Friday, November 13, 2009

Meet Lou Jing

Before, on the street, people might say things like, 'How come she looks like that?' But that was just a small number of people. When I was younger, I thought life was beautiful. Why is it that now I've grown up, I don't think that anymore?

2 comments:

  1. I wish the best for her and at the same time feel for her, experiencing racism on a grand scale like she did. As an African-American I've know how it feels to be black and blue, but unlike her....I guess she now feels like she's lost in a wilderness, that wilderness being her homeland of China.

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  2. Unfortunately, the baby daddy only reinforces stereotypes of Black men as irresponsible louts by knocking up a married wife - and then leaving her (and her bastard daughter) to clean up the mess.

    Why do these "men" totally not care about BC or any offspring they sire??? This is the real shame underlying this story. Any shame that Lou Jing feels can only pale in comparison to the shame she feels inside from being TOTALLY unwanted, uncared for and unloved by her Black daddy.

    Well, if you don't love & respect your own daughter, why should you expect anyone else to? 70% of Black babies are now born to single baby mamas in the US. Maybe Americans should be shaming these baby daddies here too?

    It's only unfortunate that Lou Jing has to take the shame that her daddy & cheating mom deserve.

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