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Comments on 'Aron Ranen's Black Hair Documentary Part One'

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BeyondChange (November 30th, 2009 @ 3:45 am)
I am South Korean :) and now live in Canada. It'a all business nothing personal...
youngmumma (November 28th, 2009 @ 11:26 pm)
I feel sick to my stomach watching this. Why dont black people support each other instead of lining the pockets of people who know absolutely NOTHING about our hair.
rissa146 (November 26th, 2009 @ 11:07 pm)
what would people comment on if it wasn't for us african americans!
framptonorchablis (November 22nd, 2009 @ 11:26 am)
99% of the people bitching about Korean-owned beauty supply stores don't think twice about spending their money at white-owned grocery stores, malls, electronic stores, etc. If you think it's important to keep the money within the black community, be consistent about it. Black people spend money on plenty of things besides hair.
KimLeeX (November 22nd, 2009 @ 4:26 am)
Korans cannot stand black folks, yet black people love stuffing there pockets with money. Some of these ghetto tricks can't even afford to put food on their tables yet they are buying weaves and relaxers.
claRAWRbaeby (November 20th, 2009 @ 1:10 am)
My father employed blacks in our store and treated all customers equally. Yet our store was the only store on our block that was constantly getting broken in to. Customers would say racial slurs to my parents on a daily basis. At school, the black kids would beat me tell me to go back where I came from and how they were gonna burn down my parents store. This is hate. No matter how much you sugarcoat it, it is.
claRAWRbaeby (November 20th, 2009 @ 1:09 am)
Videos like this one makes me wish that we were all color-blind. Why are the people in this video so adamant about buying from only African-Americans? Im Korean and my family owned a black beauty supply store also. I knew the community hated us because we werent black, but what could we do? We lived in that community also and my parents had to put food on the table.
5sizes2big (November 13th, 2009 @ 3:27 am)
Poor Kizure
5sizes2big (November 13th, 2009 @ 12:01 am)
I didn't see any blaming going on. He just put a face on the where the money goes. That's what a documentary does. It's not anti-korean.
acapedit (November 9th, 2009 @ 7:16 am)
I remember how naive it used to be that black people must support black owned enterprises, when anything but has taken place. Walk by 125ST and there's rampart bootlegging, and making money off dead people like Michael Jackson. It's about survival, and I don't think black people in general give a fuck about the morals associated with a few minds, it's take what's mine and spend it on what makes you happy, like jewelry and hair. It's a mentality that ain't got shit to do with race.
acapedit (November 9th, 2009 @ 7:08 am)
This documentary is unbalanced, and biased. From the start it blames Korean businesses for taking over a sector of the black community. Small minded individuals may not like it, but the higher question needs to be answered: why don't black people support black owned businesses? because capitalism has no ethics. Easy to blame the business minded who just sell people a product to those who spend, it's the distribution of wealth among the poor that is a pressing question. How you spend your money?
denij2005 (November 8th, 2009 @ 1:57 am)
I havent for the last 14 years and try as much as possible to get Blacks to support Black owned business or at least businesses that respect the Black community

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