Black Card Revoked

2021年3月21日
Register here: http://gg.gg/orxw7
*Black Card Revoked Game
*Black Card Revoked Game Questions
Make sure to pick this game up and play with your friends!www.cardsforallpeople.com. An answer for the culturally curious, Cards For All People makes fun, nostalgia-filled games. We are the creators of the Card Revoked game series. Set to the laughter-inducing expansion cards, if you’re looking for the perfect game night card game, Black Card Revoked is definitely it. Photo Credit: Black Card Revoked. Card Revoked & Girls Night Out games require a minimum of three people to play and a maximum of six.However, you can buy extra response cards if you’re having a large party. For larger groups, select teams and give a set of multiple choice cards to each. If you have other questions, please see the section of our site called, ’What You Need To Know Before You Buy.’ This item: Black Card Revoked - Party Pack $49.99. Ships from and sold by Cards For All People. Black Card Revoked 3 - Original Flavor $17.99. Sold by Cards For All People and ships from Amazon Fulfillment. FREE Shipping on orders over $25.00. Black Card Revoked 2.
No, not my “Black” credit card. I mean my black card – the fictional card every black person theoretically receives at birth. Frankly, I had never heard of such a thing. My parents never said anything about it, nor was it a part of any class I took in school. So how did I find out that mine was even in jeopardy? Alas, it was when I started participating in “non-black” activities!
Not only did I have the unmitigated gall to want to travel around the world, but I had the nerve to want to be wild and crazy and to fully experience life by doing things like bungee-jumping, sky-diving and skiing. I knew something was amiss when people started making comments like, “Now girl, you know black people don’t do that!”
“Um, excuse me, but…do what? Travel? Have fun? Live life?”
What is it exactly that black people don’t do? Because apparently, I either missed the memo or neglected to sign up for the “How to be Black” class in high school.
And when I had lost my mind to the point of dating men of other cultures and races, the comments were accompanied by the clucking of tongues, the smacking of lips, and the shaking of heads…as if I had somehow hit rock-bottom in life and become a total disappointment and disgrace to my race.
So in the eyes of my so-called friends and some family members, the drastic action of a revocation of my “black” card was called for. And do you know what I said to that? Good riddance!
For any so-called “membership” that is based on racial stereotypes, emotional shackles and psychological barriers is not a group I want to be a member of nor are those people with whom I want to associate. My color may be black, and my ethnicity may be African-American, but I belong to the world, and I will continue to partake in everything of it! Whether that’s playing spades and dominos or scuba-diving with sharks and jumping out of airplanes. Whether that’s dating a man with skin the color of charcoal or one with skin the color of snow. Whether that’s grooving to the rhythmic beat of Beyoncé or head-banging to the rocking tunes of Bon Jovi. There are no limitations for me – even the sky is not my limit!
And with that, I’m obtaining a new card…from the “Me, Myself and I” Society. This organization is for the free-thinking individuals of the world. There are no rules, no judgment, and the only limitations are the ones you set for yourself. I hear anything goes in this group, and I like the sound of that! So if you’re in danger of losing your own “black” card due to the way you live your life, fret not my friend. To those willing to step outside their comfort zone, live life on their own terms and shrug off the (misguided and often uninformed) opinions of others, I say a bigger, better and more satisfying world awaits you! Care to join me?
“To be yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you something else is the greatest accomplishment.” ~Ralph Waldo Emerson
This story was curated by Sonjia Mackey.NewsOne Featured Video
What started out as a card game has become a hot topic on Black Twitter. The topic in question? Potentially having your Black card revoked for doing things, watching things, saying things or participating in things that jokingly warrant your acceptance into the culture to be up for debate.
“Don’t revoke my black card” began trending on Black Twitter on Thursday, and simply typing in those five words into the search bar will send you on a humor-filled ride as folks are shamelessly unleashing confessions that might cause a side eye or three.
The trending topic is a play on the actual card game, Black Card Revoked. The game is described as “revitalized trivia” for African Americans. “It is a fun, nostalgia-filled card game that tests knowledge of cultural milestones and know-how within American Black popular culture. Spanning history, daily life, and entertainment, this questions-based game will spark debate by challenging participant’s understanding of influential moments, facts and figures,” according to the game’s description on Target’s website.
The game later transitioned into America’s first Black culture trivia television game show in 2018.
Nonetheless, folks have come forward revealing anything from they’ve never seen an episode of “Martin” to they have never eaten collard greens. Oh, and someone spelled chitlins’ as chitterlings. And while that might be the proper dictionary spelling, that clearly isn’t how Black folks spell or pronounce the Southern dish, made from the small intestines of a pig.
One Twitter user said, “Don’t revoke my Black Card but I can’t play spades.”
Don’t revoke my Black Card but I can’t play spades https://t.co/U0JBZdxGr2
— Jason Johnson (@DrJasonJohnson) January 9, 2020
Another listed all of the Southern dishes that she skips over during the holiday season. “Don’t revoke my black card but I hate collard greens, black eye peas, baked beans and yams… I basically don’t eat during the holidays,” she wrote.
Don’t revoke my black card but I hate collard greens, black eye peas, baked beans and yams… I basically don’t eat during the holidays. pic.twitter.com/8xLfJl0p4n
— Whitney J ✊ (@Alluring_Enigma) January 9, 2020
A third user expressed how displeased he is with a plethora of meats that some would consider Southern staples. He also revealed that he used to get in trouble for refusing to eat them. “Don’t revoke my black card but I hate neck bones, pig feet, fat back (I used to get my a** beat for not eating it, baked turkey wings cause the skin be all soft and saggy. and I don’t like pork ribs cause of the fat, I normally just spit it out once I taste the fat,” he said.
Don’t revoke my black card but I hate neck bones, pig feet, fat back (I used to get my my ass beat for not eating it

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