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</div><div>And here's a link to the audio clip from the Brando Show where Nutt said this.</div>
Why are you all so adamant about keeping your racist traditions?Optimus Prime 4 said:I've known that to be true for a while. I had players from Florida tell me similar. They all hear the stories, see the movies, and expect the worst. You actually get them to visit and they learn it's nothing like that. I don't think anyone can argue that Mississippi's national reputation doesn't hurt out of state recruiting.
spacecataz said:I'm pretty sure he was talking about out of state kids coming to UM, not the state of Mississippi. How the hell does the state of Mississippi exclusively get the bad rap when it's stuck in the middle of an entire region associated with racism? I think it has more to do with people associating UM with confederate flags, Klan rallies, race riots, and recently the meaning behind the nickname "Ole Miss" getting out. Either way, I'm not sure why he would say that. From my vantage point, it hasn't seemed to really hurt the school on the recruiting front anyway.
"Ole Miss" will ALWAYSbring negative images for African-Americans.HighLifeRebel said:Think it's a damn shame that the "liberals are taking away the Ole Miss traditions", so let's just all take a break from the "OM is the only reason people think Mississippi is backward" ********.
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</div><div>Whether OM fans want to admit it, it's both. People who aren't from the South see Mississippi as the worst of the worst. This isn't new. Meredith chose to enroll at OM because he knew that if he could do it in a place as bad as Mississippi, then anybody, anywhere could do it. The NAACP initially refused to help him and suggested he try it in either Arkansas or Tennessee because Mississippi was the most dangerous. Some older AA people from the South see Oxford and think of race riots. I knew AA kids at OM, from Jackson, whose grandparents begged them not to go to OM because they thought they would get lynched. </div><div>
</div><div>I knew white kids from California who thought that Mississippi (all of Mississippi) was going to be like Mississippi burning until they got here. The perception is there regardless of one's race or location, and itis much bigger than a bullshitMississippi State v. OM pissing match. We (OM and Mississippi State) both need to work hard to try and improve this perception instead of wallowing in it or throwing mud at each other.</div>
rabiddawg said:"Ole Miss" will ALWAYSbring negative images for African-Americans.HighLifeRebel said:Think it's a damn shame that the "liberals are taking away the Ole Miss traditions", so let's just all take a break from the "OM is the only reason people think Mississippi is backward" ********.
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<div>Whether OM fans want to admit it, it's both. People who aren't from the South see Mississippi as the worst of the worst. This isn't new. Meredith chose to enroll at OM because he knew that if he could do it in a place as bad as Mississippi, then anybody, anywhere could do it. The NAACP initially refused to help him and suggested he try it in either Arkansas or Tennessee because Mississippi was the most dangerous. Some older AA people from the South see Oxford and think of race riots. I knew AA kids at OM, from Jackson, whose grandparents begged them not to go to OM because they thought they would get lynched. </div>
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<div>I knew white kids from California who thought that Mississippi (all of Mississippi) was going to be like Mississippi burning until they got here. The perception is there regardless of one's race or location, and itis much bigger than a bullshitMississippi State v. OM pissing match. We (OM and Mississippi State) both need to work hard to try and improve this perception instead of wallowing in it or throwing mud at each other.</div>