jimmy eat jazz
Well-Known Member
Oh God.
So blacks can bring attention to they systemic/structural biases they face, but they can't make anyone (especially white folks)feel uncomfortable in doing so?
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Oh God.
So blacks can bring attention to they systemic/structural biases they face, but they can't make anyone (especially white folks)feel uncomfortable in doing so?
not that they never do-- but one group of people deals with this statistically higher than the other. For no reason other than racism, quite frankly.
Of Brown's many 'sins' you recite, which merited him being killed?
The problem is that there are many people who, essentially, see Michael Brown as representing their caricature of what they think a black person is--a thug, or most likely thug, who, if he didn't strictly deserve to die, at least deserves some due comeuppance, so if he is killed unjustly, meh. This is precisely one of the things black activists are trying to bring to the public's attention.
Brown is as much a victim of the others. If his punishment for his crimes were imprisonment or something more or less appropriate for the severity of his crimes, then he is not a victim. But nothing he did merited death, thus he IS a victim. Frankly, moreover, I strongly suspect that Brown's shooting was not unrelated to the culture of racism that permeates the Ferguson police force. One can legitimately question whether, if he were not black, he would be dead.
No doubt there are race hustlers among the black community, just like there are outrage entrepreneurs related to just about any social issue. Does it bother you more when the issue is black activism, or is this a concern you apply to other groups/causes as well?
You mean other than going after a police officer, trying to take his weapon, and punching him in the face?
I couldn't disagree more about Brown being a victim. And if blacks and their activists are so concerned about how they're perceived, they should probably look interally as well. Richard Sherman, someone I can't stand for the most part, spoke very intelligently about this. I'd add that they should also go into predominantly black communities pushing for education, the importance of two parent households, career readiness, and the like. Or is the rest of society to blame for the fact that 67% of blacks are raised in single-parent households? Are the rest of us to blame for the black-on-black crime? I'll stop there as I'm sure you get my point. Some self-reflection and accountability there would go a long ways.
That said, yes, we could question whether Brown would be dead or not if he was white. There's no debating that. But based on the actions that took place, again, I see the cops actions as completely warranted. White or black. Let me also add that I find the complete lack of respect for cops that's begun to run rampant in our society completely appalling.
Injustice and corporate greed at all costs are two things that bother me perhaps more than anything else. The Insider is my favorite movie in large part because of that. I'm not sure if that helped answer your question.
Yes, I understand better, thanks. I still disagree that anything Michael Brown did merited death. Last I checked, none of his crimes warranted the death penalty. As for whether the officer was justified using deadly force, we'll never know given that the local DA never had any intention, or so it appears, to pursue this issue further.
Note also if we are laying blame, IF the police officer had initially (from the beginning) dealt with the situation in a way designed to de-escalate confrontation, as opposed to escalating it from the get go, then none of this would have happened. And to what extent was his approach to the situation a function of the culture that had developed in the police force viz their attitudes towards black citizens? Would he have acted similarly had Brown been white? Know one knows, but I suspect it would have turned out much differently.
It's very hard to determine what really happens in a system where law enforcement inevitably circles the wagon to protect its own, in collusion with local district attorneys, and routinely lies and obfuscates. Hell, I don't trust the system. How do you think members of the black community feel?
Let me say that I think it's fair to ask the 'black community' to look inward and think about whether and what social dysfunctions may exist that contribute to high crime rates, high % of single parent families, etc. BUT, at the same time, it is fair to ask society and policymakers to take a deeper look to try to disentangle other potential explanatory factors, particularly poverty and institutional/structural factors that contribute to poverty, crime and other social dysfunctions within the black community. I suspect that once one has accounted for these other factors, race-based explanations will shrink significantly in terms of relative importance. In other words, it is not fair to demand that blacks look inward to explain and deal with existing dysfunctions without also looking outward to identify other contributory factors. It's much, much more complex than most people (particularly those on the right) pretend it is.
I've been out of town for a week. Just wanted to clarify that I'm not angry at all about the way this group protests. I just don't think it's nearly as effective as it could be. The reason I brought up Soros is that it seems to me that his money is routinely behind this sort of agitation and I think there's a high likelihood that he or his people have the ultimate say in how these organizations are being run (which goes contrary to those who are saying that we should just let the black population decide how to frame these issues).No, I don't have any problem with white people supporting their cause. I do have an issue with white people telling black people how to feel, protest, and conduct themselves. Why are you so angry that black people are not protesting the way you want them to?
On a side note back to the original story.
The new measure this groups is taking. Is to get ranchers across the west to renounce their BLM grazing rights and refuse to accept BLM authority.
So far I've heard of 1 rancher in NM and 8 in UT taking this up.
Uh oh. It just went down.
https://www.cnn.com/2016/01/26/us/oregon-wildlife-refuge-siege-arrests/
Around a half dozen arrested and 1 militant dead. FBI and state police got them on the highway.
Will the rest slink away or will this lead to a lot of people joining their cause?
It's over. They were barely clinging on before. They were requesting everything from food to French creamer. Soooo manly.
Laws are laws! This country is a country of laws and justice. It's not Afghanistan where everything goes
Well, thriller is happy about it...RIP #tarpman. From what I've read, supposedly he had his hands up when shot 3 times. If this is true, thoughts?
Well, thriller is happy about it...
Well, thriller is happy about it...