JimMIA
There's more to life than mice...
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2005
- Messages
- 21,168
I don't think that the lack of emphasis on ALL crime affecting the black community is a legitimate reason to feel that BLM is insincere. I think that criticism is a natural response to their catchy, but very poorly-descriptive, name.We were discussing why it does or doesn't make sense to use the argument that if BLM doesn't address black on black crime then they are insincere.
But what does make me wonder how sincere they are two things:
- Their lack of an effective strategy to try to correct what they believe is a pattern of excessive use of force by police against black people.
- Protests alone are neither effective, nor are they a strategy. Protests are not even an attempt to really address a problem with sensible solutions that might actually work.
- Protests and "community meetings" are, however, easy to organize and quite profitable -- see Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson's pioneering work in this field.
- There are effective, proven strategies for addressing real police misconduct -- and it does actually exist. There are dozens of cities (including Dallas, incidentally) who have been effectively improving things for many years. Those strategies are not hard to find -- I gave you several of them about 20 pages back. BLM makes no attempt to do things that might actually work. That makes me wonder if they really want things to work.
- Their tolerance for violence as part and parcel of their demonstrations. No, they don't promote violence -- they'd go to jail for that. But, at a minimum, they look the other way...and probably chuckle in many cases. The near riots in the Minneapolis area are a good example, and of course Ferguson and Baltimore are classics.