Lisa loves Pooh
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2004
- Messages
- 40,443
So... I'm just going to respond as if all of your posts have been sincere.
I get that there is a disconnect for you somewhere, when it comes to either understanding the concept of victim-blaming, or accepting that it exists. Which is reasonable to expect, as its largely an unconscious thing.
It might help you to understand why people are bringing it up in response to statements about Eric Garner contributing to his own death, by reading this http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/in-love-and-war/201311/why-do-we-blame-victims
You are correct. Nobody has openly stated that they believe the chokehold was an acceptable method to use. Yes. Agreed. Just like nobody (typically) openly says that rape (I know, I know... you don't accept that it has any place in the conversation - bear with me!) is acceptable.
The problem is, that by continuing to say things like "yes, but he was resisting arrest", or "yes, but he was doing something illegal" implies that he was somehow asking for it... "it" being his own death. Hence - blaming the victim.
You are more than welcome to reject the concept... but that does not mean that the concept does not exist, or that it does not apply to what you (and others) have been saying.
Fair enough.
But I don't blame him for his death and if my posts in ANY way convey that, then that is my failure to be clear.
I do blame him for doing something that required his arrest and it was his choice to resist. Beyond that, the fault was not his.
It was brought up earlier that my "semantics" was victim blaming when it most certainly was not--it was an attempt to get to what the officers' protocol should have been and no reference to psychological definitions will change the reality of what I meant.
And the fact that no aid was rendered is unconscionable.
As for the knife wielding man this morning, it is my belief that he was 100% responsible for his own death. He was not a victim.
