lustergirl
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2005
- Messages
- 7,596
That is a very broad generalization.
Sadly it is the truth. And this is coming from a white person
That is a very broad generalization.
Here's a thought...... teach them NOT to be in a situation that would need police presence. At least where I live and grew up, there was no difference in the way police treated you. Black, white, red, blue or green. If you were in a compromising situation, you were detained and asked who, what, why where and how. I learned this the hard way, ONCE! After that, I knew better to be in certain areas or when things would happen..... knowing. "this can't end good" was enough for me to know I shouldn't be there.
Is there racial problems in this country? You better believe it. And who are the ones to play that race card at the drop of a hat? Why is it we typically only hear about the white cop shooting the black kid or the white gunman shooting the black kid/person? Why do we never hear it the other way around? Or even about the Asian shooter...... because its organizations like the NAACP that over play the race card.
If any US citizen wants to move to an African nation there is nothing holding them back. If it's so bad here, move there.
Oh, for heaven's sake. Just because someone is frustrated by structural problems and institutionalized racism doesn't mean they're unAmerican. In fact, working towards a more equitable society is about as American as you can be.
And telling black people that if they don't like racism they should go back to Africa is, well, pretty outrageous. (Somehow I don't imagine that this comes from a thoughtful, Garveyist point of view...)
Oh please. So a young african american male can be walking down the street minding their own business doing nothing and still be targeted by the police as being suspicious.
Yup..... so can a young Hispanic male, a young Asian male, a young martian male. Its not just a black thing. At the same time, any one of these fine young men CAN simply walk the street and not be profiled or even talked to. Its all in the circumstances.
Not a thing has change since 1619 when the first African slaves were brought here. We are still a disposable people.
I am absolutely dumbfounded that anyone can defend what these looters did. I don't care what your race or background is, it is not right to break into places- that, by the way and as far as I know, are in no way associated with what happened- and loot and destroy them.
I am absolutely dumbfounded that anyone can defend what these looters did. I don't care what your race or background is, it is not right to break into places- that, by the way and as far as I know, are in no way associated with what happened- and loot and destroy them.
I'm not.
Not since reading that thread a while back about the people who dragged that man out of his truck and beat him within an inch of his life.
You are absolutely right. But there is a higher percentage of the young black males experiencing this. And what circumstances are you speaking of? I have not read the whole story of this development but plan on reading it later on. I am law enforcement and am involved in City Policing and the troubles of our city police so have inside knowledge of what goes in policing.
I'm not.
Not since reading that thread a while back about the people who dragged that man out of his truck and beat him within an inch of his life.
Well, I for one am not defending them in any way. I am saying that anyone that has not walked in their lives cannot know how frustrated and angry they are. And I am saying that police DO profile and DO harass young black men more than any other in some areas.
What these looters are doing is horrendous. And its not going to help anything.
Well, I for one am not defending them in any way. I am saying that anyone that has not walked in their lives cannot know how frustrated and angry they are. And I am saying that police DO profile and DO harass young black men more than any other in some areas.
What these looters are doing is horrendous. And its not going to help anything.
I have to agree with these statements.
Looting doesn't help anything--just makes people who aren't involved in that mess angry, and it ruins some people's livelihoods. Those people who worked at the QT aren't going to be seeing a paycheck in 2 weeks, because they have no place to work.
Whether or not the officer was in the wrong, a young man lost his life. That community should be coming together and grieving over the loss of a young life, not stealing 2 buck chuck and slim jims. The community should be holding meetings with their youth, talking to them about how to handle themselves should a police officer come up to them (hands out where the officer can see them, no sudden moves, no sassy mouth, just yes sir or no sir). They should be working with the police to make the community safe for everyone.
It's a vicious circle that these communities are in. Maybe if the community would step up and say "HEY, knock your crud off." "This isn't how to handle things." "We aren't going to allow the drug dealing (or prostitution or gangs or what ever else) here." But they don't. They continue down the spiral into hatred and anger, and teach it to the next generation. They don't put emphasis into learning and bettering yourself or your neighborhood.
The police can only do so much. And I imagine they get quite frustrated and angry dealing with the situations they are in as well. I'm not agreeing at all with the officer shooting an unarmed young man in the back--he could have ran after him, used his taser or just let the man go and caught up to him at a later date. I'm just saying I do understand that the anger and frustration go both ways--and it just keeps circling.
I have to agree with these statements.
Looting doesn't help anything--just makes people who aren't involved in that mess angry, and it ruins some people's livelihoods. Those people who worked at the QT aren't going to be seeing a paycheck in 2 weeks, because they have no place to work.
Whether or not the officer was in the wrong, a young man lost his life. That community should be coming together and grieving over the loss of a young life, not stealing 2 buck chuck and slim jims. The community should be holding meetings with their youth, talking to them about how to handle themselves should a police officer come up to them (hands out where the officer can see them, no sudden moves, no sassy mouth, just yes sir or no sir). They should be working with the police to make the community safe for everyone.
It's a vicious circle that these communities are in. Maybe if the community would step up and say "HEY, knock your crud off." "This isn't how to handle things." "We aren't going to allow the drug dealing (or prostitution or gangs or what ever else) here." But they don't. They continue down the spiral into hatred and anger, and teach it to the next generation. They don't put emphasis into learning and bettering yourself or your neighborhood.
The police can only do so much. And I imagine they get quite frustrated and angry dealing with the situations they are in as well. I'm not agreeing at all with the officer shooting an unarmed young man in the back--he could have ran after him, used his taser or just let the man go and caught up to him at a later date. I'm just saying I do understand that the anger and frustration go both ways--and it just keeps circling.
Young, black, male is the trifecta of profiling.
Young more likely to commit crimes than old
Black more likely than white
Male more likely than female
I don't know how you alter the mindset though.
Another tragic incident where a young life was waisted. However there are still two sides to this story and we have to see what unfolds. Yet the police are being tried here as they are in the Eric Gardner case. Gardner was selling cigarettes illegaly and resting arrest. No one wants to mention about the New Jersery Police officer that was assassinated last month. One Poster here would want you to believe that the 900,000 Police Officers in the United States are out to shoot and kill black Youths. Maybe Folks like Al Sharpton shoud be looking to raise up the black family rather than knock everyone else down.
In NYC where "Stop and Frisk" was curtailed as to not upset folks like Al Sharpton, Shootings are up 13% for the year and were up 43% in June alone. The police went after the guns in High Crime areas, which were minority areas. You Police where the crime is.