TobiasFunke
Footballguy
You said "overnight his name is known nationwide, thanks to the media." You also that it was the media that "ran with the story" of the shooting and turned it into national news.My statement wasn't false at all. Due to the media (even if the media's reporting on the reaction from the community), everyone knew the name of the cop.False. The media reacted after the community, not before it. You have cause and effect completely backwards here.You disagree? Seriously? It's the way the media works - they run the story that is going to get the biggest reaction, likely biggest emotional reaction. The cop doing his job and doing wonderful things in their local community generally doesn't make national news. A cop shooting "an unarmed black kid" in Ferguson - overnight his name is known nationwide, thanks to the media. I'm not saying that's right or wrong, just the way it is - but if that's the way it is people hear more stories of the bad cops than the good ones.Dumbest post of the year, or super dumbest?They don't make the news. Again, goes back to media.So you have black people that dont trust police. And you have police that are more forceful with blacks because they dont trust them or are scared of them. Whats the solution? Well, you said that they arent born with those views. So it starts with these groups actually interacting. The police should be in the communities and the schools interacting with the people, getting to know them so that they arent just viewed as crooked cops and can see that there are good ones out there. This would also help the police to view these people as more than the violent animals many of them seem to think they are. And this isnt just for relationships between people and police. This goes for all different groups, races and religions.
The same is true in the NFL. What have the biggest NFL stories been these last few years (on a national new level)? Ray Rice, Adrian Peterson, Aaron Hernandez, Mike Vick. Not to the same national level, but you could argue Josh Gordon and Greg Hardy. How many stores have reached those levels of publicity of NFL players doing great things for their communities or mankind in general?
Need proof? Brown was shot around noon on August 9. This thread didn't even start until August 11, and the first post links to a media report of the looting, not the shooting incident. Almost all the posts on the first couple pages are also about the looting, not the incident itself.
The media responded to the community's reaction to the incident, not vice-versa.
That's absolutely false. It's literally false- overnight would have meant his name was known on August 10, which it clearly was not. And what seems to be your premise- that the media guided the narrative and chose to make this a big story about the shooting of an unarmed kid- is also totally false. This was a non-story until the protests and the subsequent looting, which is a no-brainer story for the media to pick up.
Last edited by a moderator: