TobiasFunke
Footballguy
Yup. And I'm not sure how its relevant to the points raised by the article. There's nothing I can do locally to address the way the police treat black people. If there is, I'll do it, but thankfully those issues don't come up much where I live. Aside from some mild resentment of gentrification, we're one big happy Benetton ad.Your points are well taken here. However, much of the recent militarization has been driven by federal agencies such as the DHS. Not local governments.I agree let's get past it, I raised it to Tim because frankly I think the statements as conclusions of the incidents raised were outrageous.The problems highlighted by the article are people being gunned down by law enforcement. Black people being killed by other black people in large numbers is totally irrelevant to the point that the article attempts to make. Do you honestly think law enforcement doesn't have a problem with its perception of the black community? There's three examples of black people who by all accounts presented no danger to the police being shot (Brown, John Crawford, Eric Garner) in the last month. Three deaths of unarmed black men presenting no threat at the hands of law enforcement in a single month. Do you honestly think any of them would be dead if they were white? If you honestly think so, we'll have to just agree to (strongly) disagree. But assuming you don't, isn't that a problem worth highlighting?Tobias the perception is exactly what it's all about and more. - I live in a city where people are gunned down regularly, not one by one but in multiples, in public, even up to a score in some instances. By blacks. If black people were perceived as a "threat", if they were "feared", then there would be a very, real serious problem around here. Black people are not feared as described - "as a millions-strong army of potential killers, capable and cold enough that any single one could be a threat to a trained police officer in a bulletproof vest." And America is not "not for black people."
It is as strong or ridiculous as hyperbole as that word can get, in the classic Greek rhetorical sense, as a device meant to purposefully lead people to false conclusions. It is a leap off a step, off a flight of stairs, off a hill, off a canyon up to the moon. It is the worst kind of demagoguery. Not speaking of you, I'm speaking of the writer.
I agree that there's a small amount of needless hyperbole in the sentence you lifted, but I don't think it defeats the premise or detracts much from the overall effectiveness of the article.
However I do indeed see the incidents raised. I can tell you here during Katrina we had a mentally handicapped black teen crossing a bridge with his family, he was shot, killed, he and his dad were walking across the bridge to his father's dentist office to get provisions.
Also during Katrina a black man seeking help was killed by police apparently for no one knows what reason, his body was burned in his car behind a levee. Again a coverup.
Tobias, let me tell you something: local politics is UGLY in some places. The death, the corruption. In a small town like that? What do people do about it? When do they stand up in their own home town? Do they run for office? Do they demand transparency? Look in your own backyard. Do something damnit. These are real issues, but people love to talk and write about them, but it is freaking scarey, mean, bad work confronting it. It is not always about race, it is often about corruption and money.
If what they say is true in Ferguson, they ought to go digging, at the bottom of that dark, nasty woodpile there is probably money. Racism just helps keep the lights out.
The white guys pictured in the link where met with "anxiety and discomfort", and then with a new no-gun policy for the restaurant.