Who said it was there to solve any of these problems? It's a protest group. To point a light in the darkness of this issue where a lot of people refused to look because of their biases and/or their lack of comfortability with the issue... It's done that. It continues to do that. We talk about it often. Success.Maybe racism, past and/or present, is responsible for poverty, but BLM is clearly not the right movement to solve that problem. They'd have to rebrand and refocus around, I don't know, creating jobs and strengthening economies.
If you want to continue to think the struggle exemplified by Black Lives Matter is about blaming of white people, fine. Then we will disagree and there are no other words to be had. We all see that there are a ton of white people who understand the issues. If you don't or will not, I understand that as well.It is what it is. I have been abused by cops and I'm not black.
I have Italian and Irish friends who have been abused by cops.
Reducing excessive force is a problem that everyone can get behind until one polarizes the issue and make sweeping generalizations about whole identifiable demographic groups.
In a radical egalitarian sense, one could argue there is a problem. If, say, Japanese Americans commit 1/2 as much crime as white American, and are 1/2 as likely to be shot, from a radical egalitarian point of view, there should be no identifiable differences between identifiable demographic groups. If white people are committing twice the crime as the Japanese Americans, something is de facto wrong, even if not dejure. But, I think we would impose more injustice on the world trying to be radical egalitarians. Seeking fairness can work, be just, but is a lot harder to define and requires a ton of work.
You write of generations not being heard. But cops wear body cams now. Cops, like the ones in the Fruitville station homicide are going to prison.
These kinds of results come from hard work. And there is no utopia coming. There will ALWAYS be hard work to do. Identifying wrongful behavior. Documenting and recording it. Following up with it.
I've heard a lawyer complaining the BLM is making his work identifying and prosecuting bad cops harder as they are hardening public opinion against prosecuting cops. So much of making things better revolves around image problems. To say the floggings will continue until morale improves is not going to be productive. Yelling that white people need to get used to their new reality as they are shamed into publicly washing black people's feet is an image problem.
And everything I just wrote comes before a more important fact: the danger that cops pose to black people is negligible compared to much more vital issues. It's a distraction, bringing those not part of the movement to ask, "what is this really all about." With BLM leaders openly stating that they are Marxists it appears that this movement is not about justice or making things better. It's about useful idiots thinking they've found a wedge issue with which to tear down a great country and replace it with some Communist Utopia. Which enough US citizens, at least at this time, know will not happen. Maybe, at best, we'll be like the former U.S.S.R? They torture murdered millions of people, including any relatives I might have had in the Ukraine at the time. I won't sign on to something like that happening here to my family.
I can't speak on what you've heard about that Lawyer. What I can do is show you that Representatives are starting to work with Legislature, the Community, and Representatives of Black Lives Matter to try to bridge that gap between policing and the community.
On a personal level, and I try to not sink to this, but the gall of telling a group of people what their dangers are is staggering. I want to get into this more but I'm truly afraid I'm going to lose my calm.
Suffice to say, we are well aware of the dangers poised against us. The world for blacks will not be solved if cops were better trained and not subjugated to a stupid quota system. Education, Poverty, B... I mean, you must have seen me list these things ad nauseum on the Religion and Politics and then the Current Events forum too many times to count. Just like if we solve the problem of officers using the badge to commit any malfeasance from sexual harassments towards women to rape... that won't solve all of the problems plaguing women.
That doesn't mean not to try. That doesn't mean not to focus on it. Solve that thing. Great, now move on to the next. We all get that concept. That's how we problem solve.
And I am sorry that you were abused by police officers. I have been as well. My father, my brother. My cousins. My uncles. My aunts. I'd be hard pressed to find a family member who has never had damaging experiences with police officers. But it is what it is is the absolute enemy. It is regressionist thinking that obviously a great deal of the population is tired of accepting. There are white, black, asian, latino, straight, gay, male, female, trans, and fluid souls who are tired of how 'it' is. And are going to do something about it.
If talking was enough to have changes enacted, I think we would have all preferred that. I know I would have. It is how I wanted to believe the world worked: Through reason. But it doesn't. And because of that, I believe I speak for a lot of people when I find it so stifling and purposefully limiting when people ask us to be reasonable when they allow barbaric treatment of fellow citizens due to feeling comfortable in their inertia.
And on a human note, I personally don't care if you're white. Nor do I care if Houseman is. Nor would I say a lot of members of BLM. You can feel clear in your conscious.