I'm going to clean this up as much as possible because we don't need any more flags on this thread.
First and foremost, if you want to talk about misrepresentation, you blatantly said that I'm talking about a race war. I am not. I said Black Community, the government, some segments of the populace, and the police.
Do you know why I've continually said it like that? Because I realize there are blacks in the government. In that segment of populace. And definitely black police. In fact, in one of those videos I placed up, a black cop was being 'defended' by a white officer.
The 'gotcha' of "I'm not talking about Floyd" doesn't hold water if I'm talking about the Floyd case to stress my overall point. The point that I've stated multiple times and you only partially addressed once.
Criminality does not forgo human civility.
I've stated over and over again that Blacks, like every other race, has criminals. The movement isn't called "All Black People Are Innocent", its called "Black Lives Matter". Arrest every black person who's committed a crime. I'll thank the cops. That's what they are supposed to do. Any person who commits a crime, the cops are supposed to arrest. That's the end of it.
But even criminals have rights. Things that are not supposed to be violated. Methods that are too extreme and have no place in some of these confrontations. Once again:
Criminality does not forgo human civility.
I spoke of Floyd's encounter as a shorthand that even if he committed the crime, the manner of which he was held was inhumane. Resisting or no. And that's the end of it. I don't know if Floyd is guilty of knowingly trying to use a fake 20 dollar bill, and either did the cops. A conversation could have happened. In finding out he's a regular, they could have asked the store if they noticed him using fakes before. If not, an actual mistake could have been made. There's no need to always rush to criminal or no because mistakes can be made. And they can be solved without arrests
a lot of the time.
But quotas are to be made. So de-escalation takes a backseat to collars.
To be treated like a violent criminal when you're not even a criminal is a galling and too often familiar thing for the Black Community. If you want, I can stream more examples of people just going about their day who were killed or violently detained for a mistake in judgment. There are plenty of names. And I have the time.
But to address something that I need you to understand.
I can not move a goal post in a discussion with you if said 'move' happened in a discussion with someone else. Unless you're Dwarfenhobble as well.
You jumped on my conservation with him. I'm addressing him in that manner. I would be compelled to address him in a continuous manner if him and I were still having a conversation. You are new to this discussion. A branch off occurred. But yet and still, I continued in a manner that suited me because I do not have any pre-existing obligation to respond to you in a manner that you apparently deemed we should have continued... when I wasn't talking to you in the first place. But I did. I spoke about it. I summarized using Floyd's case that even if he was guilty, he did not deserve that violence. And I used other examples of how police are going amuck. But if you want to focus on a name and ignore what my over all point was:
A third time for the people in the back
Criminality does not forgo human civility.
Even if Black People commit crimes (Which they certainly do), they must be arrested within standards that is humane. That is the big, horrible message that Black Lives Matters keep stressing. That is my point. And the fact people keep fighting against that notion (which is beyond me) and police are quitting in droves because they don't like the fact that they can't slam people around and are distressed by being "restrained by the politicization of [their] tactics" (
their words, not mine), I can only shrug in confusion. And wish them well in life.
Oh. And lastly, to put this to bed: I'm not trying to paint anything into anything more than what it is.
According to the UN, anyway..
In
a statement issued on Friday, they urged the US authorities to address systemic racism and racial bias, and to conduct independent investigations into cases of excessive use of force by police officers.
Roots in slavery“The origin story of policing in the United States of America starts with slave patrols and social control, where human property of enslavers was ‘protected’ with violence and impunity against people of African descent. In the US, this legacy of racial terror remains evident in modern-day policing”, they said.