Since all the JK Rowling and OKKK talk seems to have trailed off and I have little to say about early anarchist and communist thinkers and how their writings decades ago are related to the working use of the terms today, may as well try to light a new fire under this thread.
So, just to be clear, the argument for #BlackLivesMatter having the racial lens it does is because black folks are disproportionately harmed by the criminal justice system, right? They're 6.7x as likely to be incarcerated, 4.4x as likely to be killed by police, about 3x as likely to have their vehicle searched in a traffic stop, 19% more likely to be convicted if charged with a felony, 6x more likely to be arrested for misdemeanor possession of marijuana, get 10% longer prison sentences after controlling for all other factors, were 7x as likely to be "stopped and frisked" in New York, and are 12x as likely to be wrongfully convicted of a crime. That cover most of the bases?
Except that lens isn't acceptable and useful solely because of the disproportionate treatment, but because of who that treatment is against. I could point out another demographic group where those numbers are 14x, 96.5% of all victims, 5x, 165%, 10x, 63%, 11.5x, and almost all of them compared to the "majority" group in that demographic, respectively. But if I were to try hashtagging about how that group's lives matter, it...wouldn't go well.
Hell, some of the people currently vocally supporting #BlackLivesMatter would probably tell me this other group *deserves* it, others would actively ignore it, and the general goal would be that this particular lens (despite seemingly more accurately hitting who is most negatively effected by the criminal justice system) should not be used, because it's...inconvenient, even if seemingly accurate by any measurement of the actual performance of the justice system and not merely what's politically en vogue. I'd also be called multiple kinds of bigot.
Wanna guess what demographic I'm talking about?