MadVillainy
C'mon Son
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2008
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And everyone remember, and correct me if I'm wrong, we have the money for people to live without these jobs for a while or lease get paid for a while
We are a nation that has a government that will go trillions of dollars in debt for a war they made up, but hundreds of billion for people to stay home during a pandemic? Never.And everyone remember, and correct me if I'm wrong, we have the money for people to live without these jobs for a while or lease get paid for a while
I wonder what's the count for all the cops arrested, fired or suspended during these protests so far. Must be getting pretty high
Doubt it. Unless their acts are caught on video and their names are discovered and made public, I don’t expect repercussions.
What does that have to do with him being killed when he was unarmed and unconvicted by cops?She doesn't support George Floyd being seen like a martyr because some make it seem like he was a great person and there being merchandise with his face & name but he wasn't that good based on research she found on him. I agree with her that he shouldn't be seen as a martyr based on him a person but disagree that he shouldn't be supported.
For me it's about his death, the black lives movement and peaceful protests against police brutality than him being a saint before death or not.
What does that have to do with him being killed when he was unarmed and unconvicted by cops?
How is everyone's stress levels with all of this? This is...a lot. Really feels all the anger of the past 3 1/2 years, mixed with with the stresses of months of lockdown have boiled over into this incredibly tumultuous moment.
I've seen so much horrifically disturbing and violent imagery of unprovoked violence on cops against protesters. I've also seen some incredibly touching images of police marching with protesters, an officer hugging a black child for minutes, cops kneeling with protesters, protesters giving cops water. I've seen footage of smart protesters singling out white rioters and stopping them in their tracks. It's all happening at once, and right now it feels like we are unable to fully process the enormity of this moment, all the good and bad of it.
There are a few trends for this with me that I'm concerned about. I find it worrisome that there seem to be so many attempting to defend the rioting and looting as if criticizing it is somehow criticizing the peaceful BLM movement. I find this reprehensible. Those people are NOT helping the movement. They are not friends of the movement. In many cases they are the exact opposite. They have destroyed minority-owned businesses and low-income housing. A 77 year old retired (black) police chief was shot dead. There is no way to justify that. Stealing a PS4s from GameStop has nothing to do with justice for George Floyd. To ignore this and sweep it under the rug is wrong in my view, and it accomplishes nothing but giftwrap all of this to the right to weaponize.
And unfortunately, I feel the same about the shocking silence from the health community about people gathering shoulder to shoulder by the thousands. Masks or no masks. People have lost their livelihoods. People have buried loved ones and been unable to grieve with their families. And suddenly nobody is talking about the virus as masses gather by the thousands, in defiance of every guideline we've made such an effort to adhere to over the past several months. And the health community has been far too quiet about the risks. This kind of a double standard is sheer fodder for Trump and the right to gleefully exploit. All of this only increases the chances of a second wave, and the hand wave this seemingly has been given by the health community could potentially undermine their credibility in the coming months when we will need to heed their advice more than ever to prevent a deadlier second wave ala 1918.
The protests by and large have been beautiful demonstrations and will no doubt be in the pages of history books some day. We are already seeing some police departments announcing plans for reform. That's incredible and wonderful, and necessary. But I find myself hoping that this will soon simmer down and people will remain safe in their homes as much as they possible can. The longer this continues, the more people are going to die and get hurt-- most of which being the actual protesters, unfortunately. We still are dealing with a pandemic that has claimed 105,000+ American lives that is in no way, shape or form gone. And we have an election in November where we are attempting to remove a pseudo-fascist from power. And historically, authoritarians like him thrive on widespread social unrest like this. Our own saving grace here (as always) is his ineptitude and inability to truly wield power, but nevertheless I think it's more crucial than ever that we keep our eyes on the prize.
1) Cops hugging kids, marching with protesters doesn't mean much. It's just the whole "they're not all bad" argument that's always touted about. a) even if the cop themselves aren't doing the BS. They're still complicit in a system by not speaking out and doing so much more to reform police departments. I, of course, don't know every police department in the world; but I've never heard of any internal police-community relations team that has done much. I haven't seen much public outcry for officers who condemn racist or just corrupt actions. There's no BLM movement within police forces that I've heard of. What they're doing is as empty and meaningless as "thoughts and prayers" after a mass shooting.
And unfortunately, I feel the same about the shocking silence from the health community about people gathering shoulder to shoulder by the thousands. Masks or no masks. People have lost their livelihoods. People have buried loved ones and been unable to grieve with their families. And suddenly nobody is talking about the virus as masses gather by the thousands, in defiance of every guideline we've made such an effort to adhere to over the past several months. And the health community has been far too quiet about the risks. This kind of a double standard is sheer fodder for Trump and the right to gleefully exploit. All of this only increases the chances of a second wave, and the hand wave this seemingly has been given by the health community could potentially undermine their credibility in the coming months when we will need to heed their advice more than ever to prevent a deadlier second wave ala 1918.
The protests by and large have been beautiful demonstrations and will no doubt be in the pages of history books some day. We are already seeing some police departments announcing plans for reform. That's incredible and wonderful, and necessary. But I find myself hoping that this will soon all simmer down and people will remain safe in their homes as much as they possible can. The longer this continues, the more people are going to die and get hurt-- most of which being the actual protesters, unfortunately. We still are dealing with a pandemic that has claimed 105,000+ American lives. And we have an election in November. Eyes on the prize.