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Why they riot - 5/1/2015 2:24:30 PM   
MrRodgers


Posts: 10540
Joined: 7/30/2005
Status: offline
The best statement yet on why they riot. For any objective sociological assessment as to why people would go to such extremes. This becomes a very important question...why ?

“My greater source of personal concern, outrage and sympathy beyond this particular case is focused neither upon one night’s property damage nor upon the acts."

“It is focused rather upon the past four-decade period during which an American political elite have shipped middle class and working class jobs away from Baltimore and cities and towns around the U.S. to third-world dictatorships like China and others, plunged tens of millions of good, hard-working Americans into economic devastation, and then followed that action around the nation by diminishing every American’s civil rights protections in order to control an unfairly impoverished population living under an ever-declining standard of living and suffering at the butt end of an ever-more militarized and aggressive surveillance state.”

Peter Angelos Owner of the Baltimore Orioles, responding to a sports radio broadcaster upset about earlier protests causing gate closures at Camden Yards.

Thinking of the presidential hopefuls:

Almost none of the presidential hopefuls — themselves backed by corporate patrons — even mentions poverty. So it’s doubtful they’ve considered the sense of hopelessness that chronic unemployment might cause, or the disenfranchisement a black man might experience when his very presence is treated as a problem. It might mean getting pulled over for doing nothing wrong, or being handcuffed on a walk home. Or ending up dead for selling cigarettes, or for having the nerve to look a police lieutenant in the eye, as Freddie Gray did.....

Angelos and Basu are exactly right.

Profile   Post #: 1
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 2:49:45 PM   
Sanity


Posts: 22039
Joined: 6/14/2006
From: Nampa, Idaho USA
Status: offline

That makes sense, because entrepreneurs will naturally want to build companies in areas where violent rioters are likely to burn them to the ground

Smart

_____________________________

Inside Every Liberal Is A Totalitarian Screaming To Get Out

(in reply to MrRodgers)
Profile   Post #: 2
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 3:02:11 PM   
MrRodgers


Posts: 10540
Joined: 7/30/2005
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Sanity


That makes sense, because entrepreneurs will naturally want to build companies in areas where violent rioters are likely to burn them to the ground

Smart

It wasn't entrepreneurs who shipped millions of jobs to Asia and Mex. The ones who do go into business create a few staff jobs and then if there is a need for labor, never look in the US at all. They all go east right away to satisfy the angel and venture capitalists before going to wall street...to get the them and the original founders rich.

Corporate America once up and running, are in the business of eliminating Americans from their payroll or bringing in substitutes Americans are to train...to take thier jobs.

(in reply to Sanity)
Profile   Post #: 3
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 3:10:18 PM   
bounty44


Posts: 6374
Joined: 11/1/2014
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: MrRodgers

Almost none of the presidential hopefuls — themselves backed by corporate patrons — even mentions poverty. So it’s doubtful they’ve considered the sense of hopelessness that chronic unemployment might cause...



I disagree with that---while I cannot honestly say cruz, paul or Rubio use the word "poverty" specifically with regularity, every time they talk about jobs, shrinking the government, "the American dream" or "freedom" (which they do frequently) they are making direct references to people being able to move themselves out of poverty and through the economic "classes."


< Message edited by bounty44 -- 5/1/2015 3:41:52 PM >

(in reply to MrRodgers)
Profile   Post #: 4
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 3:20:27 PM   
bounty44


Posts: 6374
Joined: 11/1/2014
Status: offline
this is from ted cruz:

quote:

Government is not the answer. You are not doing anyone a favor by creating dependency, destroying individual responsibility. 55 years ago, when my dad was a penniless teenage immigrant, thank God some well-meaning bureaucrat didn't put his arm around him and say let me take care of you. Let me give you a government check and make you dependent on government. And by the way, don't bother learning English. That would have been the most destructive thing anyone could have done.


Instead, my parents worked together to start a small business, to provide for their family and to chart their own future. That's the American dream.

To restore America, to get Americans back to work, we must rein in the leviathan. We must stop spending money we don't have and turn around our crushing debt. Each of you comprises the fabric of our nation. Together, we must revive our many-century love story with liberty and restore that shining City on a Hill that is America.


http://www.ontheissues.org/Economic/Ted_Cruz_Welfare_+_Poverty.htm

and this is really neat:

quote:

Washington, D.C., March 27, 2015 – The Circle of Protection today asked Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz to record a video telling Americans what he would do to help hungry and poor people if elected.

“We are praying for a president who will make ending hunger and poverty a top priority of his or her administration. Are you that leader?” the Circle of Protection asked in a letter sent to Ted Cruz, the junior senator from Texas. A request for a three-minute video will be made of all presidential candidates as they officially enter the race for their party’s nomination.

“As national leaders from all the major branches of Christianity, we care deeply about many issues facing our country, but ending hunger and poverty is a top priority,” the religious leaders wrote.

The Circle of Protection will broadly publicize Cruz’s video among churches and the public. The Circle of Protection will not evaluate the candidates’ policy positions or endorse any candidate.


http://files.bread.org/pdf/circle-of-protection-ted-cruz.pdf


this is from rand paul:

quote:

Let me say from the outset, I will work with the President, Democrats, Independents and anyone else who wants to get people back to work and alleviate poverty in our country.

I believe in an America with a strong safety net, but one that doesn't suffocate our resolve to better ourselves and our country.

We must choose a new way, a way that empowers the individual through education and responsibility to earn a place alongside their fellow Americans in the most prosperous nation ever conceived...


I'm not against having unemployment insurance. I do think, though, that the longer you have it, that it provides some disincentive to work, and that there are many studies that indicate this. So we have to figure out how to create jobs and keep people from becoming long-term unemployed. That's why I promoted the economic freedom zones which would dramatically lower taxes in areas where there's long-term unemployment.

Education, housing, and local commerce, among many other welfare programs for citizens should be the responsibility and role of the states & communities. This budget will provide assistance to the states to perform functions like supplemental nutrition, low-income health care and other assistance needs. Not only does this significantly lower the cost to the federal government, but also it achieves the goal of bending the cost curve for these programs down.

Through reform ideas like block granting, we can provide federally assisted funds to local communities to help them facilitate and tend to those in need of such essentials such as food or health care. Such proposals would return the responsibility back to the states and promote the opportunity for states to innovate and plan based on the needs of their constituency. Most importantly, it would encourage states to take a more direct look at who is in poverty, who is receiving unnecessary aid, and to facilitate a lessened dependency on government.


http://www.ontheissues.org/Economic/Rand_Paul_Welfare_+_Poverty.htm





< Message edited by bounty44 -- 5/1/2015 3:41:03 PM >

(in reply to bounty44)
Profile   Post #: 5
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 3:21:40 PM   
Marini


Posts: 3629
Joined: 2/14/2010
Status: offline
DmSM
quote:

ORIGINAL: MrRodgers

The best statement yet on why they riot. For any objective sociological assessment as to why people would go to such extremes. This becomes a very important question...why ?

“My greater source of personal concern, outrage and sympathy beyond this particular case is focused neither upon one night’s property damage nor upon the acts."

“It is focused rather upon the past four-decade period during which an American political elite have shipped middle class and working class jobs away from Baltimore and cities and towns around the U.S. to third-world dictatorships like China and others, plunged tens of millions of good, hard-working Americans into economic devastation, and then followed that action around the nation by diminishing every American’s civil rights protections in order to control an unfairly impoverished population living under an ever-declining standard of living and suffering at the butt end of an ever-more militarized and aggressive surveillance state.”

Peter Angelos Owner of the Baltimore Orioles, responding to a sports radio broadcaster upset about earlier protests causing gate closures at Camden Yards.

Thinking of the presidential hopefuls:

Almost none of the presidential hopefuls — themselves backed by corporate patrons — even mentions poverty. So it’s doubtful they’ve considered the sense of hopelessness that chronic unemployment might cause, or the disenfranchisement a black man might experience when his very presence is treated as a problem. It might mean getting pulled over for doing nothing wrong, or being handcuffed on a walk home. Or ending up dead for selling cigarettes, or for havingthe nerve to look a police lieutenant in the eye, as Freddie Gray did.....

Angelos and Basu are exactly right.


As a BLACK African American woman, I thank you for this.
I realized LONG ago, Many non-Black folks on here, feel they are experts on how many Black people think, so I don't bother to debate on most topics dealing with race on here.

Thank you, and fucking A, Mr. Rogers
I told an elderly family member last night, that I agree with what one young man in Baltimore, stated in an interview.
....Many people have NO idea how many young Black people feel in the inner city.

As a Black woman, I agree.
When I was much younger, it was EASY to get a job, and times were much easier.

With Black unemployment at critically high levels, I don't know what it"feels like", NOT to be able to get a job, to feel like I have little to no opportunites, and to live with chronic/pervasive hopelessness.

Thank you Mr. Rogers

PEACE

< Message edited by Marini -- 5/1/2015 3:46:10 PM >


_____________________________

As always, To EACH their Own.
"And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. "
Nelson Mandela
Life-long Democrat, not happy at all with Democratic Party.
NOT a Republican/Moderate and free agent

(in reply to MrRodgers)
Profile   Post #: 6
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 3:21:46 PM   
Aylee


Posts: 24103
Joined: 10/14/2007
Status: offline
We know who is hurt by the rioting. What I want to know is:

Who is benefiting from the rioting?

_____________________________

Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam

I don’t always wgah’nagl fhtagn. But when I do, I ph’nglui mglw’nafh R’lyeh.

(in reply to bounty44)
Profile   Post #: 7
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 3:42:09 PM   
MrRodgers


Posts: 10540
Joined: 7/30/2005
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Marini

DmSM
quote:

ORIGINAL: MrRodgers

The best statement yet on why they riot. For any objective sociological assessment as to why people would go to such extremes. This becomes a very important question...why ?

“My greater source of personal concern, outrage and sympathy beyond this particular case is focused neither upon one night’s property damage nor upon the acts."

“It is focused rather upon the past four-decade period during which an American political elite have shipped middle class and working class jobs away from Baltimore and cities and towns around the U.S. to third-world dictatorships like China and others, plunged tens of millions of good, hard-working Americans into economic devastation, and then followed that action around the nation by diminishing every American’s civil rights protections in order to control an unfairly impoverished population living under an ever-declining standard of living and suffering at the butt end of an ever-more militarized and aggressive surveillance state.”

Peter Angelos Owner of the Baltimore Orioles, responding to a sports radio broadcaster upset about earlier protests causing gate closures at Camden Yards.

Thinking of the presidential hopefuls:

Almost none of the presidential hopefuls — themselves backed by corporate patrons — even mentions poverty. So it’s doubtful they’ve considered the sense of hopelessness that chronic unemployment might cause, or the disenfranchisement a black man might experience when his very presence is treated as a problem. It might mean getting pulled over for doing nothing wrong, or being handcuffed on a walk home. Or ending up dead for selling cigarettes, or for havingthe nerve to look a police lieutenant in the eye, as Freddie Gray did.....

Angelos and Basu are exactly right.


As a BLACK African American woman, I thank you for this.
I realized LONG ago, Many non-Black folks on here, feel they are experts on how many Black people think, so I don't bother to debate on most topics dealing with race on here.

Thank you, and fucking A, Mr. Rogers
I told an elderly family member last night, that I agree with what one young man in Baltimore, stated in an interview.
....Many people have NO idea how many young Black people feel in the inner city.

As a Black woman, I agree.
When I was much younger, it was EASY to get a job, and times were much easier.

With Black unemployment at critically high levels, I don't know what "feels like", NOT to be able to get a job, feel like I have little to no opportunites and live with chronic hopelessness.

Thank you Mr. Rogers

PEACE

Thanx for your comments, Marini

< Message edited by MrRodgers -- 5/1/2015 3:43:51 PM >

(in reply to Marini)
Profile   Post #: 8
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 3:51:30 PM   
bounty44


Posts: 6374
Joined: 11/1/2014
Status: offline
that's a dandy question...apart from liberal race baiters and the pandering democrats, im not sure.

bill o'reilly mentioned recently he thinks its going to take Baltimore decades to recover from this.

one thing missing so far in response to the OP (though i trust it will show up eventually) is the notion of individual responsibility. I can be oppressed, disenfranchised, and unemployed, and still I have a choice to burn and loot, or to not.

(in reply to Aylee)
Profile   Post #: 9
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 3:54:39 PM   
MrRodgers


Posts: 10540
Joined: 7/30/2005
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: bounty44

this is from ted cruz:

quote:

Government is not the answer. You are not doing anyone a favor by creating dependency, destroying individual responsibility. 55 years ago, when my dad was a penniless teenage immigrant, thank God some well-meaning bureaucrat didn't put his arm around him and say let me take care of you. Let me give you a government check and make you dependent on government. And by the way, don't bother learning English. That would have been the most destructive thing anyone could have done.


Instead, my parents worked together to start a small business, to provide for their family and to chart their own future. That's the American dream.

To restore America, to get Americans back to work, we must rein in the leviathan. We must stop spending money we don't have and turn around our crushing debt. Each of you comprises the fabric of our nation. Together, we must revive our many-century love story with liberty and restore that shining City on a Hill that is America.


http://www.ontheissues.org/Economic/Ted_Cruz_Welfare_+_Poverty.htm

and this is really neat:

quote:

Washington, D.C., March 27, 2015 – The Circle of Protection today asked Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz to record a video telling Americans what he would do to help hungry and poor people if elected.

“We are praying for a president who will make ending hunger and poverty a top priority of his or her administration. Are you that leader?” the Circle of Protection asked in a letter sent to Ted Cruz, the junior senator from Texas. A request for a three-minute video will be made of all presidential candidates as they officially enter the race for their party’s nomination.

“As national leaders from all the major branches of Christianity, we care deeply about many issues facing our country, but ending hunger and poverty is a top priority,” the religious leaders wrote.

The Circle of Protection will broadly publicize Cruz’s video among churches and the public. The Circle of Protection will not evaluate the candidates’ policy positions or endorse any candidate.


http://files.bread.org/pdf/circle-of-protection-ted-cruz.pdf


this is from rand paul:

quote:

Let me say from the outset, I will work with the President, Democrats, Independents and anyone else who wants to get people back to work and alleviate poverty in our country.

I believe in an America with a strong safety net, but one that doesn't suffocate our resolve to better ourselves and our country.

We must choose a new way, a way that empowers the individual through education and responsibility to earn a place alongside their fellow Americans in the most prosperous nation ever conceived...


I'm not against having unemployment insurance. I do think, though, that the longer you have it, that it provides some disincentive to work, and that there are many studies that indicate this. So we have to figure out how to create jobs and keep people from becoming long-term unemployed. That's why I promoted the economic freedom zones which would dramatically lower taxes in areas where there's long-term unemployment.

Education, housing, and local commerce, among many other welfare programs for citizens should be the responsibility and role of the states & communities. This budget will provide assistance to the states to perform functions like supplemental nutrition, low-income health care and other assistance needs. Not only does this significantly lower the cost to the federal government, but also it achieves the goal of bending the cost curve for these programs down.

Through reform ideas like block granting, we can provide federally assisted funds to local communities to help them facilitate and tend to those in need of such essentials such as food or health care. Such proposals would return the responsibility back to the states and promote the opportunity for states to innovate and plan based on the needs of their constituency. Most importantly, it would encourage states to take a more direct look at who is in poverty, who is receiving unnecessary aid, and to facilitate a lessened dependency on government.


http://www.ontheissues.org/Economic/Rand_Paul_Welfare_+_Poverty.htm


Government IS the answer for me as long as you and the other working stiffs will bust your ass get up 5-6 AM work the 10-12 hr days make good money or not and pay 39% top rate...while

.....that same govt. insures my crops and the govt. insures my banks deposits and securities, I can make million$ buying and selling golf courses, shopping centers and office bldgs. hold them for only a year, call it all long tern [sic] capital gains (whatever that is) or carried interest (whatever that is) give me tax and trade incentives to ship your jobs overseas, and tax allowance to keep profits offshore.....

.....and pay 1/2 as much in taxes as you suckers. Thank you govt,...thank you very much.

(in reply to bounty44)
Profile   Post #: 10
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 4:31:27 PM   
kdsub


Posts: 12180
Joined: 8/16/2007
Status: offline
If I knew how every...hell even most whites thought about anything I could make a lot more money than I do... Marini to make the claim you do is like claiming all blacks think alike and are simpletons with no complexity or varied opinion. To me it is insulting... I have neighbors they talk I talk I know how they feel they know how I feel some are black some or white we are all people with varying opinions...I know MORE about blacks close to me than you do only because we talk... so please knock off the only blacks know blacks stuff... it is simply not true. People do know people.


Butch

< Message edited by kdsub -- 5/1/2015 4:42:24 PM >


_____________________________

Mark Twain:

I don't see any use in having a uniform and arbitrary way of spelling words. We might as well make all clothes alike and cook all dishes alike. Sameness is tiresome; variety is pleasing

(in reply to Marini)
Profile   Post #: 11
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 4:47:12 PM   
MrRodgers


Posts: 10540
Joined: 7/30/2005
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

If I knew how every...hell even most whites thought about anything I could make a lot more money than I do... Marini to make the claim you do is like claiming all blacks think alike and are simpletons with no complexity or varied opinion. To me it is insulting... I have neighbors they talk I talk I know how they feel they know how I feel some are black some or white we are all people with varying opinions...I know MORE about blacks close to me than you do only because we talk... so please knock off the only blacks know blacks stuff... it is simply not true.

Butch

The point is anybody who is not black does not know and could never know what is like to BE black in any racist country which still includes the US.

There is in far too many white minds and hearts, an almost instinctive rejection of the idea that any black person could be treated like we've been hearing about recently and all across America.

Yet, there is no way any white person can know what it is really like to be black in America.

I have had many close black friends, black roommate and even a black sub. Still, I cannot know what it is like to wear their skin.

(in reply to kdsub)
Profile   Post #: 12
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 5:01:26 PM   
Aylee


Posts: 24103
Joined: 10/14/2007
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: bounty44

that's a dandy question...apart from liberal race baiters and the pandering democrats, im not sure.

bill o'reilly mentioned recently he thinks its going to take Baltimore decades to recover from this.

one thing missing so far in response to the OP (though i trust it will show up eventually) is the notion of individual responsibility. I can be oppressed, disenfranchised, and unemployed, and still I have a choice to burn and loot, or to not.


If you look at WHO riots, it is those with the least to lose by being arrested.

_____________________________

Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam

I don’t always wgah’nagl fhtagn. But when I do, I ph’nglui mglw’nafh R’lyeh.

(in reply to bounty44)
Profile   Post #: 13
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 5:35:02 PM   
kdsub


Posts: 12180
Joined: 8/16/2007
Status: offline
quote:

The point is anybody who is not black does not know and could never know what is like to BE black in any racist country which still includes the US


Mr Rodgers that is crap... try being gay in this country. There is little difference i would say in many respects... there are kinds of prejudice with many groups... try being Jewish in America...blacks have no more experience then these groups... try being Hispanic in America... you and she need to get off the high horse because many no prejudice... not just blacks

Butch

< Message edited by kdsub -- 5/1/2015 5:38:07 PM >


_____________________________

Mark Twain:

I don't see any use in having a uniform and arbitrary way of spelling words. We might as well make all clothes alike and cook all dishes alike. Sameness is tiresome; variety is pleasing

(in reply to MrRodgers)
Profile   Post #: 14
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 5:37:56 PM   
HunterCA


Posts: 2343
Joined: 6/21/2007
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: MrRodgers

The best statement yet on why they riot. For any objective sociological assessment as to why people would go to such extremes. This becomes a very important question...why ?

“My greater source of personal concern, outrage and sympathy beyond this particular case is focused neither upon one night’s property damage nor upon the acts."

“It is focused rather upon the past four-decade period during which an American political elite have shipped middle class and working class jobs away from Baltimore and cities and towns around the U.S. to third-world dictatorships like China and others, plunged tens of millions of good, hard-working Americans into economic devastation, and then followed that action around the nation by diminishing every American’s civil rights protections in order to control an unfairly impoverished population living under an ever-declining standard of living and suffering at the butt end of an ever-more militarized and aggressive surveillance state.”

Peter Angelos Owner of the Baltimore Orioles, responding to a sports radio broadcaster upset about earlier protests causing gate closures at Camden Yards.

Thinking of the presidential hopefuls:

Almost none of the presidential hopefuls — themselves backed by corporate patrons — even mentions poverty. So it’s doubtful they’ve considered the sense of hopelessness that chronic unemployment might cause, or the disenfranchisement a black man might experience when his very presence is treated as a problem. It might mean getting pulled over for doing nothing wrong, or being handcuffed on a walk home. Or ending up dead for selling cigarettes, or for having the nerve to look a police lieutenant in the eye, as Freddie Gray did.....

Angelos and Basu are exactly right.





Here's a place to start for you to fix your simplistic views.

Sorry, added link. http://www.amazon.com/Winning-Race-Beyond-Crisis-America/dp/B001G8WPP8/ref=as_at?tag=thedaibea-20&linkCode=as2&

It's always the most simplist to add a 20 second socialist sound bite. That's not very good for solving problems however.

< Message edited by HunterCA -- 5/1/2015 5:59:01 PM >

(in reply to MrRodgers)
Profile   Post #: 15
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 5:46:15 PM   
HunterCA


Posts: 2343
Joined: 6/21/2007
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: MrRodgers


quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

If I knew how every...hell even most whites thought about anything I could make a lot more money than I do... Marini to make the claim you do is like claiming all blacks think alike and are simpletons with no complexity or varied opinion. To me it is insulting... I have neighbors they talk I talk I know how they feel they know how I feel some are black some or white we are all people with varying opinions...I know MORE about blacks close to me than you do only because we talk... so please knock off the only blacks know blacks stuff... it is simply not true.

Butch

The point is anybody who is not black does not know and could never know what is like to BE black in any racist country which still includes the US.

There is in far too many white minds and hearts, an almost instinctive rejection of the idea that any black person could be treated like we've been hearing about recently and all across America.

Yet, there is no way any white person can know what it is really like to be black in America.

I have had many close black friends, black roommate and even a black sub. Still, I cannot know what it is like to wear their skin.



That is so,racist and pandering. Soo, you have to be female to be gynecologist. You have to be an addict to be a drug councilor. And so on. Racist and pandering.

(in reply to MrRodgers)
Profile   Post #: 16
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 5:52:22 PM   
BamaD


Posts: 20687
Joined: 2/27/2005
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: HunterCA


quote:

ORIGINAL: MrRodgers

The best statement yet on why they riot. For any objective sociological assessment as to why people would go to such extremes. This becomes a very important question...why ?

“My greater source of personal concern, outrage and sympathy beyond this particular case is focused neither upon one night’s property damage nor upon the acts."

“It is focused rather upon the past four-decade period during which an American political elite have shipped middle class and working class jobs away from Baltimore and cities and towns around the U.S. to third-world dictatorships like China and others, plunged tens of millions of good, hard-working Americans into economic devastation, and then followed that action around the nation by diminishing every American’s civil rights protections in order to control an unfairly impoverished population living under an ever-declining standard of living and suffering at the butt end of an ever-more militarized and aggressive surveillance state.”

Peter Angelos Owner of the Baltimore Orioles, responding to a sports radio broadcaster upset about earlier protests causing gate closures at Camden Yards.

Thinking of the presidential hopefuls:

Almost none of the presidential hopefuls — themselves backed by corporate patrons — even mentions poverty. So it’s doubtful they’ve considered the sense of hopelessness that chronic unemployment might cause, or the disenfranchisement a black man might experience when his very presence is treated as a problem. It might mean getting pulled over for doing nothing wrong, or being handcuffed on a walk home. Or ending up dead for selling cigarettes, or for having the nerve to look a police lieutenant in the eye, as Freddie Gray did.....

Angelos and Basu are exactly right.





Here's a place to start for you to fix your simplistic views.

We need to have a serious discussion about this, no honkeys allowed.

_____________________________

Government ranges from a necessary evil to an intolerable one. Thomas Paine

People don't believe they can defend themselves because they have guns, they have guns because they believe they can defend themselves.

(in reply to HunterCA)
Profile   Post #: 17
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 5:58:04 PM   
Aylee


Posts: 24103
Joined: 10/14/2007
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

quote:

The point is anybody who is not black does not know and could never know what is like to BE black in any racist country which still includes the US


Mr Rodgers that is crap... try being gay in this country. There is little difference i would say in many respects... there are kinds of prejudice with many groups... try being Jewish in America...blacks have no more experience then these groups... try being Hispanic in America... you and she need to get off the high horse because many no prejudice... not just blacks

Butch


Try being Asian, where they stack the deck AGAINST you.

_____________________________

Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam

I don’t always wgah’nagl fhtagn. But when I do, I ph’nglui mglw’nafh R’lyeh.

(in reply to kdsub)
Profile   Post #: 18
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 6:01:05 PM   
HunterCA


Posts: 2343
Joined: 6/21/2007
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Aylee


quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

quote:

The point is anybody who is not black does not know and could never know what is like to BE black in any racist country which still includes the US


Mr Rodgers that is crap... try being gay in this country. There is little difference i would say in many respects... there are kinds of prejudice with many groups... try being Jewish in America...blacks have no more experience then these groups... try being Hispanic in America... you and she need to get off the high horse because many no prejudice... not just blacks

Butch


Try being Asian, where they stack the deck AGAINST you.



Really, we have to keep them darn Asian kids out, set quotas on them or they'll take up all the good spots.

(in reply to Aylee)
Profile   Post #: 19
RE: Why they riot - 5/1/2015 6:05:36 PM   
HunterCA


Posts: 2343
Joined: 6/21/2007
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Marini

DmSM
quote:

ORIGINAL: MrRodgers

The best statement yet on why they riot. For any objective sociological assessment as to why people would go to such extremes. This becomes a very important question...why ?

“My greater source of personal concern, outrage and sympathy beyond this particular case is focused neither upon one night’s property damage nor upon the acts."

“It is focused rather upon the past four-decade period during which an American political elite have shipped middle class and working class jobs away from Baltimore and cities and towns around the U.S. to third-world dictatorships like China and others, plunged tens of millions of good, hard-working Americans into economic devastation, and then followed that action around the nation by diminishing every American’s civil rights protections in order to control an unfairly impoverished population living under an ever-declining standard of living and suffering at the butt end of an ever-more militarized and aggressive surveillance state.”

Peter Angelos Owner of the Baltimore Orioles, responding to a sports radio broadcaster upset about earlier protests causing gate closures at Camden Yards.

Thinking of the presidential hopefuls:

Almost none of the presidential hopefuls — themselves backed by corporate patrons — even mentions poverty. So it’s doubtful they’ve considered the sense of hopelessness that chronic unemployment might cause, or the disenfranchisement a black man might experience when his very presence is treated as a problem. It might mean getting pulled over for doing nothing wrong, or being handcuffed on a walk home. Or ending up dead for selling cigarettes, or for havingthe nerve to look a police lieutenant in the eye, as Freddie Gray did.....

Angelos and Basu are exactly right.


As a BLACK African American woman, I thank you for this.
I realized LONG ago, Many non-Black folks on here, feel they are experts on how many Black people think, so I don't bother to debate on most topics dealing with race on here.

Thank you, and fucking A, Mr. Rogers
I told an elderly family member last night, that I agree with what one young man in Baltimore, stated in an interview.
....Many people have NO idea how many young Black people feel in the inner city.

As a Black woman, I agree.
When I was much younger, it was EASY to get a job, and times were much easier.

With Black unemployment at critically high levels, I don't know what it"feels like", NOT to be able to get a job, to feel like I have little to no opportunites, and to live with chronic/pervasive hopelessness.

Thank you Mr. Rogers

PEACE



I don't think I'm an expert on how black people think. I know I'm not an expert on how white people think. I think it's weird to assume all people of any group think a like. But I do have some experience. I had a black sub once years ago. She'd text me while she was sitting around her kitchen table with her family. She'd tell me they were talking about how much they hated white people. I don't recall one similar kitchen table talk in my home. Yet, if one group is seeing the world through that sort of mindset, I'm pretty sure they're going to project onto me that I hate just as they do.

I know for a fact liberal's of all colors project that onto me now.

< Message edited by HunterCA -- 5/1/2015 6:06:50 PM >

(in reply to Marini)
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