A worldwide movement and one American city reallocates 8% of their money to at risk youths? Consider me impressed. That's some real revolutionary Thomas Paine shit right there. I bet a well organized localized activist could of have done that on their own. And my point was its inappropriate to dissect deceased victims and someone needs to step out from behind the posters and conjure up the balls to deliver a speech in front of the Lincoln Memorial and articulate what they want instead of coloring BLM on the streets. The movement went away before, and it will go away again. It will exhaust itself in its own block parties. As I said, I agree with some of the issues, to some extent. But this is a mob. Not a movement. And its the most ill conceived thing I have ever seen in my life. It is purposely without confession or constitution because it has none. Where is their civil rights bill? Makinge a completely necessary profession undesirable. Good luck when the private militias fill the vacuum. Is there systemic racism? Duh. Has there been progress. Duh. How about we reflect on both and how there is blame to go around. Oh, that's right. We can't have that discussion. We can't contest the hypothesis. We must simply kneel to it's obvious truth.Peanut wrote: ↑Mon Jun 15, 2020 7:59 pmWell I dunno what would qualify as "real" in your book (to me that just sounds like a pseudo bar) but BLM has already caused changes that would never have happened if recent events hadn't unfolded the way they have. Garcetti clawed back 150mil from the LAPD (8% of their budget) and redirected it to programs aimed at helping at-risk youth among others. Police are being phased out of public schools across the country. These are just the headlines I've seen in the last couple when I wasn't even looking for them. The movement seems to have grown almost as exponentially as Covid in the last few weeks, and I doubt it's going anywhere anytime soon either. Cop is probably the second most undesirable job in America today now, after ER doctor.
BLM uses images of victims because it is victims of excessive police force that are its focus. Why would it be appropriate to dissect deceased victims? Whatever the crimes of any of the victims, capital punishment was not the just penalty for any of them.
Slavery had Frederick Douglas. The Holocaust had Elie Weisel. The Civil right movement had MLK, Jr. Apartheid had Mandela. They articulated the agenda. Wrote about the issues. Led those who wanted to be involved for the cause. BLM? A large scale tantrum. And people get tired of listening to people throwing tantrums. Even if they may be right on certain points. I mean that's just Common Sense.