No one here has claimed that it is.victimizing innocent people isn't justice.
The thirteen people who claimed the violence was justified did
No one here has claimed that it is.victimizing innocent people isn't justice.
Whatever. I have no idea where you're even going with this, or what message is supposed to be conveyed by the tee-hee-wink-wink smileys you've attached to the two replies to me. You declared that riots "are not justice". I pointed out that no one has said they are. There was nothing untrue or ambiguous about it.
The difference between justified and justice in this context is enormous and significant.
No one here has claimed that it is.victimizing innocent people isn't justice.
The thirteen people who claimed the violence was justified did
Ah. Thank you for the clarification. You believe incorrectly.I never stated the two words had the same meaning, but I did state and do believe posters here have insinuated that these riots equate to justice. Oh and...![]()
I'm always saddened by the abject "othering" that arises from conflict. Situations like this are far from binary, yet so many engage in oversimplification, and othering ... leading to a dehumanization of the people involved.
Of course, that's also one of the root causes of what's transpiring. But that's a subtlety that is clearly being ignored by a lot of posts in this thread.
Cops aren't innocent bystanders. It's not about "their lives don't count", obviously. No one should be dying, just in general. That said, it's hard to muster of a great deal of sympathy for cops getting injured while doing a terrible job of handling riots and protests that are themselves a direct result of police abusing and murdering people and never being held accountable . "Protestors injured cops" again falls behind "cops murdered black people", not in front of it.
False equivalency.I'm curious, if someone beats you up or burns your house down and gives the excuse that he's angry at how society has treated him would you be okay with it?
False equivalency.I'm curious, if someone beats you up or burns your house down and gives the excuse that he's angry at how society has treated him would you be okay with it?
Unless you're insinuating the the subject of our little tall tale is putting his house (or person) in the middle of a demonstration for the express purpose of containing said demonstration.
People on food stamps provide no service to the taxpayers, they are simply given assistance in return for nothing.
People on food stamps provide no service to the taxpayers, they are simply given assistance in return for nothing.
WRONG.
They spend those Food Stamp benefits in the consumer marketplace and help fuel the economy, spurring sales and the growth of grocery stores and other retailers who sell their food to those Food Stamp recipients. In an era when so much of what we call money is just electronic numbers in a vast, global and interlinked computer network Food Stamp benefits are no less a valid form of currency than a handwritten check, a charge on a credit or debit card or cash.
You think they return nothing to society and the economy, but that's just one more thing you're sorely misinformed about. And let's not forget that most Food Stamp recipients actually do hold jobs and have gainful employment but don't earn enough to successfully feed themselves and their families without those benefits. None of this is news for anybody who actually wants to know the real statistics about who gets Food Stamps and why.
False equivalency.I'm curious, if someone beats you up or burns your house down and gives the excuse that he's angry at how society has treated him would you be okay with it?
Unless you're insinuating the the subject of our little tall tale is putting his house (or person) in the middle of a demonstration for the express purpose of containing said demonstration.
It's not a false equivalency. Businesses were burned down. People's livelihood was destroyed. 150 vehicles were destroyed. What if that was your vehicle destroyed? What did the owners of those businesses do to deserve that?
See, while you guys empathize with criminals, most of whom the mayor herself said doesn't give a shit about the community, I empathize with the actual residents who no longer have a place to work or means of transportation. I used the house example hoping that maybe, just maybe, you could put yourself in THOSE peoples shoes.
You mean they're "job creators"?
False equivalency.
Unless you're insinuating the the subject of our little tall tale is putting his house (or person) in the middle of a demonstration for the express purpose of containing said demonstration.
It's not a false equivalency. Businesses were burned down. People's livelihood was destroyed. 150 vehicles were destroyed. What if that was your vehicle destroyed? What did the owners of those businesses do to deserve that?
See, while you guys empathize with criminals, most of whom the mayor herself said doesn't give a shit about the community, I empathize with the actual residents who no longer have a place to work or means of transportation. I used the house example hoping that maybe, just maybe, you could put yourself in THOSE peoples shoes.
Of course it's a false equivalency. The post you quoted referred explicitly to police. And your post launched into an unrelated tangent about completely innocent bystanders.
To avoid false equivalencies, please do make sure posts are more accurate in their responses.
Furthermore, your latest response builds quite the strawman, considering I've yet to see anyone justify the actions of looting and destruction
- rather, justify the emotions behind the acts - and point to the fact that the situation is bigger than one night of violence.
As I mentioned previously, this is a subtlety missed in many posts in this thread (including the one I quoted just now). One can certainly express empathy for the motivations behind the acts, while also condemning the acts themselves. As Ta-Nehisi Coates said, "none of this can mean that rioting or violence is 'correct' or 'wise,' any more than a forest fire can be 'correct' or 'wise.'"
This situation is far from a binary analysis. And yet that is precisely what the post I quoted did.
Such a shame. But that, too, is part of why all of this happened in the first places ...
Nope. This is no longer true. Not only as it applies to Gray's death specifically (or Brown's death if we're talking about cops in Ferguson, or Garner's death if we are talking about cops in NYC, etc), but also in general. Firstly, the history of racist and abusive tactics within the Baltimore PD are part of what's fueling these protests. Even keeping things centered on Baltimore itself, this goes beyond one man's death and those specific few cops responsible for it. But it also goes far beyond just Baltimore. The blue wall, "not all cops/most cops are good" nonsense, that these things have been allowed to escalate unchecked, and the NUMEROUS instances of absolutely disgusting and unacceptable behavior on the part of police officers in a number of cities (that is, behavior aside from, but generally connected to, the murders themselves) have voided this entire concept. "A few bad apples" is apologist nonsense. Police culture and doctrine is entirely fucked up, and that is one of the primary drivers of this entire situation. "Figuring out who the bad cops are and throwing them out or punishing them" is not only not happening anyway (no one ever gets punished), but it's also not possible nor constructive to actually solving this problem.Cops aren't innocent bystanders. It's not about "their lives don't count", obviously. No one should be dying, just in general. That said, it's hard to muster of a great deal of sympathy for cops getting injured while doing a terrible job of handling riots and protests that are themselves a direct result of police abusing and murdering people and never being held accountable . "Protestors injured cops" again falls behind "cops murdered black people", not in front of it.
The cops responsible have been suspended pending the investigation. So the only cops injured yesterday were ones who had nothing to do with gray's death.
Of course not. You posed this to me after I clarified that beating up innocent reporters was beyond the pale even within the context of my "it is justified in general" stance, so yeah. I've answered this already re: being beaten up.I'm curious, if someone beats you up or burns your house down and gives the excuse that he's angry at how society has treated him would you be okay with it?
I was reffering to far more than the post I quoted. Had you taken the time to follow the conversation in the previous posts you would have known that... I have a better idea, don't inject yourself in the middle of a conversation unless you know what all has been discussed.
So which is it? Are we following the conversation? Or going back to the OP? Or are we just picking and choosing in order to buttress posts that are bereft of any supporting rationality? Consistency is helpful in discussions such as these.Had you taken the time to follow the conversation in the previous posts ... The OP wasn't asking if anyone empathized with the looters. He was asking if their acts were justified.
Sort of like in the days when Rosa Parks was arrested for not giving up her seat to a white man in the "colored section" in the back of the bus. The resulting boycott of public transit caused a major economic problem for the bus company. White citizens' groups bombed black homes, churches, and businesses in retaliation, besides the constant demeaning treatment and lynchings that had been going on for decades.You mean they're "job creators"?
Funny how the world often works, huh? When the right-wingers scapegoat the most vulnerable people they end up hurting the bottom lines of their own.
I get where you're coming from but, to me, it's not about the violence so much as it is about a repressed population reaching its breaking point. Throughout history, repressed peoples have reached their breaking points. And while the specific acts may not be defensible, the motivations behind those acts are certainly understandable. And defensible.Sort of like in the days when Rosa Parks was arrested for not giving up her seat to a white man in the "colored section" in the back of the bus. The resulting boycott of public transit caused a major economic problem for the bus company. White citizens' groups bombed black homes, churches, and businesses in retaliation, besides the constant demeaning treatment and lynchings that had been going on for decades.You mean they're "job creators"?
Funny how the world often works, huh? When the right-wingers scapegoat the most vulnerable people they end up hurting the bottom lines of their own.
Whether or not one thinks the violence was justified, sometimes payback's a mofo.
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