Baltimore Protests and Riots

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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by Ziggy Stardust »

The Romulan Republic wrote: Also, perhaps he could clarify what his meaning was rather than you presuming to speak for him.
He got it right. I'm not really in the mood for a drawn-out post on the subject, but Alyrium covered a lot of what I would have wanted to say.
The Romulan Republic wrote: Jesus Christ. When did arguing in favour of non-violence and the rule of law start to mean getting branded a moron and a racist?
For the record, I wasn't trying to brand you a moron or anything. I don't intend to speak for anyone else, but my main interest in challenging you was simply to figure out where you draw the linen on the necessity of violence and whatnot. It's not even so much that I disagree with your stance, but rather that anyone I see someone make a strong statement like the ones you made I am interested in pushing them on it. A lot of times people have a tendency to take strong stances on issues without thinking about them critically, and even when I agree with the stance I still want them to think about it more.

If I came off as combative, I apologize. Sometimes the board culture here can be a little infectiously antagonistic (also, sometimes it's just fun to insult someone for absolutely no reason whatsoever, you filthy cunt-sucking fuckbrain).
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by The Romulan Republic »

I don't think that last comment was directed primarily at you. And I'm happy to debate anyone on the subject, or clarify my position, so long as the discussion is an honest and accurate one.

Alyrium Denryle (and any others I've missed), apologies for not replying fully to your posts yet. I'm rather busy at the moment but I'll try to reply soon. In my defence, do keep in mind that I am debating several people here and that I have a life outside this forum.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by Alyrium Denryle »

The Romulan Republic wrote:I don't think that last comment was directed primarily at you. And I'm happy to debate anyone on the subject, or clarify my position, so long as the discussion is an honest and accurate one.

Alyrium Denryle (and any others I've missed), apologies for not replying fully to your posts yet. I'm rather busy at the moment but I'll try to reply soon. In my defence, do keep in mind that I am debating several people here and that I have a life outside this forum.

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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by Sidewinder »

I think the following news is related.
New York Post wrote:Food worker fired after praising death of two cops

By Chris Perez

May 10, 2015 | 2:18pm

<snips photo>

A Subway sandwich shop worker sparked outrage on Twitter with her social media posts celebrating Saturday’s killing of two Mississippi cops — and now she’s been fired.

“This behavior is unacceptable & does not represent our brand’s values & ethics,” Subway tweeted Sunday night, in response to the backlash. “The franchise has terminated the employee.”

<snips images of Twitter posts>

Sierra “C-Babi” McCurdy, of Laurel, Miss., ultimately lost her job because she praised the cold-blooded murders of Hattiesburg cops Benjamin Deen, 34, and Liquori Tate, 25, after they were gunned down in the line of duty during a routine traffic stop Saturday night.

“2 police officers was shot in hattiesburg tonight…GOT EM,” the Subway employee exulted on Facebook. “We can turn this bxtch into Baltimore real quick….Police take away innocent people lives everyday now & get away w/ it, fxck them…no mercy.”

Twitter users expressed outrage at her remarks — and that the sandwich giant would have a person like that working for them.

“Wow. This piece of trash was celebrating the death of two policeman in Hattiesburg. Your [employee], @Subway,” one person tweeted.

Three suspects have been arrested in connection with the brutal killings. Two have been charged with multiple counts of capital murder, while the third was charged with two counts of accessory after the fact to capital murder. A fourth person has been charged with obstruction of justice.

Authorities have not released a motive for the cold-blooded killings.

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Yes, C-Babi McCurdy (the former Subway employee) is a black woman. Before anyone accuses Subway of racism, note Liquori Tate, one of the murdered police officers, was BLACK. (Benjamin Deen, the other murdered officer, can be seen here.)
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by The Romulan Republic »

Why would anyone (besides a complete lunatic or imbecile) think Subway was racist for firing someone who supported murder because she was black?

Oh right, this is the thread where people are defending rioting. Maybe they also think gunning down cops is okay too.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by K. A. Pital »

It is more complicated than 'rawr, kill cops' or full-throttle legalism which you are supporting here, TRR, but I am not going to explain the underlying reasons for riots, it has been done thousands of times before.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by The Romulan Republic »

Obviously their are other positions besides the extremes you described, I never said otherwise, and I accept that their are situations where it is justified to break the law (I have no problem with non-violent civil disobedience as a rule). And someone with your long history and position of authority on this board should know better than to use straw men.

Also, you seem to be under the impression that I don't understand why people riot. That may or may not be true (I can't speak for what's going through every rioter's mind) but regardless, its not why I oppose the riots. I oppose them because I believe that they are morally wrong regardless of the reasons. Understanding why someone does something is not the same as believing it is excusable. I could make a good guess about why many Germans supported Hitler or Al Qaida flew planes into buildings. Doesn't fucking make it right.

Fucking balls. Is it so hard to have an honest debate based on what I actually say?

In a bizarre way, I almost take the straw men as a compliment- they suggest that my arguments are sufficiently good that you feel you have to lie to win. But of course, maybe you just misunderstood.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by The Romulan Republic »

Actually, to be fair, I may have given the impression that I am in favour of strict legality in all circumstances. Allow me to clarify that that is not the case.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by K. A. Pital »

Be careful as not to fall victim to old Godwin: comparing rioters in a city known for problems with police abuse of power to Nazis is the dumbest I have seen in a while. I am not strawmanning your position: you really think riots are morally wrong regardless of the reasons. This means you confine yourself to non-violence at all costs, like Ghandi. Needless to say, some people took hard decisions and he got all the glory, but never once it was remembered that Ghandi advised the Jews to go die in ovens without resistance.

Meanwhile, resistance to authority that is abusive is never clean. It is most often tainted by criminal element (which puts off all the white-gloves moralists from people who are, at times, fighting the good fight with the only methods known or considered efficient by themselves).

That is not to say Baltimore in particular is justified: I have no fucking idea, I am not there you know... But I want to remind you that the rule of law is generally a rule of law for the upper class, considering how many of them walk unharmed for crimes that can put the low man in jail for a good part of his life. I want to remind you that representative democracy is not excusing abuse of power, and it makes no fucking difference to John Doe killed, maimed or put in jail though police abuse, that a fat cat changes another fat cat once in a while in the White House and the Congress. Zero difference, in fact.

I went through it myself. People took part in elections but the cops kept mutilating people through beating, extorting money in protection rackets, including drug money, all while everyone extolled the virtues of democracy.

And even though my view of the First World is that their life level greatly exceeds everything that hitherto existed, some places and some situations even there are grim enough to justify riots. And that said, I want to reiterate that this is my general opinion: I have not been following the events in Baltimore closely.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by The Romulan Republic »

K. A. Pital wrote:Be careful as not to fall victim to old Godwin: comparing rioters in a city known for problems with police abuse of power to Nazis is the dumbest I have seen in a while.
I did not say the rioters are like Nazis. I was using the Nazis as an example (admittedly an extreme one) to illustrate that understanding why someone does something is not the same as approving of it.
I am not strawmanning your position: you really think riots are morally wrong regardless of the reasons.
Pretty much, though I accept that their are extreme situations where violence can be justified, as I've already said in this thread I believe.
This means you confine yourself to non-violence at all costs, like Ghandi.
That does not follow at all. It means that I object to a specific form of indiscriminate violence.
Needless to say, some people took hard decisions and he got all the glory, but never once it was remembered that Ghandi advised the Jews to go die in ovens without resistance.
Your implication that Ghandi's decision to stand by non-violence even in the face of oppression was not a hard decision is rather offensive. Of course, "hard decisions" is a euphemism for "The ends justify the means."

Also, you falsely equated my position to Ghandi's, then attacked Ghandi's character to attack me by proxy, all while pulling the Nazi card as you criticized me for doing.
Meanwhile, resistance to authority that is abusive is never clean. It is most often tainted by criminal element (which puts off all the white-gloves moralists from people who are, at times, fighting the good fight with the only methods known or considered efficient by themselves).
I don't condemn all resistance to authority because of criminal elements, but I do condemn the criminal elements unless their are circumstances that I feel justify their crimes. What's wrong with that?
That is not to say Baltimore in particular is justified: I have no fucking idea, I am not there you know... But I want to remind you that the rule of law is generally a rule of law for the upper class,
Might I suggest that you are viewing this issue through the lens of your admitted communist ideology and that that is prejudicing you?
considering how many of them walk unharmed for crimes that can put the low man in jail for a good part of his life. I want to remind you that representative democracy is not excusing abuse of power, and it makes no fucking difference to John Doe killed, maimed or put in jail though police abuse, that a fat cat changes another fat cat once in a while in the White House and the Congress. Zero difference, in fact.
Of course democracy doesn't excuse abuse of power. I never said anything to the contrary, so why you should feel that you need to explain this to me...

I do hate the "All politicians are the same" refrain that is implied here, though. Its a tired, trite line spouted by simple minds.
I went through it myself. People took part in elections but the cops kept mutilating people through beating, extorting money in protection rackets, including drug money, all while everyone extolled the virtues of democracy.
Democracy can be abused, of course. But that doesn't mean that its a bad idea.
And even though my view of the First World is that their life level greatly exceeds everything that hitherto existed, some places and some situations even there are grim enough to justify riots. And that said, I want to reiterate that this is my general opinion: I have not been following the events in Baltimore closely.
I doubt rioting is ever a good course of action. Its excessive in a situation where violence is not warranted, potentially ineffective in situations bad enough to warrant violence revolt, and indiscriminate.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by K. A. Pital »

So you are calling me a simpleton for saying that it does not matter to the average victim of abuse that he has the option to vote for a bag of fat cats once every few years? I do not say it does not matter in principle, but to say that victims of abuse should never resort to violence unless under threat of death or something like it... is a pretty strong statement, which is why I disagreed with it in the first place.

Though you failed to understand the core of my argument: the system is always imperfect and, as all large organizations, it is generally insensitive to local abuse and injustice. As in, always insensitive. The comment on the rule of law I made is general: it is a general situation with rare exceptions that a rich and connected person will be protected, while the low-life commoner will not be, and the presumption of innocence is not equal for both. This is a fundamental property of the system, one that could not be cured in several hundred years.

The system is very sensitive to violence, however, because it easily spreads, because it is carried by mass-media and because violence undermines the public order (status-quo) on which the system rests.

This is why violence, more often than not, is more efficient at bringing attention to local or even global problems in the system.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by The Romulan Republic »

It is true that injustice is common, though to accept it as universal or near-universal is to invite apathy or nihilism, but I would still caution against overgeneralizing.

Also violence may get attention, but it also has a tendency to hurt innocent people, cause unnecessary harm, and make it easy to paint the perpetrator and their cause as bad and give legitimacy to harsh crackdowns.

And I'm deeply skeptical of the idea that violence is any more likely to bring reform. Elections sometimes replace one bad politician with another, but history is fucking packed with tyrannical governments overthrown by brutal revolutionaries who became oppressive in turn.

Or to quote the work of Terry Pratchett: "Don't put your trust in revolutions. They always come around again. That's why they're called revolutions. People die, and nothing changes."
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

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K. A. Pital wrote:The system is very sensitive to violence, however, because it easily spreads, because it is carried by mass-media and because violence undermines the public order (status-quo) on which the system rests.

This is why violence, more often than not, is more efficient at bringing attention to local or even global problems in the system.
So? If all you care about is the spectacle and not the harm deliberately inflicted on innocent third parties, how does that make you any better than a run-of-the-mill terrorist? Osama bin Laden may have been acting to draw attention to his list of demands, but that does not make his murder of nearly three thousand American civilians justified.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by K. A. Pital »

Well surely the death of half a million or more Afghanis, Iraqis and others caused by the actions of a perfectly legitimate, popular and duly elected American government is much better than Osama's actions. Every instance of violence has to be approved by some higher up, otherwise this violence is bad. Violence by rioteers harms innocents, therefore is bad. That is what they teach at the obedience school, I guess.

Am I supposed to really live in the same world where, say, Churchill or the far more recent Bush Jr are 'statesmen' and fine people, while Osama bin Laden is the personification of evil and the worst human ever imaginable?

Am I supposed to take the stance that some poor rioteer causing random destruction without any sort of coordination is worse than the legitimate and duly elected government, which routinely tortures dozens of people and murders thousands upon thousands of innocents?

Surely there has to be a way to end this madness, no? So far I noticed that the 'peace' president that s supposed to end the Bush crimes had gotten involved in a civil war in Libya, carelessly sponsored islamists in Syria through Turkey and House of Saud, has not prosecuted people responsible for torture in Afghanistan and Iraq, has not closed Guantanamo.

So pardon me for being a nihilist in your eyes. My experience shows that a lifetime of talk sometimes cannot achieve even the simplest goals.

And pardon me for having the audacity not to bow to neither the authority of the government, especially a criminal one, nor the "authority" of Terry Pratchett, and not being so skeptical towards the observation - not and idea! - that change sometimes, and perhaps often, is brought by violence.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

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K. A. Pital wrote:Surely there has to be a way to end this madness, no?
Not making yourself part of the problem is a start. You don't seem to comprehend that not all change is good, and that indiscriminate violence is rather shit at producing the sort of change that any decent person would actually want. Do you really think that looting and burning the businesses which any urban community requires to survive is going to do anything but make their situation worse?
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by K. A. Pital »

For starters, an anti-corruption drive inside the police and harsh punishments for the guilty policemen could happen as a result. Of course, it would be better to achieve this result without any violence whatsoever. That goes without saying. But how many times has this happened? How many times the people silently accepted that the police walk free whever there is wrongdoing on their part?

I believe that it happens way more often than riots, which only happen when the public indignation reaches a critical mass.

I am a "part of the problem" how exactly? I have not voted for any of the murderous motherfuckers ruling the world's major powers. I accept the right of the public to rise up as they see fit, peacefully or even non-peacefully, if peaceful actions do not produce a visible result and the corruption remains in place. I am against pointless violence, but I accept that it can have a point, and even a riot that spirals out of control can eventually bring about something good, like Haymarket was an important stepping stone in the fight for the eight-hour day, despite all the violence involved. I guess that makes me a part of some problem in the eyes of others. Duh.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

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The Romulan Republic wrote:Two: demonstrate that violence is a more effective way of bringing change than non-violence or shut the fuck up. Their have been a lot of riots without America's problems over race being solved. And while I am aware that their was violence a-plenty during the civil rights movement of the sixties, who everyone remembers now, the one who had the greatest impact, is Martin Luther King.
Two points:

1) What children are taught today, and have been taught for several decades, is a white-washed version of MLK, Jr. He was not a saint, and while he preferred non-violence, violence not completely off the table.

2) He was the alternative to Malcom X (and similar), who scared the fuck out of white America because he demanded his rights "by any means necessary".

Being the more the "reasonable" [racial slur] (by the definition of those in power) when things started to burn the majority took MLK's deal over that of Malcolm X, because he was less scary. Subsequently, MLK has been a bit deified by both sides.

MLK would NOT have had his "greatest impact" had not other more violent people been ready to take to the streets.

I will also point out that, in addition to MLK, Malcolm X, several Black Panthers, and other well known figures being executed a lot of ordinary people died during the Civil Rights Movement, or were maimed. Until some members of the majority are willing to "switch sides" and throw in with the minorities (as happened during the 1960's) the majority isn't likely to give a fuck because it's "them" being hurt, not the "us" they care about. Which is why it's so damn important to those who want to maintain the status quo to drive a wedge between different factions, keep people segregated, and spread stories about how awful "they" are.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by The Romulan Republic »

Broomstick wrote:
The Romulan Republic wrote:Two: demonstrate that violence is a more effective way of bringing change than non-violence or shut the fuck up. Their have been a lot of riots without America's problems over race being solved. And while I am aware that their was violence a-plenty during the civil rights movement of the sixties, who everyone remembers now, the one who had the greatest impact, is Martin Luther King.
Two points:

1) What children are taught today, and have been taught for several decades, is a white-washed version of MLK, Jr. He was not a saint, and while he preferred non-violence, violence not completely off the table.
Already discussed.
2) He was the alternative to Malcom X (and similar), who scared the fuck out of white America because he demanded his rights "by any means necessary".
I know about Malcom X.
Being the more the "reasonable" [racial slur] (by the definition of those in power) when things started to burn the majority took MLK's deal over that of Malcolm X, because he was less scary. Subsequently, MLK has been a bit deified by both sides.
I think it is a massive oversimplification to say that the majority supported Martin Luthor King simply because they were scared of Malcolm X, but I don't know for certain.

In any case, I find the idea that people will only change because of violence or a threat and the implication that human beings are generally insusceptible to reason, morality, compassion, or anything else more subtle or less forceful, too cynical and misanthropic.
MLK would NOT have had his "greatest impact" had not other more violent people been ready to take to the streets.
I'd say that its impossible to say exactly what impact he would have had in a hypothetical alternate universe where their was no violent resistance or threat of the same.
I will also point out that, in addition to MLK, Malcolm X, several Black Panthers, and other well known figures being executed a lot of ordinary people died during the Civil Rights Movement, or were maimed. Until some members of the majority are willing to "switch sides" and throw in with the minorities (as happened during the 1960's) the majority isn't likely to give a fuck because it's "them" being hurt, not the "us" they care about. Which is why it's so damn important to those who want to maintain the status quo to drive a wedge between different factions, keep people segregated, and spread stories about how awful "they" are.
Yes, I know that violence occurred. More committed by the state and white racists (the side that at least partially lost) than by the civil rights movement though, surely.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

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I'd say that was true up until the assassinations of the 1960's, at which point we started seeing the inner city ghettos burn in self-destructive riots.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by K. A. Pital »

The Romulan Republic wrote:I'd say that its impossible to say exactly what impact he would have had in a hypothetical alternate universe where their was no violent resistance or threat of the same.
Exactly. There has not been, or there has very rarely been a situation where the demands of the protesters were not be supported by a threat of violence, the credibility of which has been either proven earlier or even concurrently with the protest movement itself. There is nothing too cynical in accepting it as a fact of history. People are much more susceptible to reason when the party that reasons with them can back up their demands with something. It could be numbers, and it could be dedication. As for compassion, you will find - if you somehow change the sheltered life you lead - that this particular thing is lacking rather severely, and lacking almost everywhere in the world. So people are not terribly compassionate, especially if suffering of others is unseen or remote. Out of sight - out of mind, they say.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by Patroklos »

Yeah, I am pretty sure the majority of protestors have no threat of violence. The million man march? Zero threat of violence. All the protesters outside the Supreme Court on either side on any given day? Zero threat of violence. All the random dudes of all flavors I see on the national mall every time I visit? Zero threats of violence. Native Americans protesting Adam Sandler movies? Zero threat of violence. Union members picketing Tennessee VW plants? Zero threats of violence. Students refusing to pay their student loan bills? Zero threat of violence. Students carrying their mattresses around? Zero threat of violence. All the minimum wage protestors? Zero threat of violence. Even the majority of the current anti police protests outside of the ground zeros have no threat of violence. The examples go on and on. Now maybe you can say they are ineffective because of that, but its a bald face lie to say most protestors are backing up their positions with threats of violence.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by Ziggy Stardust »

The Romulan Republic wrote: Oh right, this is the thread where people are defending rioting. Maybe they also think gunning down cops is okay too.
You know, for someone who has complained constantly in this thread how your position is being misrepresented/strawmanned, you have quite a habit of completely misrepresenting other people's arguments as well. You keep twisting other people's arguments to fit your overzealous black/white fallacy. Not a single person in this thread has made an argument that gunning down cops is somehow okay.

And, here, you do it again:
In any case, I find the idea that people will only change because of violence or a threat and the implication that human beings are generally insusceptible to reason, morality, compassion, or anything else more subtle or less forceful, too cynical and misanthropic.
Luckily, nobody in this thread is making that argument. I mean, is this deliberate obtuseness on your part?
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by K. A. Pital »

Patroklos wrote:Now maybe you can say they are ineffective because of that, but its a bald face lie to say most protestors are backing up their positions with threats of violence.
I meant historic, successful long-running protest movements, which quite often involved some violence, but it has not prevented people from recognizing the goals of the protesters as fully legitimate, and may in fact have contributed to their eventual success. This especially concerns the situations where the protesters routinely face discrimination and violence themselves. In case the protesters are not threatened by anything and are not driven to the brink, protests rarely escalate into riots, which I already mentioned.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by The Romulan Republic »

Ziggy Stardust wrote:You know, for someone who has complained constantly in this thread how your position is being misrepresented/strawmanned, you have quite a habit of completely misrepresenting other people's arguments as well. You keep twisting other people's arguments to fit your overzealous black/white fallacy. Not a single person in this thread has made an argument that gunning down cops is somehow okay.


Overzealous? Black/white fallacy? Why? Because I believe that their are some things that are not justifiable? Because I am not a complete moral relativist? Because I actually have moral principles?

I've even accepted that their are situations where violence can be justified, so I'm not an absolute pacifist. How far do I have to go before I'm sufficient moderate (and isn't that an ironic word to apply to embracing the use of violence)?

In any case, it was simply a statement of fact that some people here are defending rioting. And when I then see talk about weather its racist to fire someone for supporting the killing of police, its not hard to wonder if some people here might support killing cops as well. And I didn't say any did, merely raised the possibility. In any case, I believe it was intended as an insult, not just a factual statement. Ie, if you can support this, how low are you willing to sink?
And, here, you do it again:
In any case, I find the idea that people will only change because of violence or a threat and the implication that human beings are generally insusceptible to reason, morality, compassion, or anything else more subtle or less forceful, too cynical and misanthropic.
Luckily, nobody in this thread is making that argument. I mean, is this deliberate obtuseness on your part?
Have you not read K. A. Pital's posts? He may not be claiming that literally every human being can only change for violence or threats, but he is pretty much saying that people as a whole will not support reform without at least a threat of violence. And I do find that cynical and misanthropic.
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Re: Baltimore Protests and Riots

Post by Channel72 »

Romulan Republic wrote:Yes, I know that violence occurred. More committed by the state and white racists (the side that at least partially lost) than by the civil rights movement though, surely.
Meh... it depends. Witness the fate of Newark, New Jersey - massive riots, looting and destruction. The city still hasn't recovered to this day.

This isn't an argument in favor of violent riots, of course. But it's certainly a convenient historical warning.

Of course, this also demonstrates that oftentimes the result of minorities rioting is for the white people to just get the fuck out of Dodge, leaving behind a ghost-town of dollar stores, liquor stores, poverty, crime and misery.
Last edited by Channel72 on 2015-05-14 03:35pm, edited 4 times in total.
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