A lot of the crowd violence is in response to police violence. They tear gas indiscriminately and use flash brigades against peaceful protestors. So some people take advantage and turn to useless violence. But the chaos in which that occurs is a fucking police riot. The police are not responding to chaos. They are creating chaos. They intended a beat down after the verdict from the beginning.
Natter 73: Chuck Norris only wishes he could Natter
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Two wrongs do not make a right. Where does it fucking end?
But I won't talk aobut this because I can't be calm.
Sometimes you have to draw those lines, askye. You have to be able to do your job.
I'm not surprise but I am disappointed. At the inevitability, in part.
Maybe it ends when the police are not just another criminal gang under the color of law. I'm not justifying. I'm pointing out the police are the cause, the root of what is happening. Hell for all we know the violence is being led by undercover police. There is plenty of Usa historical precedent. At minimum, tear gassing the peaceful protestors left the field free to the violent ones. That both sides are responsbile does not mean both sides are equally responsible.
I'm not talking about politics or social issues this Thanksgiving. Good luck to any relatives who try it, because I am going to shut it DOWN.
Now I've got one old friend (who's spent the 35 years of our acquaintance telling me how sexy and beautiful I am and trying to kiss me, and that's about the extent of our interaction), getting on my FB and my friends' FB telling about an old case he knew about as a lawyer that has nothing to do with the current situation, and how we'll never know what really happened, and we should trust the cops and the legal system, and look at these fools burning down their town, and I'm about to divest myself of this pompous ass once and for all.
I'm not condoning setting things on fire, but I can certainly understand the impulse to do it.
I'm not condoning setting things on fire, but I can certainly understand the impulse to do it.
I have a friend on FB with an ego the size of Jupiter who's spouting things like "Of course we all know racism is a problem, but burning things down is NOT the way to make yourselves heard! Do you REALLY think this is the way to make REAL CHANGE???" And I just want to comment "Sweetie, do you actually think any of the rioters are reading your FB posts? And if not, then who are these posts for?" (She is a very recent college graduate and is SO VERY SURE of the way the world should work. Half the time I want to hug her and half the time I want to thwack her on the head.)
burning things down is NOT the way to make yourselves heard!
What would she suggest? Peaceful protests? Petitions? Talking to the media? So far those avenues of getting yourselves heard have not been successful. No, setting shit on fire won't work either, but is really that hard to understand the frustrated helpless fury and fear that pushes someone to do it?
It's getting worse in Ferguson. I don't really want to keep watching, but I feel almost obligated. Like, paying attention is the only thing I can actually do at this moment.
What would she suggest? Peaceful protests? Petitions? Talking to the media?
She did actually go on to say, "As a woman, I am making changes through peaceful means," blah blah blah. (In terms of women's rights, according to her.) She's very young and very white and very pretty. The system is kind of on her side from the get-go.
It's getting worse in Ferguson. I don't really want to keep watching, but I feel almost obligated. Like, paying attention is the only thing I can actually do at this moment.
Me, too, except I'm falling asleep. I think I'm done for tonight even though I want to stay up.
I expected no indictment, and yet I'm surprised at how sick I feel that what I expected to happen did actually happen.
Yes, this.