calbear93 said:
sycasey said:
calbear93 said:
sycasey said:
calbear93 said:
sycasey said:
calbear93 said:
sycasey said:
LMK5 said:
Matthew Patel said:
LMK5 said:
Where's the protest march to bring attention to the killing of Bernell Trammell, a black man who committed the crime of favoring Trump over Biden? I haven't seen any marches in his name. It's interesting how the protesters pick their enemy of the moment. Look at it for what it is. The thugs are opportunists who have found a way to act out against society during a time they believe they can get away with it. They don't give a rip about anyone. They're angry at their own failings and have found a convenient outlet. Nobody who's breaking stuff at 3AM has a real life.
It's so funny how you see things written in the RWNJ rags that all of these so-called independent thinkers read and you know that soon, the same exact tripe you read somewhere else will eventually make it to a RWNJ near you.
Is LMK5 particularly knowledgeable about black men in Milwaukee who get killed? Of course he isn't. He's as unknowledgeable about that as any other number of subjects he speaks on. But he's been told what to believe by his "information" sources and now he has something to be outraged about.
Show me the protests against the carnage in Chicago. Show me the marches showing support for Bernell Trammell. Show me the protests against rising crime in NYC.
Maybe conservative groups should try organizing those. If their positions are popular enough they should have no trouble attracting crowds.
Well, people like LMK5 are not pretending to be the white savior for the minorities. And whether something is popular (relatively) does not mean it is worthwhile. The protesters who are still protesting to this day two months after the incident are not adding incremental value, especially in the middle of a pandemic.
Okay, but so what? LMK5 was not making an argument against the efficacy of the protests there, in fact his point entirely rests upon the idea that protests ARE effective and WHY don't these liberals protest these things that conservatives care about? Only why would they? Can't people who care about those issues also organize their own demonstrations? What's stopping them?
(This leaving aside Unit2's entirely logical point that protests against police violence are protests against the government and actions taken in its name, while street violence by private citizens is not something that can be protested in the same fashion.)
Or is this exchange really just about trying to catch liberals being hypocritical and not actually about solving social issues?
For me, it was just the sheer stupidity of white woke crowd still vandalizing buildings two months after George Floyd, thinking that there are still people who have not made up their mind and will be influenced by another burning of buildings. I don't even view them as protesters like I did with those who understandably rose up in anger demanding change soon after George Floyd. These hooligans don't really care about George Floyd or inner city violence. They just want to burn **** up under the pretense of social justice.
Again: there are people who legitimately want to protest for the cause and there are those who want to wreck stuff. IMO the latter group is much smaller but gets much more outsized coverage.
However, my expectation is that the latter group will also fall away naturally if there is no more instigation from authorities. Early results from Portland after the feds left are encouraging.
I don't see a lot of legitimate protesting late in July.
So what would be "legitimate protesting" to you? Do you think every individual that attends these protests is burning things? If they aren't doing that then they are engaging in legitimate protest. You might not agree with their cause, but it's perfectly legal to do so.
I get the sense from you guys that you think our cities are literally burning down right now. They're not. These are largely isolated events that don't affect most of the population.
You and I either have different tolerance for harm brought to others by these vandals or we are living in a different world. What is going on in Seattle and Portland are not protesters who are trying to raise awareness. Who, after two months, are not aware? What is the purpose? What would cause you to be concerned for the people living in Seattle and Portland or the business owners? Actual burning of every building? How about those buildings and stores they are actually burning down and defacing? What percentage is acceptable to you? And how do you explain to the residents and store owners that this is just the price of getting the message out to people who have been in a coma for the last two months and have not heard about the cause? This is where you and I part ways on what we accept as just legitimate protest versus mayhem by criminals.
I see an interesting analogue here (to me anyway) between the highlighted viewpoint you're espousing and how GOP politics on the state and national levels have gone over the past 2+ decades (and yes, I'm only framing this back to the 90's because that's the earliest I could reasonably be expected to have any understanding of politics at all). Granted, this is going to be an over-generalization because I'm sure there are multiple individual examples of poor Democratic governance leading to valid calls for a change of leadership, but I still think the following thesis holds on a broad level.
Long story short:
1) GOP in power: policies and behaviors that have deleterious effects on domestic economics and society or foreign standing (e.g., Gingrich's novel no-holds-barred approach to compromise with both Democrats and his own party, Bush's Iraq War and Katrina response not to mention stewardship over the Great Recession)
2) Voters are upset, seek new leadership3) Democrats come into power: attempt to fix the broken effects of both previous GOP leadership and longstanding structural flaws (e.g., Obama going out of his way to seek out compromise with the GOP in his first two years, implementing the ACA, setting new clean energy standards)
4) Voters slowly forget why they were upset with the GOP in the first place while current GOP distance themselves from previous regime and lie about reasons for anger in the first place: deep, long-lasting change simply cannot be done in the span of two years but people are impatient and fickle, so voters are now angry at Democrats for not accomplishing enough
5) GOP comes back into power: cycle starts anew
The reason I find this to be analogous to what you're saying here is that you're essentially promoting Step 4 in your highlighted statement above, if not necessarily the underlying process. Sustained awareness, in my opinion, is crucial for maintaining the political will to actually institute changes that strike at the heart of deeply institutionalized societal shortcomings. Sustained awareness helps make it clear that the issue at hand is not simply a flavor of the month, that there is in fact a legitimate grievance that needs to be addressed. And, sustained awareness helps keep it in people's minds lest they quickly forget what everything was all about. Unfortunately, sustained awareness is extraordinarily hard, because it requires exactly what these protesters (let's be honest, many of those people in the streets of Portland and Seattle are indeed there with legitimate grievances) have been doing for two months, which is to take the time out just about every single day to make their voices heard. Frankly, it shocks me that they've been able to sustain it this long but more power to them. But when I say that you're essentially promoting Step 4, it's because it seems to me that if these protesters were to have simply gone home after, say, Week 3 or 4, are we really to believe that there would be any incentive left for anyone in government to implement change? Do we really think people writ large who are not directly involved in the protests are going to remember what everything was about?
Personally, I think the answers are a clear no and no. In that vein, discouraging these sustained protests simply gives an excuse for those in power (GOP and Democrat, if we're being fully honest), to ignore all the hard-fought progress so far, minimal as it may yet be. So my very unnecessarily long-winded thesis is, I find all this analogous to my above outline on GOP politics because there appears to be a strong correlation between those who would identify with GOP/conservative viewpoints and those who would question why protests are still going on. And the effect I foresee if people were to just shut it down and go home at this point would be akin to how, most recently, American voters ushered in the Tea Party with a full-scale rebuke of Democrats after Democrats couldn't keep voters reminded of just how bad the previous GOP leadership had been.