Ferguson, Missouri Community Furious After Teen Shot Dead By Police

Discussion in 'In the News' started by Sirius Dogon, Aug 10, 2014.

  1. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    That's straight bullshit. So basically resign to the idea that we're second class citizens who can be shot and killed for minor infractions while white terrorist make the cover of rolling stone after bombing an American city.
    Smdh
     
  2. Sirius Dogon

    Sirius Dogon New Member

    [YOUTUBE]5Wt8yEGacIs[/YOUTUBE]
     
  3. Sirius Dogon

    Sirius Dogon New Member

  4. Sirius Dogon

    Sirius Dogon New Member

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    What white St. Louis thinks about Ferguson

    By Julia Ioffe | New Republic


    About a 15-minute drive from the Ferguson protest that, by now, feels more like a block party, in the more upscale St. Louis suburb of Olivette, there’s a new strip mall with a barbecue joint and a Starbucks and an e-cigarette store. On a mild Thursday evening in August, people sat around tables, sipping coffee, sipping beer, dabbing barbecue sauce off their fingers.

    All of these people were white.

    It was a stark contrast to Ferguson, which is two-thirds black. Olivette is almost the exact opposite, at over 60 percent white. St. Louis, and the little hamlets that ring it, is one of the most segregated cities in America, and it shows.

    Here in Olivette, the people I spoke to showed little sympathy for Michael Brown, or the protesters.

    "It’s bullshit," said one woman, who declined to give her name. When I asked her to clarify what, specifically, was bullshit, she said, "All of it. I don’t even know what they’re fighting for."

    "It’s just a lot of misplaced anger," said one teenage boy, echoing his parents. He wasn’t sure where the anger should be, just that there should be no anger at all, and definitely no stealing.

    "Our opinion," said the talkative one in a group of six women in their sixties sitting outside the Starbucks, "is the media should just stay out of it because they’re riling themselves up even more."

    "The protesters like seeing themselves on TV," her friend added.

    "It’s just a small group of people making trouble," said another.

    "The kid wasn’t really innocent," chimed in a woman at the other end of the table (they all declined to give their names). "He was struggling with the cop, and he’s got a rap sheet already, so he’s not that innocent." (While the first point is in dispute, the second isn’t: The police have said that Michael Brown had no criminal record.)

    If anything, the people here were disdainful and, mostly, scared—of the protesters, and, implicitly, of black people.

    "I don’t think it’s about justice for Michael Brown’s family," said the teenage boy. "It’s just an excuse for people to do whatever they want to do."

    One man I talked to, a stay-at-home dad who is a landlord to three black tenants and one white one in Ferguson (“my black tenants would never do that,” he clarified) was more sympathetic to Brown and also had the sense that the police had overdone it a bit. But he was scared of the protests. I told him that the protest that day was entirely peaceful, festive almost. “You know,” he said. “I have a wife and three children, and if something were to happen to me, that would be very bad.”

    As for the protests, well, they weren’t about justice; they were just an excuse. “People are just taking the opportunity to satisfy their desire for junk,” said one woman, knowingly. As if black people, the lust for theft encoded in their DNA, are just barely kept in line by authority.

    "When they kill each other, we never hear about it," one of the Starbucks women said. This, she meant, was a good thing. "When it’s black-on-black violence, we never hear about it."

    I asked why she thought that was.

    "Because, basically, they hate whites!" her friend chimed in. "Prejudice, reverse prejudice. Prejudice goes both ways."

    The others signalled their agreement.

    "It’s not Ferguson people. It’s a lot of outside people coming in."

    This was a sore subject with several of the people I spoke to. A major problem with the protests—and they very clearly did not mean the militarized police response to the protests—was that they were tarnishing St. Louis’s image as a nice place.

    "I’m embarrassed to say I’m from St. Louis," the "bullshit" woman grumbled.

    "Me, too," said her friend. "I don’t tell people I’m from St. Louis anymore."

    "This is not representative of St. Louis," said one of the older women, back at Starbucks. "St. Louis is a good place. And Ferguson is a very good place."

    "We have never had anything like this in St. Louis!" her friend exclaimed, flustered, as if trying to clear the city’s good name. "Ever!"

    As the women grew uncomfortable, one of them hit on a way to fight back.

    "Where are you from?" she asked me.

    "Washington," I said.

    "Well," she said, satisfied. "You people have trouble too sometimes."

    And they all laughed.
     
  5. Sirius Dogon

    Sirius Dogon New Member

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  6. Sirius Dogon

    Sirius Dogon New Member

  7. Sirius Dogon

    Sirius Dogon New Member

  8. Sirius Dogon

    Sirius Dogon New Member

  9. Sirius Dogon

    Sirius Dogon New Member

  10. Sirius Dogon

    Sirius Dogon New Member

  11. Sirius Dogon

    Sirius Dogon New Member

  12. Sirius Dogon

    Sirius Dogon New Member

  13. Sirius Dogon

    Sirius Dogon New Member

    [YOUTUBE]RDU8Bk9jc-s[/YOUTUBE]
     
  14. andreboba

    andreboba Well-Known Member


    Even the Governor of Missouri, a 'conservative' Democrat and former prosecutor, said he thought it was wrong for the Ferguson PD department to release this video at the same time they gave out the name of the PO responsible for killing Brown.

    His behavior at the convenience store had nothing at all to do with his confrontation with the police officer.

    This tactic by Ferguson's Police Chief only increases the distrust between the community and law enforcement.

    Either the shooting was wrong or it wasn't. You don't smear a victim's character to justify killing him.

    You seem really conflicted Paniro IMO about what your core values are.

    You go back an forth between dittohead status and libertarianism.
     
  15. satyr

    satyr New Member

  16. Sirius Dogon

    Sirius Dogon New Member

  17. qwils86

    qwils86 New Member

    It seems like every month a Black young man is getting murdered by some bigot :smt013
     
  18. RaiderLL

    RaiderLL Well-Known Member

    Fixed.
     
  19. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    Now I gotta wonder if you're some type of shill because the shit you say is more aligned with someone with the agenda of causing disruption with the goal of supporting the corrupt. Bottom line Paniro do you think the government should kill citizens in the street especially when they are unarmed and don't pose a threat to anyone?
    Yes or no
     
  20. Soulthinker

    Soulthinker Well-Known Member

    Compaired to the Bundy Ranch it is so different from night and day.
     

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