Police mass murders
Comments
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How about an honest accounting from the black community of just how much fucking crime is committed by the black community and why that might have some impact on the amount of police presence and police contact blacks have with the police?Tequilla said:
Sorry ... I don’t consider this good enoughTheKobeStopper said:The exact numbers aren’t the problem. The problem is black people don’t trust the system. When a black person gets shot, they don’t trust that the cop was just and when it’s not just, they know they can’t trust the system to provide justice. This distrust is earned.
There’s also the problem of right wingers who have abandoned all skepticism of authority, unless it’s a democrat. You guys assume the cop must have been in the right. Black people assume the cop must have been wrong.
There’s a tight rope of skepticism of authority but trust in our institutions that must be walked and we have completely fallen off.
I understand perceptions are realities ... so I get the skepticism and understand that doesn’t change overnight
The Chauvin verdict should help in the narrative that bad policing isn’t held accountable
But the other side of the coin is that the data and stats aren’t presenting the reality as much as the exception
We have one of the most visible people in the world go after a cop that saved a life and potentially additional lives ... that’s incredibly irresponsible
As I’ve said elsewhere, not only do we need greater accountability out of policing, but we need greater accountability from the public. Until that happens, we’re in a perpetual state of things being fucked
Kobe what is your and the left's role in all of this when you give people the excuse of systemic white racism in order to explain their criminal behavior? What role does that play in black assumptions?
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And from barry to almost every dem politician that supported BLM that resulted in cops being ambushed and killed in response to the Lebron James meme that white cops were hunting down innocent blacks and slaughtering them for fun. What you are going to have left in big city police departments are woke cops just cashing their government checks and letting Thunder Dome rampage the city.SFGbob said:
How about an honest accounting from the black community of just how much fucking crime is committed by the black community and why that might have some impact on the amount of police presence and police contact blacks have with the police?Tequilla said:
Sorry ... I don’t consider this good enoughTheKobeStopper said:The exact numbers aren’t the problem. The problem is black people don’t trust the system. When a black person gets shot, they don’t trust that the cop was just and when it’s not just, they know they can’t trust the system to provide justice. This distrust is earned.
There’s also the problem of right wingers who have abandoned all skepticism of authority, unless it’s a democrat. You guys assume the cop must have been in the right. Black people assume the cop must have been wrong.
There’s a tight rope of skepticism of authority but trust in our institutions that must be walked and we have completely fallen off.
I understand perceptions are realities ... so I get the skepticism and understand that doesn’t change overnight
The Chauvin verdict should help in the narrative that bad policing isn’t held accountable
But the other side of the coin is that the data and stats aren’t presenting the reality as much as the exception
We have one of the most visible people in the world go after a cop that saved a life and potentially additional lives ... that’s incredibly irresponsible
As I’ve said elsewhere, not only do we need greater accountability out of policing, but we need greater accountability from the public. Until that happens, we’re in a perpetual state of things being fucked
Kobe what is your and the left's role in all of this when you give people the excuse of systemic white racism in order to explain their criminal behavior? What role does that play in black assumptions? -
And liberals like Kobe will be blaming white racism when it happens.WestlinnDuck said:
And from barry to almost every dem politician that supported BLM that resulted in cops being ambushed and killed in response to the Lebron James meme that white cops were hunting down innocent blacks and slaughtering them for fun. What you are going to have left in big city police departments are woke cops just cashing their government checks and letting Thunder Dome rampage the city.SFGbob said:
How about an honest accounting from the black community of just how much fucking crime is committed by the black community and why that might have some impact on the amount of police presence and police contact blacks have with the police?Tequilla said:
Sorry ... I don’t consider this good enoughTheKobeStopper said:The exact numbers aren’t the problem. The problem is black people don’t trust the system. When a black person gets shot, they don’t trust that the cop was just and when it’s not just, they know they can’t trust the system to provide justice. This distrust is earned.
There’s also the problem of right wingers who have abandoned all skepticism of authority, unless it’s a democrat. You guys assume the cop must have been in the right. Black people assume the cop must have been wrong.
There’s a tight rope of skepticism of authority but trust in our institutions that must be walked and we have completely fallen off.
I understand perceptions are realities ... so I get the skepticism and understand that doesn’t change overnight
The Chauvin verdict should help in the narrative that bad policing isn’t held accountable
But the other side of the coin is that the data and stats aren’t presenting the reality as much as the exception
We have one of the most visible people in the world go after a cop that saved a life and potentially additional lives ... that’s incredibly irresponsible
As I’ve said elsewhere, not only do we need greater accountability out of policing, but we need greater accountability from the public. Until that happens, we’re in a perpetual state of things being fucked
Kobe what is your and the left's role in all of this when you give people the excuse of systemic white racism in order to explain their criminal behavior? What role does that play in black assumptions? -
Ted Wheeler has a modicum of brains and some common sense but as a typical "moderate" leftard he can't say no and felt that let it burn for a bit would make it go away. Watching him now he looks totally defeated as he realizes that Portland is dying and now there is nothing that can be done. His life is just a self-induced misery. Ted is hated by the left, the center and the right. Reagan and Trump could say no and not care that the people who hated them just hated them more. Ted thought that appeasement was an option. Like Cuomo watching his big taxpayers fleeing New York, Ted deserves all the misery that can get heaped on him. Imagine trying to get a meeting with a major business trying to leave Portland and begging them to stay? He is just a pathetic little phuck now and he knows it.SFGbob said:
And liberals like Kobe will be blaming white racism when it happens.WestlinnDuck said:
And from barry to almost every dem politician that supported BLM that resulted in cops being ambushed and killed in response to the Lebron James meme that white cops were hunting down innocent blacks and slaughtering them for fun. What you are going to have left in big city police departments are woke cops just cashing their government checks and letting Thunder Dome rampage the city.SFGbob said:
How about an honest accounting from the black community of just how much fucking crime is committed by the black community and why that might have some impact on the amount of police presence and police contact blacks have with the police?Tequilla said:
Sorry ... I don’t consider this good enoughTheKobeStopper said:The exact numbers aren’t the problem. The problem is black people don’t trust the system. When a black person gets shot, they don’t trust that the cop was just and when it’s not just, they know they can’t trust the system to provide justice. This distrust is earned.
There’s also the problem of right wingers who have abandoned all skepticism of authority, unless it’s a democrat. You guys assume the cop must have been in the right. Black people assume the cop must have been wrong.
There’s a tight rope of skepticism of authority but trust in our institutions that must be walked and we have completely fallen off.
I understand perceptions are realities ... so I get the skepticism and understand that doesn’t change overnight
The Chauvin verdict should help in the narrative that bad policing isn’t held accountable
But the other side of the coin is that the data and stats aren’t presenting the reality as much as the exception
We have one of the most visible people in the world go after a cop that saved a life and potentially additional lives ... that’s incredibly irresponsible
As I’ve said elsewhere, not only do we need greater accountability out of policing, but we need greater accountability from the public. Until that happens, we’re in a perpetual state of things being fucked
Kobe what is your and the left's role in all of this when you give people the excuse of systemic white racism in order to explain their criminal behavior? What role does that play in black assumptions? -
I think "the talk" needs to change.
Data shows that cops will not kill you. Don't resist arrest as this high increase the tension in the situation, and split second decisions will be made.
Be clam and listen to the police.
If you are arrested, do not resist.
Trust the police.
There needs to be smart and respected leaders in the community that leads this communication.
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A lot of people, myself included, think Chauvin only highlights the problem.Tequilla said:
Sorry ... I don’t consider this good enoughTheKobeStopper said:The exact numbers aren’t the problem. The problem is black people don’t trust the system. When a black person gets shot, they don’t trust that the cop was just and when it’s not just, they know they can’t trust the system to provide justice. This distrust is earned.
There’s also the problem of right wingers who have abandoned all skepticism of authority, unless it’s a democrat. You guys assume the cop must have been in the right. Black people assume the cop must have been wrong.
There’s a tight rope of skepticism of authority but trust in our institutions that must be walked and we have completely fallen off.
I understand perceptions are realities ... so I get the skepticism and understand that doesn’t change overnight
The Chauvin verdict should help in the narrative that bad policing isn’t held accountable
But the other side of the coin is that the data and stats aren’t presenting the reality as much as the exception
We have one of the most visible people in the world go after a cop that saved a life and potentially additional lives ... that’s incredibly irresponsible
As I’ve said elsewhere, not only do we need greater accountability out of policing, but we need greater accountability from the public. Until that happens, we’re in a perpetual state of things being fucked
That’s the original report. The only reason there was justice was public pressure. They were plenty happy to sweep it under the rug. The fact that mass protests and political pressure were needed in order to even get a trial for a cop that murdered someone on video does not instill trust. -
He was arrested the day after the video was released fuck off. Most all of the rioting and looting happened after he'd been arrested.TheKobeStopper said:
A lot of people, myself included, think Chauvin only highlights the problem.Tequilla said:
Sorry ... I don’t consider this good enoughTheKobeStopper said:The exact numbers aren’t the problem. The problem is black people don’t trust the system. When a black person gets shot, they don’t trust that the cop was just and when it’s not just, they know they can’t trust the system to provide justice. This distrust is earned.
There’s also the problem of right wingers who have abandoned all skepticism of authority, unless it’s a democrat. You guys assume the cop must have been in the right. Black people assume the cop must have been wrong.
There’s a tight rope of skepticism of authority but trust in our institutions that must be walked and we have completely fallen off.
I understand perceptions are realities ... so I get the skepticism and understand that doesn’t change overnight
The Chauvin verdict should help in the narrative that bad policing isn’t held accountable
But the other side of the coin is that the data and stats aren’t presenting the reality as much as the exception
We have one of the most visible people in the world go after a cop that saved a life and potentially additional lives ... that’s incredibly irresponsible
As I’ve said elsewhere, not only do we need greater accountability out of policing, but we need greater accountability from the public. Until that happens, we’re in a perpetual state of things being fucked
That’s the original report. The only reason there was justice was public pressure. They were plenty happy to sweep it under the rug. The fact that mass protests and political pressure were needed in order to even get a trial for a cop that murdered someone on video does not instill trust. -
It was a simple honest question, @TheKobeStopper
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Yes.doogie said:It was a simple honest question, @TheKobeStopper
19% of Black participants said they had a "great deal" or "quite a lot" of confidence in police. 56% of White participants said the same.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.cnn.com/cnn/2020/08/12/us/american-confidence-in-policing-new-low-trnd/index.html
Do you hear them? -
Blacks are also more likely to believe in ghosts. Must be true. What impact on their confidence in the Police has to do with the non-stop string of lies leftists feed them Kobe?TheKobeStopper said:
Yes.doogie said:It was a simple honest question, @TheKobeStopper
19% of Black participants said they had a "great deal" or "quite a lot" of confidence in police. 56% of White participants said the same.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.cnn.com/cnn/2020/08/12/us/american-confidence-in-policing-new-low-trnd/index.html
Do you hear them?
Polling shows that blacks also believe that there are thousand of unarmed black people who are killed by the police each year. Does it make it true? Now why would they believe a number so unhinged from reality?




