All that needs to be said


baltimorecops

The people now calling for nonviolence are not prepared to answer these questions. Many of them are charged with enforcing the very policies that led to Gray’s death, and yet they can offer no rational justification for Gray’s death and so they appeal for calm. But there was no official appeal for calm when Gray was being arrested. There was no appeal for calm when Jerriel Lyles was assaulted. (“The blow was so heavy. My eyes swelled up. Blood was dripping down my nose and out my eye.”) There was no claim for nonviolence on behalf of Venus Green. (“Bitch, you ain’t no better than any of the other old black bitches I have locked up.”) There was no plea for peace on behalf of Starr Brown. (“They slammed me down on my face,” Brown added, her voice cracking. “The skin was gone on my face.”)

When nonviolence is preached as an attempt to evade the repercussions of political brutality, it betrays itself. When nonviolence begins halfway through the war with the aggressor calling time out, it exposes itself as a ruse. When nonviolence is preached by the representatives of the state, while the state doles out heaps of violence to its citizens, it reveals itself to be a con. And none of this can mean that rioting or violence is “correct” or “wise,” any more than a forest fire can be “correct” or “wise.” Wisdom isn’t the point tonight. Disrespect is. In this case, disrespect for the hollow law and failed order that so regularly disrespects the community.

Ta-Nehisi Coates

Comments

  1. says

    Couldn’t agree more. You guys keep on fighting, you burn the fucking place to the ground if that’s what it takes. That’s the only way things will ever change.

  2. Dark Jaguar says

    I can’t agree with that. Think of the innocent people who just want to get on with their lives caught up in this mess. Yes, the police involved in the brutality aren’t helping things, but violence just… isn’t the answer. “Burn the place to the ground” if that’s what it takes? Do you hear yourself? I mean, there’s GOT to be a limit on what actions are acceptable in the name of your cause, there just HAS to be. Where exactly do you draw the line?

  3. Nerd of Redhead, Dances OM Trolls says

    I mean, there’s GOT to be a limit on what actions are acceptable in the name of your cause, there just HAS to be. Where exactly do you draw the line?

    Where do you draw the line, and show with evidence that the line is effective for social change, in this case the demilitarization of the police, and the beginning of true community policing?

  4. Dark Jaguar says

    Cliche time! ““Beware that, when fighting monsters, you yourself do not become a monster…” I believe this is exactly the situation that quote is meant to address.

    Yes, we are talking about woefully imbalanced power structures. The police and the government have most of the power, this is a fact, and it’s unfair and should be fought. That changes who’s to blame for starting this whole mess, but people are still in control of how they respond. Violence… I can’t even believe we’re actually supporting violence on THIS site of all places. I think that’s what flabbergasts me the most.

  5. anteprepro says

    This dynamic is very common. The privileged class injures the oppressed class. This is ignored, considered part of normal, everyday life. The oppressed class starts lashing out in defiance, trying to defend itself or fight back. They are then framed as the assailant, the angry and irrational bad guys, because the initial assaults that they are responding to were erased from the narrative. I have seen this happen in so very many contexts, and it does not always need to be in the form of actual violence either.

  6. Dark Jaguar says

    All of that is true, but, we’re talking about hurting people and burning down a whole city here. Isn’t it enough to look at that and say, “that’s wrong”? Do I really need to explain why, using nothing but logic and without emotion, THAT is wrong?

  7. Nerd of Redhead, Dances OM Trolls says

    I can’t even believe we’re actually supporting violence on THIS site of all places. I think that’s what flabbergasts me the most

    What flabbergasts me is you show NO EFFECTIVE WAY FOR SOCIAL CHANGE. Just “don’t do that”.

  8. Nerd of Redhead, Dances OM Trolls says

    Do I really need to explain why, using nothing but logic and without emotion, THAT is wrong?

    Try EVIDENCE of what works, and what doesn’t. Forget logic.

  9. says

    My only issue with the violence is that too much of it seems to be directed against other members of the same targeted community.

    Smash windows and raise hell if that is what is necessary. But target the precinct houses. Target city hall. Target the bigots and oppressors. But do not target the barbershops and grocery stores owned by people who have also been victimized: that only does the oppressor’s work for them.

  10. says

    Innocent people are caught up in this mess every day, and that will continue until the offenders (the police) is forced into retreat. I would really like it if civil discourse was enough to solve this, but nobody is going to do anything with the core problem unless they are forced into it.

    I’m not saying that violence is a good thing, but sometimes it is the lesser of two evils. The police is already waging a war on minorities. This is a matter of meeting violence with violence since nothing else seems to work. Of course you need non-violent opposition as well, but without an angry mob to back you up your words will never amount to much in my experience.

  11. says

    Think of the innocent people who just want to get on with their lives caught up in this mess.

    Is “this mess” the innocent people murdered by police? If non-violence isn’t working and politicians and systemic racism making it more and more difficult for them to have a voice at the ballot box, what exactly do you propose is the answer? How much farther do they have to put up with being kicked down?

  12. liz321 says

    @1

    Non-violence seemed to work well for Martin Luther King and the whole civil rights movement. Are you saying that this situation is somehow more impossible to overcome than publicly endorsed segregation and all the evils tat went along with it? Of course not.

    Non-violence is the only path for both sides. There needs to be a huge emphasis for police forces in how to de-escalate situations, de-militarize their approach, and change their Us vs. Them mentality.

    Burning down cities isn’t going to do that.

    Do I understand the frustration? Absolutely. However, the people who are looting, beating people, and burning things down do not represent their entire community, or the breadth of the response of their community. Many in their own communities do not support their actions.

  13. Saad says

    Dark Jaguar,

    I agree with you completely about about hurting (uninvolved) people. As for a heavily armed horde of racist police descending upon you while salivating over the chance to throw you around and injure you with chemical weapons, I can’t possibly criticize a physical response. Violence is wrong. But when protests and demonstrations aren’t working, when appealing to the law itself isn’t working, there’s no way I can sit here with the privilege of not being a black man with a target on my back and tut-tut about those besieged people.

    If it takes disruptive rebellion to get the next white police officer to think twice about executing a black man on the street, then it’s worth it. A CVS is not worth even 0.0001% of the life of a human being murdered in broad daylight by his own public servant.

    Also, that violence is wrong IS the entire starting point of these protests. These “riots” pale in comparison to the amount of violence the police dishes out and the amount of damage it does to entire communities.

  14. says

    Gregory: Good point, one should choose ones targets with care.

    As for my statement of “burning the place to the ground” it was metaphorical, aimed at the system. But if that includes some symbolic buildings, so be it.

  15. anteprepro says

    What is your solution, Dark Jaguar? The point is not that violence is the answer, the point is that the calls for non-violence are selective and disingenuous, and that the outrage that leads to violence is entirely justified. Why exactly are we wringing our hands more over the cars protesters burn than the people that police brutalize to death? I think there are two clear reasons: We sympathize with the protesters’ cause and want them to represent it better, and because police brutality is so common as to be banal and mundane, while riots are not. Neither are particularly compelling reasons to give an armchair lecture to protesters about the ideal response to police getting away with murder.

  16. says

    Non-violence seemed to work well for Martin Luther King and the whole civil rights movement.

    To a point, but systemic racism didn’t end and there have been many who have been working diligently over the decades to claw back even the progress that was made then.

  17. brett says

    Selma did a good job at making that point, about how Non-Violence is a tactic that civil rights movements adopted because it could work (and because there was no chance they could win in violent confrontations), not because they were morally opposed to more violent methods and thought Non-Violence was the only moral way to effect change.

    Another good piece from TNC. I’d strongly recommend people read up some of his past writings about the Civil War as well – it provides some great context when he writes about resistance and change in the present.

    @Gregory in Seattle

    Smash windows and raise hell if that is what is necessary. But target the precinct houses. Target city hall. Target the bigots and oppressors. But do not target the barbershops and grocery stores owned by people who have also been victimized: that only does the oppressor’s work for them.

    That bothered me as well. Most of the stores looted and wrecked earlier this week were in neighborhoods that are already desperate for more jobs and business, with tons of abandoned storefronts and homes. I don’t think CVS is going anywhere (they’re likely insured), but smaller businesses?

  18. anteprepro says

    liz321:

    Non-violence seemed to work well for Martin Luther King and the whole civil rights movement. Are you saying that this situation is somehow more impossible to overcome than publicly endorsed segregation and all the evils tat went along with it? Of course not.

    http://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/2014/11/25/what-would-mlk-say/
    http://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/2014/11/25/what-would-mlk-say/comment-page-1/#comment-883430

    Non-violence is the only path for both sides. There needs to be a huge emphasis for police forces in how to de-escalate situations, de-militarize their approach, and change their Us vs. Them mentality.

    That’s great. Get into a powerful political position and start doing that. Instead of the typical political response of whining about Both Sides and doing nothing to address the problem of police brutality that these protests are fucking about. Oh, but you are also blaming Both Sides too, aren’t you? Go figure.

  19. samihawkins says

    Non-violence seemed to work well for Martin Luther King and the whole civil rights movement.

    “It is not enough for me to stand before you tonight and condemn riots. It would be morally irresponsible for me to do that without, at the same time, condemning the contingent, intolerable conditions that exist in our society. These conditions are the things that cause individuals to feel that they have no other alternative than to engage in violent rebellions to get attention. And I must say tonight that a riot is the language of the unheard.”

    Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, ‘The Other America’ , March 14, 1968

    Also I see it took a whole two posts for someone to start tut tuting with the usual bullshit. I expected it to be the first post.

    ‘Shame on them for not being quiet and peaceful while we treat them as subhuman scum and let them be murdered with impunity by any cop or random asshole who says the magic words ‘self defense’. Instead they should try peaceful protests like the one currently being ignored by the media in Baltimore or all the other ones before it that were completely ignored and accomplished nothing.’

  20. rpjohnston says

    Don’t like copypasting but here’s what I wrote on my own tumblr:

    “It’s easy to condemn acts in isolation – “violence is never the answer” “oh my god they’re looting a liquor store!” – but much harder to look at the broader picture and think “why did this happen and how can it be prevented”. Fire a pithy “violence is wrong” and you can cavort away in smug self-righteousness, ignoring what lead to it in the first place.

    Nothing is going to change until we stop taking the easy way out.”

  21. says

    @anteprepro #15 – “The point is not that violence is the answer, the point is that the calls for non-violence are selective and disingenuous, and that the outrage that leads to violence is entirely justified.”

    This.

    @liz321 #12 – One night of violence has brought the kind of attention that the six days of peaceful protests could not. Had the protests remained peaceful, there would be little in the local news and absolutely nothing on the national news. Like it or not, the rioting in Baltimore has put the story out there in a way that would have been impossible without it. In the long run, that is good.

  22. liz321 says

    @antepro

    And what exactly is your solution after everything gets burned down? Please tell me what wonderful repercussions that’s going to have? The world will suddenly be a less racist, less divided place free of all evil? There will be no more police brutality ever?

    Your “solution” is not a solution.

    It’s just like all those stupid “I hope that guy gets raped in prison” comments that show up when someone who does something horrible gets sent to jail.

    @ 20

    Nobody commenting here is ignoring what led to it in the first place.

  23. says

    Re MLK and non-violence:

    Not that I’m very well versed in that history, but wasn’t there a shitload of violence and riots as well? Wasn’t there an implicit threat of more violence if they didn’t take advantage of the “cease-fire” that MLK provided?

    I don’t necessarily believe that violence alone will work, but it can be a very potent motivator for more peaceful solutions. Start by a show of force, show them that you are not only are capable of destroying EVERYTHING, but that you WILL tear the place apart unless your demands are met. Then you can start talking.

  24. microraptor says

    The thing is, the police brutality isn’t the whole picture, either. It’s just one of the issues going on in that city. Look at where the riots started- neighborhoods that have as high as 20% unemployment where more than half of all households earn less than $25,000 per year. Neighborhoods where banks will refuse to give you a loan just because of your address. Neighborhoods that are deliberately passed over for urban renewal projects by the city.

    It’s not just the cops, it’s the whole fucking system that triggered these riots.

  25. Chris J says

    http://chrisbrecheen.blogspot.com/2015/04/controlling-narrative-case-study-in.html

    Narrative: “Something something something Martin Luther King something something.” White people fucking LOVE this narrative, don’t they. MLK, man. I have a dream, man. Don’t judge people by their color, man. Peace and love, man. He would teach these people to be non-violent if he were here.

    You mean the guy who said he couldn’t really condemn rioters because a riot was the language of the unheard? The guy who broke the law all the fucking time and didn’t give a flying shit about white people’s feelings? The guy who got up in white people’s faces pointing out injustice that they swore was no big deal until they ASSASSINATED him? The guy who died an enemy of the state? The guy the FBI blackmailed? Arrested 30 times in a relatively brief ministry? Railed against capitalism? The guy who called the peace and stability loving “northern moderate” worse than the southern racists? Is that the guy we’re talking about?

    Because if your narrative is that he was a teddy bear who would just hug all this shit out, please open a history book and stop remembering him from the video you were shown on the Friday before the three day weekend…in third grade.

    And just so we’re clear, when you’re invoking Ghandi and MLK as the reason no one should ever be violent, let me remind you that these protests were very, VERY violent. It was just one side doing it.

  26. Big Boppa says

    Here’s something else that Dr. King said:

    I must confess that over the past few years I have been gravely disappointed with the white moderate. I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro’s great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen’s Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to “order” than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: “I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action”; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man’s freedom; who lives by a mythical concept of time and who constantly advises the Negro to wait for a “more convenient season.” Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will. Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection.

  27. unclefrogy says

    I was just listening to the news on the radio and the discussion was on this issue and the interviewee ended with a question about how were the police going to “control society.”
    If that is indeed what the authorities think is the job of the police is in practice that is a long way from protect and serve that so many hold up as their motto.
    There is a contradiction between ideas of freedom, liberty and the pursuit of happiness and the ideas of controlling society and the war on drugs and zero tolerance policies.
    what is missing in this is the idea of “We the People”. Without that idea in effect tolerance is missing, populations are seen as separate units, othering is inevitable and abuse goes unnoticed. resulting in shooting down “suspects” in the street and years in solitary confinement in prison.
    Is this any different from the conditions that proceeded the French Revolution, or the Russian Revolution?
    uncle frogy

  28. pyromancer says

    I think some of the people here are missing the point of the article. The point of Coates’ piece wasn’t that violence is the only answer for oppression, its that the violence happening now is a symptom of the much larger disease of systemic oppression that Baltimore has had in place for years. Blame for this falls squarely at the feat of the police and there enablers, who have tried to ignore the problem and now are calling for some AstroTurf nonviolence campaign to control a situation without addressing the root problem.

    That being said, I don’t think most of the violence that went on in Baltimore from the people’s end was being organized towards any sort of political end goal. It was just people angrily lashing out at a system that failed them. That might not be the most ideal response, but I haven’t lived under the heel of an oppressive police state because of the color of my skin, so I’m not going to lecture someone who has on what they should or should not do when they decide enough is enough.

  29. says

    About MLK and non-violence: The level of anger is too great right now to be directed, and it is being expressed as rage. That rage will burn out, and it will be possible for community leaders to step up and direct the anger to more productive ends. This is what Dr. King did.

    However, calls for non-violence from outside the community are counterproductive. The community must raise their own leaders, otherwise it is just another situation of outsiders putting “uppity” people in their places “for their own good and the good of society.” That response from us outsiders will only pour fuel on the fire.

  30. liz321 says

    @ 22–Gregory

    Agreed that it has brought urgency to the situation and demanded more attention. So should it continue unabated?

    I do feel that these last few incidents of police brutality are showing evidence of change. What has happened in Ferguson and NYC had a huge impact on the response of police depth. The incident in South Carolina where Walter Scott was murdered brought immediate condemnation. The incident in Baltimore Had the police chief front and center saying that things were wrong with what happened to Freddie Gray all along the way.

    Where previously departments have brushed things under the rug or reflexively covered for offending officers, now police chiefs are scared. They are responding to public sentiment. They know that the public is no longer willing to tolerate the brutality being exposed or give the police department the benefit of the doubt.

    Protests and media coverage and discussion is working.

  31. anteprepro says

    liz321: The riots send a message. That message is “we are mad as hell and we are not gonna take it anymore”. Either this leads to social and political change, it doesn’t and people like yourself discourage and demonize rioters and things fizzle, or things get “burned down” and we try to build something new up from the ashes. The alternative is the current state of affairs. The status quo sounds nice and comfortable and appealing and all, but that’s only if you ignore all the people being oppressed and killed by it. A very convenient ignorance, but it is ignorance nonetheless. So yes, cry out about the violence of the protesters, while doing no such thing about the everyday violence performed as part of the operations of our society. Feel free.

    But anyway, for those that didn’t want to follow the links, here is MLK on rioting

    This bloodlust interpretation ignores one of the most striking features of the city riots. Violent they certainly were. But the violence, to a startling degree, was focused against property rather than against people. There were very few cases of injury to persons, and the vast majority of the rioters were not involved at all in attacking people. The much publicized “death toll” that marked the riots, and the many injuries, were overwhelmingly inflicted on the rioters by the military. It is clear that the riots were exacerbated by police action that was designed to injure or even to kill people. As for the snipers, no account of the riots claims that more than one or two dozen people were involved in sniping. From the facts, and unmistakable pattern emerges: a handful of Negroes used gunfire substantially to intimidate, not to kill; and all of the other participants had a different target—property.
    I am aware that there are many who wince at a distinction between property and persons—who hold both sacrosanct. My views are not so rigid. A life is sacred. Property is intended to serve life, and no matter how much we surround it with rights and respect, it has no personal being. It is part of the earth man walks on; it is not man.
    The focus on property in the 1967 riots is not accidental. It has a message; it is saying something.
    If hostility to whites were ever going to dominate a Negro’s attitude and reach murderous proportions, surely it would be during a riot. But this rare opportunity for bloodletting was sublimated into arson, or turned into a kind of stormy carnival of free-merchandise distribution. Why did the rioters avoid personal attacks? The explanation cannot be fear of retribution, because the physical risks incurred in the attacks on property were no less than for personal assaults. The military forces were treating acts of petty larceny as equal to murder. Far more rioters took chances with their own lives, in their attacks on property, than threatened the life of anyone else. Why were they so violent with property then? Because property represents the white power structure, which they were attacking and trying to destroy.

  32. The Mellow Monkey says

    liz321 @ 12

    Non-violence seemed to work well for Martin Luther King and the whole civil rights movement.

    It worked quite well, what with him getting shot in the fucking face and all.

    People clearly need to scroll back up and re-read what Ta-Nehisi Coates said, because it seems like a whole bunch of folks are missing it. Here, to make it easy:

    When nonviolence is preached as an attempt to evade the repercussions of political brutality, it betrays itself. When nonviolence begins halfway through the war with the aggressor calling time out, it exposes itself as a ruse. When nonviolence is preached by the representatives of the state, while the state doles out heaps of violence to its citizens, it reveals itself to be a con. And none of this can mean that rioting or violence is “correct” or “wise,” any more than a forest fire can be “correct” or “wise.” Wisdom isn’t the point tonight. Disrespect is. In this case, disrespect for the hollow law and failed order that so regularly disrespects the community.

    A riot may not be the answer if you think the question was “what will fix this?”

    Looks to me more like the question, as it has ever been, is “how far can murder committed by agents of the state and white supremacy and grinding poverty push people before they break?”

  33. Saad says

    liz321,

    And what exactly is your solution after everything gets burned down? Please tell me what wonderful repercussions that’s going to have? The world will suddenly be a less racist, less divided place free of all evil? There will be no more police brutality ever?

    Your “solution” is not a solution.

    And what’s yours? 20% more signage? Use more “please” and “thank you’s”?

    Please tell me what wonderful repercussions that’s going to have. The world will suddenly be a less racist, less divided place free of all evil? There will be no more police brutality ever?

    Your “solution” is not a solution.

    I don’t think anyone here has said this is definitely a solution. I’m saying I can’t and won’t blame them. You tell me what a people are supposed to do when their government is firmly against them, appealing to law isn’t working, demonstrating isn’t working, and the clock is ticking to the next black human being’s public execution.

  34. says

    @ Liz321:
    You’re missing the point, everything is NOT going to get burned down. This is a fight between those who have next to nothing versus those that have more than they will ever need. The side with the most to loose will back down eventually, as long as you don’t listen to their insincere cry for parley.

  35. Saad says

    liz321, #32

    The incident in South Carolina where Walter Scott was murdered brought immediate condemnation.

    … because of the fucking video that a civilian had to make. Do you know what the police’s response was before the video surfaced?

    What a beautiful fantasy world you live in.

  36. Who Cares says

    Over a Mano Singhams blog a commenter has one of the rioters as saying that they tried peaceful protesting for 3 days and no one bothered to notice, only after the rioting started did the issue get attention beyond the usual platitudes offered.

  37. jedibear says

    I’m sorry, no.

    Understanding rioting as a part of the larger picture is one thing, defending it as a tactic is something else entirely. Rioting is inexcusable, unnecessary, and counterproductive.

    You want to show disrespect? Show disrespect. Violence is not disrespect. Violence is violence.

    You don’t get to do what the hell you want because you’re angry. Theft doesn’t become moral because you’re angry. Arson doesn’t become moral because you’re angry. You’re still responsible for your own actions. You don’t get to evade moral responsibility just because you’re frustrated.

  38. liz321 says

    @ antepro

    I haven’t demonized anyone. You’re the one hurling hyperbole all over the place. I understand some of the violence. It works as a temporary attention grabber and after that is totally ineffective.

    Several commenters keep saying calls for non-violence have to come from the inside of the community and keep equating the looters with the community at large. You seem to be ignoring the fact that very many people from this community are calling for non-violence, that very many people from this very community have been setting themselves up in front of the police to protect them from violence.

    You are ignoring the majority of this community and pretending that only those in government are calling for non-violence.

    It isn’t the case.

  39. anteprepro says

    Also, other thread on the subject of the Baltimore riots:
    http://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/2015/04/28/the-right-wing-responds-to-baltimore/

    Epiphany I had in the other thread (not sure if it is accurate or not though

    Read that teacher’s tweet linked by rq at 29. Hundreds of cops stopping buses, forcing students out in the open without transportation, and harassing any groups of students they found suspicious. It suddenly makes sense: This is how riots started almost immediately after school. This is how the shutting down transportation that day was an issue, and why they shut down school today. It was all about that “purge” threat. The cops went the Full Ferguson, full force, massive number, decked out in riot gear, prepared for a massive attack that probably didn’t exist. But they attacked their invisible foe, angrily, sloppily, and by doing so they conjured up a real one.

    The quote I refer to from the teacher describing the buses being stopped follows:

    A clear narration of what my students and I just saw (and please SHARE this so people know the story): we drove into Mondawmin, knowing it was going to be a mess. I was trying to get them home before anything insane happened. The students were JUST getting out of Douglas, but before that could even happen, the police were forcing busses to stop and unload all their passengers. Then, Douglas students, in huge herds, were trying to leave on various busses but couldn’t catch any because they were all shut down. No kids were yet around except about 20, who looked like they were waiting for police to do something. The cops, on the other hand, were in full riot gear marching toward any small social clique of students who looked as if they were just milling about. It looked as if there were hundreds of cops. So, me, personally, if I were a Douglas student that just got trapped in the middle of a minefield BY cops without any way to get home and completely in harm’s way, I’d be ready to pop off, too.
    I hope everyone’s kids are getting home to them safely tonight.

    A militarized police force cracking down on protests and the general populace in a suppressive and excessive manner in the wake of questionable threats, agitating a populace already upset and fearful of police excesses in the wake of brutal killing by a police member who will likely not see justice, in a community that is heavily affected by inequality around economic and racial lines. It’s almost like it is a familiar story. It is almost like there is not only a legitimate grievance, but also that the police were actively making the situation fucking worse, through intention or sheer incompetence.

  40. pyromancer says

    People often forget the MLK style non-violence wasn’t some lovey Teddy Bear nonsense, it was a calculated tactic designed to elicit specific responses from authorities. He and the other people in the Black Freedom struggle were explicitly breaking laws and goading authorities into overreach to show how unjust the system they were protesting was.

  41. anteprepro says

    jedibear:

    You don’t get to do what the hell you want because you’re angry. Theft doesn’t become moral because you’re angry. Arson doesn’t become moral because you’re angry. You’re still responsible for your own actions. You don’t get to evade moral responsibility just because you’re frustrated.

    Not moral is not the same as immoral. And again, your examples make it explicit: this is more concern for property than people.

  42. liz321 says

    @44

    I agree. However, some of these comments seem to equate non-violence with “roll over and let the government do whatever the hell it wants to you.”

  43. says

    Coates is spot on. The users of violence are calling for non-violence, calling for “cooperation” when they mean capitulation, asking for abeyance when they want obedience.

    Violence is the last resort of protesters. It’s what they do when they have tried all legally and socially acceptable remedies, and nothing has worked. No authority has listened, no court given them justice.

    Violence is the first resort of cops. They do it because they can use illegal and socially unacceptable violence, and nobody challenges it. No authority has listened to the victims of cop violence, no court given them justice.

    Is it any surprise that the public in Baltimore have had enough, that they view the “authorities” as the enemy and a threat to social order?

  44. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Think of the innocent people who just want to get on with their lives caught up in this mess.

    If you want to ignore this and get on with your life, you are not an innocent person.
    Innocent people have been murdered. What about the lives they’ll never get on with? If this does not stop, how many more innocent people will die?

  45. says

    Liz321

    I do feel that these last few incidents of police brutality are showing evidence of change.

    WTF?
    People are still getting fucking killed by the fucking police and unless there is a video showing it nobody gives a fuck.
    Police are killing 7 year old girls in their beds because they are raiding the fucking wrong apartment and then the courts say “shit happens”. Do you have a 7 year old daughter? Or a 12 year old son? I do, and fortunately I don’t have to worry about them being murdered in their beds or at the playground. So don’t tell the people who have to fear for their children’s lives how to behave.

  46. Chris J says

    @jedibear:

    There is violence on both sides. On one side, systematic violence leading to the unnecessary deaths of over 100 people by the institution that is supposed to protect them. On the other, angry riots causing mostly property damage, and mainly when provoked by police response.

    Which violence do you condemn first? Which violence do you condemn loudest? Which violence do you ignore until you get the opportunity to make a “both sides do it” argument?

    The riots are just the more visible violence to outsiders. If your main objection is to the visible violence, then you are basically saying that you simply want the violence to become invisible again, not that you want anything to be solved.

  47. slithey tove (twas brillig (stevem)) says

    aarrgghhh
    yes!! we all agree that violence is BAD.
    BUT.
    To yell at the rioters for committing violent acts while completely ignoring the violence that motivated them is WORSE.
    analogy time: it’s like yelling at a rape victim for punching the rapist (during the rape), while ignoring the rape, and calling the rapist a victim of a violent attack by his target.
    isn’t there a name for this, “Victim blaming”?

  48. says

    Liz321

    Several commenters keep saying calls for non-violence have to come from the inside of the community and keep equating the looters with the community at large. You seem to be ignoring the fact that very many people from this community are calling for non-violence, that very many people from this very community have been setting themselves up in front of the police to protect them from violence.

    You are ignoring the majority of this community and pretending that only those in government are calling for non-violence.

    So, are you a part of that community?
    If not, kindly STFU about what they should or shouldn’t do.

  49. Chris J says

    liz321@42:

    I haven’t demonized anyone. You’re the one hurling hyperbole all over the place. I understand some of the violence. It works as a temporary attention grabber and after that is totally ineffective.

    Did an investigation into the Ferguson police department, the revelation of massive, systematic racism, and a serious attempt to overhaul the system, start before or after the riots?

  50. anteprepro says

    liz321: I have no idea how to even respond to your 42. Too many points must have been missed, because I can’t even begin to determine where you might have gone astray. First of all, “everything gets burned down” is your hyperbole, not mine. You are the one insisting that people are “conflating” “looters” with the community and claiming that we are ignoring community members calling for no violence. No, we are doing no such thing. No, we are not even advocating or condoning violence here. We are simply saying that violence is an understandable reaction. It is certainly not an ideal or preferred one, but it is one that makes sense in their situation because they have been effectively goaded into it. And we are also admitting that non-violence is not the perfect solution. Invoking the Civil Rights Movement as an example is ignoring that there WERE violent protests as well, and it is also ignoring that the modern day person most associated as the grand heroic leader of that movement said virtually the same thing we are saying now regarding riots. Those who cannot help but condemn the riots in the name of righteousness are defending the status quo, for reasons already amply explained. There are lots of double standards in play here as well, in all the indignant furor about the evils of riots: http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2014/11/white-people-rioting-for-no-reason.html

    I await your continued missing of points.

  51. pyromancer says

    It worked quite well, what with him getting shot in the fucking face and all.

    I see this point cropping up quite a bit lately and I’m not a fan of it, mostly because it implies that if MLK was more violent in his rhetoric or actions he would have avoided assassination. The fates of activists like Malcolm X and Fred Hampton show otherwise.

    You go against the system publicly on a regular basis, you risk that system coming down on you an destroying you, violent or non-violent.

  52. liz321 says

    @49 Gillel

    Yes..people are getting fucking killed. And guess what, even with violent riots people are still going to be fucking killed. People will be fucking killed until bad cops are hunted down and prosecuted, not protected, not excused, not taken at their word. And…the only way to fight that is not with violence but with recording every damn incident that ever happens, making life difficult for them, legally pursuing them, changing the level of legal accountability they are held to and making people who behave like them social pariahs.

    You don’t need to harm people in your own community to do that.

  53. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    I’m so sick of hearing how violence is only dangerous if the oppressed are fighting back.
    It’s like how taxing the rich is called class warfare while having more poor black people in prison than live in some small countries is not.

    Civility in the face of oppression is what the oppressors want. It is what the abusive rely on. The US government bombs hospitals for “peace”, but expects non-violence from it’s own people in the face of ongoing, systemic, violence. What entitled hypocrisy.

  54. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Did an investigation into the Ferguson police department, the revelation of massive, systematic racism, and a serious attempt to overhaul the system, start before or after the riots?
    THIS!
    Should these rioters simpered quietly? Do you think these riots made life worse for the communities that stod up to their oppressers?
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watts_riots

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stonewall_riots

    Were none of these US riots for the greater good?
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_incidents_of_civil_unrest_in_the_United_States

  55. says

    Liz321

    And…the only way to fight that is not with violence but with recording every damn incident that ever happens, making life difficult for them, legally pursuing them, changing the level of legal accountability they are held to and making people who behave like them social pariahs.

    You show how that change is achieved before you go tut-tuing people who fight. Eric Garner’s death was on video, still no indictment.

  56. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    pyromancer,
    Way to miss an obvious point.
    The point is not that violence would have saved King. It is that non-violence didn’t.

  57. liz321 says

    Tur-tuting….yeah, this word keeps getting used. So for everyone who thinks that calls for non-violence are simply tut-tutting from a distance and who thinks that violence is a good catalyst for social change and an effective solution…you’d better be packing you bags and getting to Baltimore and participating in the violence and looting there.

    If you don’t then you are no better than the people you are attempting to mock, encouraging violence and looting from a distance while you don’t have to face jail time, or tear gas, or rubber bullets.

    Any of you who keep saying these are good tactics need to ask yourselves if you would participate in them. If you’re not willing to do it, then you really have no grounds to pretend as if you are some awesome revolutionary leading the oppressed in violent change.

    At the end you are simply a commenter sharing an opinion from a computer, as am I .

  58. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    You don’t need to harm people in your own community to do that.

    What people in that community are being harmed? A CVS is not a person. Tamir Rice was a person. He was a little boy. You are rebuking people’s efforts to save the lives of children.

    Let me ask you something. If go full on Leatherface and come at your kid with a chainsaw, you gonna ask me nicely to stop? What if you already saw me chainsaw down several other children first? Are you telling me you’d believe that I’d quit this time if someone asks me to despite the pleas of those I had killed before being ignored?

    What if I’d been killing kids for hundreds of years and the killing only slowed down when I was forced to stop?

    If these were people you cared about being murdered and blamed for their own murdered, you’d sing a different tune.

    If white people were being treated like this rioters would be hailed as heroes.

  59. qwints says

    People have tried covert and overt revolutionary violence in the US before and it didn’t work. The people in power just kill them.

  60. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    You don’t need to harm people in your own community to do that.

    Forgot to block quote. Sorry.

  61. John Horstman says

    @Chris J #50:

    The riots are just the more visible violence to outsiders. If your main objection is to the visible violence, then you are basically saying that you simply want the violence to become invisible again, not that you want anything to be solved.

    This!

  62. anteprepro says

    liz321 continues to lecture about tactics. Because apparently they have solved all the world’s problems and have the objective, and exclusive, set of directions to reach those goals. Thank you, liz321, for ensuring that we adhere to your strict guidelines that are the one and only true path to a better future. Bless your heart, our savior.

  63. says

    Liz321

    Tur-tuting….yeah, this word keeps getting used. So for everyone who thinks that calls for non-violence are simply tut-tutting from a distance and who thinks that violence is a good catalyst for social change and an effective solution…you’d better be packing you bags and getting to Baltimore and participating in the violence and looting there.

    May I quote myself all the way up at 21:

    Everybody preaching nonviolence needs to show some non violent way to effectively change things.
    Though I’m also not a fan of cheering on people risking their lives from the safety of an armchair.

    Oops…

  64. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    participating in the violence and looting there.

    Better that than to be a victim blamer and bootlicker for racist cops.

    One good thing I learned in church was not to be a coat-holder.
    Definition: Someone who stands by and hold the coats of the men stoning innocents to death.

    All those coats you’re holding are gonna get heavy, Liz321.

  65. Pteryxx says

    If the legacy of the real Dr. King–his radical politics, vision, and challenging words and deeds for an America sick with white supremacy, class inequality, war mongering, and hatred for the poor–was properly channeled, it would deafen the chattering classes and broad swaths of the American public.

    The real Dr. King is akin to the Old Ones or the Elder Gods. They and he are not to be summoned without care, for reasons disingenuous, or to help with a fool’s errand.

    Dear White America: Please Stop Talking About Martin Luther King Jr. and the Baltimore ‘Riots’ from Chauncey Devega at DailyKos

    The impotent summoning of Dr. King in a time of crisis (with its righteous, justifiable, protest and rage against police thuggery, and a cruel State that cares more about protecting property and its out of control racist police, than in justice for black and brown Americans and the poor) is enabled by a flat and weak understanding of the Black Freedom Struggle and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s role in it.

    The Civil Rights Movement contained multiple elements with often often conflicting interests and strategies for success. Non-violence was not an empty phrase: it existed and found power in relation to those who wanted a more robust, direct, and if necessary, armed response to white supremacy and anti-black hatred. The Civil Rights Movement was able to use the media in the context of the Cold War, and white elites’ anxieties about perception management abroad in an era of Jim and Jane Crow, to win its incremental gains.

    Brother Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. has been canonized as an American saint. At the time of his assassination and martyrdom, King was one of America’s most hated and despised public figures.

  66. liz321 says

    @ 68

    blah, blah, blah…really just words to try and belittle those you don’t agree with. You twisted everything I have said, adding to it, claiming that I have implied it’s going to solve all the worlds problems, that I am the savior to a better future….blah, blah blah.

    All attempts to pretend as if there is really only one solution, and it’s yours. So tiring.

  67. A Masked Avenger says

    Saad, #38, and liz321, #32:

    The incident in South Carolina where Walter Scott was murdered brought immediate condemnation.

    … because of the fucking video that a civilian had to make. Do you know what the police’s response was before the video surfaced?

    Police are working overtime to correct this situation, by introducing new legislation to ban videotaping of police.

  68. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Any of you who keep saying these are good tactics need to ask yourselves if you would participate in them. If you’re not willing to do it, then you really have no grounds to pretend as if you are some awesome revolutionary leading the oppressed in violent change.

    What the actual fuck? First, I’d love to protest but I can’t. If a cop pepper sprays me in the face I will die. Fear of being murdered is what keeps me home and the police know this. It is a feature, not a bug. You’re on the wrong side if you don’t support violence.

    I can’t leave my kids, but if I take them with me and a cop kills them I will be blamed for “putting them at risk”. These cops are shot a pregnant woman’s eye out for sitting in a car to close to protests in Ferguson. The war is already happening. You only just now noticed it because people are fighting back.

    You’re the one pretending. You’re pretending to be taking moral high ground. You aren’t.

  69. liz321 says

    @74

    Some are trying to ban it, some want to embrace it. Many departments are actually pursuing body cameras for their own protection and self-policing.

  70. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Why have I stopped blockquoteing? Why?
    My brains, they are turning to mush.

  71. Doug Hudson says

    “Now, if it is deemed necessary that I should forfeit my life for the furtherance of the ends of justice, and mingle my blood further with the blood of my children and with the blood of millions in this slave country whose rights are disregarded by wicked, cruel, and unjust enactments, I submit; so let it be done!” –John Brown

    “His zeal in the cause of freedom was infinitely superior to mine. Mine was as the taper light, his was as the burning sun. Mine was bounded by time. His stretched away to the silent shores of eternity. I could speak for the slave. John Brown could fight for the slave. I could live for the slave. John Brown could die for the slave. ” — Frederick Douglass on John Brown

    Violence is not always wrong. Sometimes violence is the only answer left. I am not black, and I do not have the zeal of John Brown–but neither will I criticize the black people for rising up against injustice.

  72. liz321 says

    @ 75

    Non-violence does not equal not protesting. I am challenging people defending violence as a tactic to get out there and crack some heads, not simply protest.

  73. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Liz321,
    Body cameras won’t solve shit. They are not a panacea.
    Now answer the questions rather than pretending I didn’t ask them. Or is burying your head in the sand how you handle everything?

    Also, would you mind terribly telling us if you are black? I suspect strongly that you are not. Are you in fact one more white person whitesplaining to black people how to respond to racism?

  74. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    The people cracking heads are called cops, Liz321. Setting some cars on fire is not “cracking heads”.
    Now answer the questions and actually look at the links provided. This is not a monologue for Liz. Back up your argument if you can or make like a tree and fuck off.

  75. Saad says

    liz321,

    And…the only way to fight that is not with violence but with recording every damn incident that ever happens, making life difficult for them, legally pursuing them, changing the level of legal accountability they are held to and making people who behave like them social pariahs.

    Why the everloving fuck would you think there aren’t ongoing attempts to also do this? You think right after each of the racist murders, crowds immediately erupted into property damage. Also, do you not see the thousands of people peacefully protesting? No, your attention goes to the fucking CVS.

    And LOL @ legally pursuing them. HahahaHAHA!

    Not sure if mind-blowingly naive or just fucking racist.

    Jackie, #70

    One good thing I learned in church was not to be a coat-holder.
    Definition: Someone who stands by and hold the coats of the men stoning innocents to death.

    I love that. Added to vocabulary.

    Jackie, #77

    My brains, they are turning to mush.

    Don’t worry. It’s beginning to have that effect on me too.

  76. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Liz, what kinds of support have you given to non-violent protesters? What have you done to protest these killings?

    I kinda doubt you’ve been the ally you are painting yourself to be.

  77. Pteryxx says

    liz #76:

    Many departments are actually pursuing body cameras for their own protection and self-policing.

    No, they’re really not. Most departments want body cameras so they can control and selectively erase or edit the footage, which they can’t do with private surveillance or bystander cameras; and officers can shut them off just before they engage in a bit of entertainment brutality. As for internal investigations, police don’t bother to discipline their own *now*, except for harassing and driving out whistleblowers. How are they going to self-police any differently with access to the bodycams of the whistleblowers?

    Here’s a resource thread; do some searching for mentions of cameras. Reagan’s morning in America

  78. chigau (違う) says

    liz321 #79
    When the best you can do is
    If you approve of it, you should go do it.
    you’ve lost.
    Bless your heart.

  79. liz321 says

    @Jackie

    You are full of shit.

    First you say you can’t protest, but that wasn’t what I said. I challenged violence promoters to go out and do violence. So your excuses have nothing to do with what I actually said.

    Second, I am white. And that does not invalidate me from having an opinion. And I am assuming a lot of people on this thread are white too. And yet the people who lined up in front of Baltimore police to protect them are black. They believe in non-violence, but their actions don’t count do they? The many black leaders calling for non-violence don’t count either, do they? Freddie Gray’s own family’s cries for non-violence don’t count either, do they?

    Stop pretending that it’s just white government leaders against violence and looting. It isn’t the case.

    If you want to assume that everything I say is just an extension of white privilege so that you can ignore it and feel better about your opinion, you’re free to do so….but it is not just white people who believe in non-violence.

  80. anteprepro says

    liz321

    blah, blah, blah…really just words to try and belittle those you don’t agree with. You twisted everything I have said, adding to it, claiming that I have implied it’s going to solve all the worlds problems, that I am the savior to a better future….blah, blah blah.
    All attempts to pretend as if there is really only one solution, and it’s yours. So tiring.

    The irony in the air was thick that night.

    Just shut the fuck up already, liz.

  81. Saad says

    liz321, #57

    And…the only way to fight that is not with violence but with recording every damn incident that ever happens,

    Eric Garner’s killing is on video.
    Tamir Rice’s killing is on video.
    John Crawford III’s killing is on video.

    Comments?

  82. Anne Fenwick says

    Historically, riots have a very poor record of bringing about useful change, and they do have a very good record of resulting in harm to the rioters. The direct victims of property and bodily harm are hardly ever the people the rioters are angry with. I don’t think it’s possible to regard riots as a good thing. And in the case of the US (correct me if I’m wrong) policing is organized at state or city level. Even if the riot led to beneficial change in Baltimore, every other district could carry on as before.

    What’s needed is a whole lot of research and organized systematic activism on an individual and collective level. This doesn’t seem the best atmosphere in which to brainstorm ideas, but you can probably all think of a few anyway.

  83. UnknownEric the Apostate says

    Hi. As you all might know, I am an adopted Baltimorean. Having been here for 15 years, working in the heart of the city on the border between downtown and the west side, I can honestly say I’m not the slightest bit shocked by what has occurred here. This shit has been simmering. Baltimore was (and still is) a powder keg primed to explode. A very divided city where the differences between the affluent white neighborhoods* and the poor black neighborhoods are shocking and sad. It was only a matter of time and I, for one, am not going to stand here and lecture or point fingers at the people who rioted. You should see the shit they have to deal with daily.

    *Yes, I live in one. It was creepy as hell how my general area (North-Central Baltimore) felt like nothing out of the ordinary was going on whilst the worst of the violence was happening. Two different Baltimores indeed.

  84. anteprepro says

    liz321:

    o. And yet the people who lined up in front of Baltimore police to protect them are black. They believe in non-violence, but their actions don’t count do they? The many black leaders calling for non-violence don’t count either, do they? Freddie Gray’s own family’s cries for non-violence don’t count either, do they?
    Stop pretending that it’s just white government leaders against violence and looting. It isn’t the case.

    1. No one said there are no people in Baltimore advocating or practicing non-violence.
    2. No one said non-violence is a bad thing: it is just often NOT ENOUGH, and the specter of non-violence shouldn’t be used to invalidate those who used “violence” (i.e. self defense and/or property destruction) during the protest.
    3. No one said that is just the government calling against violence.
    4. You cannot fucking read.
    5. Shut the fuck up already.

  85. liz321 says

    @85
    OH please…of course I don’t want people to commit violence. I am merely repeating the same argument back to people who keep demanding that cries for non-violence are simply tut-tutting. If i’m tut-tutting, so are commenters who talk about the effectiveness of violence yet would never lift a finger to hurt anybody themselves. It’s disingenuous.

  86. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Oh, Liz.
    Shut the fuck up. Your desperate attempt to avoid facts that refute your view is noted. You are clueless, racist* and have no business demanding anything of anyone. Go tut-tut elsewhere.

    *Yes, racist. You assume without educating yourself that those silly black folks haven’t tried to do anything at all about racism and oppression and just suddenly started setting shit on fire. You think you, in all of your white wisdom know better than they do. THAT is bullshit. Yes, your opinion is invalid. Invalid and vapid.

  87. liz321 says

    @ 91

    No. You’re the one who needs to read. This whole comment thread is full of people who have advocated violence and reduced non-violence to bending over and taking it from the government.

    For you to say that No One said those things is ridiculous.

  88. Saad says

    liz321, #86

    And that does not invalidate me from having an opinion. And I am assuming a lot of people on this thread are white too. And yet the people who lined up in front of Baltimore police to protect them are black. They believe in non-violence, but their actions don’t count do they? The many black leaders calling for non-violence don’t count either, do they? Freddie Gray’s own family’s cries for non-violence don’t count either, do they?

    Oh my god, how are you not getting this?

    The protesters’ calls for non-violence count.

    The police and the government’s calls for non-violence are silencing attempts. They don’t count.

    I support nonviolent protesting. I oppose violence and destruction. Up to the point where nonviolent protesting works. Over the past year (and before that) it has proven to not work. It has also been proven that white police officers murder black people. It’s what they do.

    In light of these facts, I will not oppose physical opposition. Doing so makes you a callous (and either ignorant or racist, pick one) asshole.

  89. Saad says

    I just realized I’ve directed five posts to liz321 without a single reply from xir. Is it the avatar? Whatever. Jackie, you’re doing much better anyway.

  90. liz321 says

    @93

    No Jackie. Everything you say is what you have told yourself in your head. I haven’t called anyone in Baltimore silly, I haven’t demonized them, I haven’t even condemned the people who looted. GO back and read my comments. It’s not there. That’s a story you are telling yourself about me in your head.

    All I said is that violence is not an effective or good way to bring about real change. It’s not going to ultimately help this community. An attention-grabber…sure. A long-term solution that will ultimately benefit this community, No.

    And I have repeated that those who looted do not represent their entire community no matter how much you want to ignore the fact.

  91. anteprepro says

    Saad, if it makes you feel better, she has been paying lots of attention to me, but her replies have been so incoherent and disconnected from reality that she might as well have been replying to someone else. You ain’t missing much.

  92. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    You know, there were white people who said the Civil War was uncalled for because if you gave white people long enough and asked them nicely enough, they’d just stop enslaving people.

    Not withstanding the fact that was never going to happen it is illustrative of white attitudes then and how little they have changed. Generations of black Americans would still have lived in slavery under their scheme to peacefully resolve slavery. That was fine by them. A war would hurt white people. Simply sitting back and doing nothing merely hurt black people.

    The more things change…

  93. Pteryxx says

    Also, most of the *black* people calling for nonviolence, including those clergy who trained protesters in nonviolent techniques last night, the Crips and Bloods who called a truce, and the random citizens throwing their bodies between protesters and armed riot cops, are doing it largely because they don’t want more of their friends and neighbors getting beaten and killed that night. By an occupying force that’s massively overpowered for dealing with them and has members looking for any excuse, too. Not just because there’s something precious or effective about not breaking windows.

  94. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Saad,
    That’s not new. Trolls commonly ignore people who don’t speak to them in a way they can get bent out of shape about. When you get in their face, they have to deal with you. The facade of civility falls away.

    Kinda like how the media and government treat protesters, isn’t it?

  95. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Saad,
    I didn’t mean “that’s not news” disrespectfully, but reading it, it sounds that way. I just mean that it has been noticed here over and over again.
    …and thank you.

  96. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    liz321, your gaslighting and dishonesty have been noted.
    Care to answer the questions now or would you prefer to fuck off into the sunset?

  97. Chris J says

    Saad,
    That’s not new. Trolls commonly ignore people who don’t speak to them in a way they can get bent out of shape about. When you get in their face, they have to deal with you. The facade of civility falls away.

    Kinda like how the media and government treat protesters, isn’t it?

    Boom.

  98. liz321 says

    @102 Why do you mark out black people as *black* people in your comment? Is there some question about their blackness in your mind? And I find it condescending that you seem to think that you know what their “real” motives are for preaching non-violence.

    Way to completely dismiss an entire group of people and their efforts. You basically imply that they could only have self-preservation in mind and don’t really believe in non-violence as a principle.

  99. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    I look at Gaza today. I look at black neighborhoods in the US.
    I see so much similarity.

    Has anyone else here ever seen Closetland? The older I get, the more it rings true. From oppressing one person to oppressing many, is not a major leap.

  100. Chris J says

    liz321@107:

    @102 Why do you mark out black people as *black* people in your comment? Is there some question about their blackness in your mind? And I find it condescending that you seem to think that you know what their “real” motives are for preaching non-violence.

    That was emphasis, distinguishing the black people who call for nonviolence from the white people. Asterisks are not scare quotes.

  101. liz321 says

    @Saad, if I haven’t replied to you it’s simply because everyone is upset by my comments and I can’t possibly reply to them all.

    I find this whole comment thread mired in hyperbole and demands. Everyone else who advocated for non-violence has seemingly left the conversation and being the object of ire simply because I believe in non-violence as a general life principle is..well troubling to me.

    I don’t believe in non-violence only in these protests. I believe in non-violence between parents and children, between spouses/partners, etc. I have seen and experienced enough violence and retaliation up close and personal in my own life that I will not condone violence as an effective means for progress.

    I would kill someone actively trying to kill me if I had to. I would fight off a rapist. I would protect myself in an assault. I would not commit violence outside of these immediate types of situations.

    I would not burn down the house of someone who wronged me horribly. I would not slash the tires of a cheating partner. I would not steal from someone who I thought deserved it.

    And….I wouldn’t encourage anyone else to either.

  102. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Liz321, for the love of sweet, fuzzy, kittens stop trying gotchas. You aren’t good at it. That was emphasis, not removal.

    Now, if you are finished avoiding the questions asked of you, we’d all like to see you attempt a coherent response that contains at least a hint of truth. Can you do it?

  103. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    “I’m not racist. You’re racist, because of asterisks !” – Liz321

  104. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    I would kill someone actively trying to kill me if I had to. I would fight off a rapist. I would protect myself in an assault. I would not commit violence outside of these immediate types of situations.

    They are being raped murdered and assaulted, Liz321! FFS.

  105. liz321 says

    @ Gilell

    Don’t you have something better to do than play comment police?

    Seriously, the pettiness of this comment thread and all of the demands to say this or prove that, or shut the fuck up…it’s mind-blowing. So many of you can’t stand that someone disagrees with you. The mocking, the condescension, the dismissiveness, the name-calling.

    Petty, petty bullshit.

  106. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Liz321, you are not abiding by the TOS. You will be banned if you continue. Since you didn’t read it, it has been pointed out to you as a courtesy.

    You should thank Gilell. She was extending you a kindness.

  107. liz321 says

    @114 Jackie

    Lol..you really think you are something, don’t you?

    He/she is not racist because of asterisks. He/she is racist because he/she completely dismissed an entire group of people’s efforts and work as not really being “real”.

  108. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    I don’t mind disagreement. I have learned alot from people correcting my ignorance. I just don’t suffer fools.

    If you hate it here so much, why don’t walk away?

  109. liz321 says

    @ 117 Jackie.

    If PZ wants to ban me…he can feel free to do so. Last I checked, you are not PZ. But thanks so much for your caring comments and the wish that I continue this fruitful discussion with you. It has truly been such a pleasure for me.

  110. Chris J says

    Liz321@111:

    I would kill someone actively trying to kill me if I had to. I would fight off a rapist. I would protect myself in an assault. I would not commit violence outside of these immediate types of situations.
    I would not burn down the house of someone who wronged me horribly. I would not slash the tires of a cheating partner. I would not steal from someone who I thought deserved it.

    Notice how every single one of your hypotheticals is about some harm personally being done to you, as an individual. Police brutality is not a campaign against individuals, it is against a group. Even if the protesters themselves were never personally targeted, they were part of the targeted group.

    What do you do when structured violence is perpetrated against a group defined to include you? What do you do when every unjust murder could very easily have been you or your loved ones had the cosmic dice rolled differently? What do you do when the people in power you have to appeal to to protest the systematic violence are the ones perpetuating it, and what do you do when they turn that violence on you as soon as you speak up too loudly?

    “Riots are the language of the unheard.” Somehow, I think you keep forgetting that last part, “unheard.”

  111. anteprepro says

    liz321 cannot engage. Either due to dishonesty or incompetence. Hyperbole and petty, petty bullshit, indeed.

  112. liz321 says

    @120 Chris J

    I don’t know what I would do. But I do know what I would’t do. I wouldn’t kill people and burn down buildings of those not involved.

    And…I wouldn’t encourage other people to to do that either.

    Non-violence is not equal to non-action.

  113. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Liz321,
    Baby, you ain’t seen nuthin yet. I could open the book of you and read it page by page. You’ve already told me so much and it would not be difficult for me to learn more. If I decided to read your beads, you’d know it.

    You are either extremely dishonest or extremely stupid. The only racist here is you. You are fooling no one. You are making no points. You present no facts and use no logic. Gimme a coherent argument and let’s see how fast I can rip it up? Want to?
    We can do that.
    Just skim the fucking links and stop trying to deflect attention away from how miserably wrong you are.
    Ready, set, go?

  114. liz321 says

    @121 anteprepro

    blah, blah, blah, some more ad hominem, blah blah, blah, more dismissiveness, blah, blah blah extra hyperbole, blah, blah, blah.

  115. Funny Diva says

    Anyone else mildly bothered by the framing around “disrespect”?
    AFAIC, it goes so far beyond “disrespect” it’s not even funny…but I guess that’s as “angry” as a mainstream voice like Coates’s is allowed to be…

    Or possibly the term disrespect has so much less baggage for my privileged self than for him that it has an almost completely different definition in my mind?

  116. karmacat says

    I understand the reasons for violence but has violence really worked? Did the police in LA change after the LA riots? There were riots in Baltlimore in 1968. Did it cause any changes? Violence will get a person heard but will it lead to change? And those arguing for violence, you need to ask the people in Baltimore what they want. There are areas of Baltimore that are food deserts because no business wants to move to those areas. Riots just make that worse.

    The questions to ask was why did the Civil rights movement work then? What made it possible to have a civil rights movement then. Why didn’t it happen earlier? What was happening in society that allowed civil rights to progress? What can we do now that is effective and doesn’t have to rely on violence?

  117. Seven of Mine: Shrieking Feminist Harpy says

    Liz321

    Seriously, the pettiness of this comment thread and all of the demands to say this or prove that, or shut the fuck up

    Um. It’s petty to expect you to actually defend your position as opposed to repeating ad nauseum? Today I learned.

  118. anteprepro says

    Hey, liz, what happened to you invoking MLK? You dropped that talking point like a hot potato. It’s almost like you actually were able to read and understand the refutations you received on that topic! And yet didn’t bother to acknowledge it. Not even with a “blah blah blah” or “hyperbole” or whatever handwaving bullshit you are doing. Intriguing.

  119. Usernames! (ᵔᴥᵔ) says

    Wasn’t there an implicit threat of more violence if they didn’t take advantage of the “cease-fire” that MLK provided?
    —Erlend Meyer (#24)

    The “threat” came from Malcolm X. LBJ understood that he’d have to deal with one or the other, and MLK was the only one willing to sit down at the table.

    I believe it’s a crime for anyone who is being brutalized to continue to accept that brutality without doing something to defend himself. ~. I am for violence if non-violence means that we continue postponing or even delaying a solution to the American black man’s problem. ~. White man hates to hear anybody, especially a black man, talk about the crime that the white man perpetrated on the black man. But let me remind you that when the white man came into this country, he certainly wasn’t demonstrating non-violence.
    — Malcolm X, “The Autobiography of Malcolm X”, pg 374

    (emphasis mine)

  120. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Liz,
    Who is not involved in ignoring the police brutality black Americans have endured since…forever?
    I’ll admit it. I’m involved. I’ve displayed horrible ignorance and apathy toward bigotry and I am ashamed that I did. I didn;t mean to, but that is how privilege works. I didn’t see what did not harm me. I was and can still unintentionally be part of the problem. I do not tell black Americans how to protest because I have no right to do so. When it comes to fighting racism they are the authorities, not me. I shut up and listen and you need to too.

  121. anteprepro says

    karmacat:

    And those arguing for violence, you need to ask the people in Baltimore what they want.

    That rather misses the point. People aren’t so much arguing for violence as much as arguing against those arguing against violence. In that, violence is neither condemned nor condoned, precisely because it IS a question of what the people in Baltimore want, and what they feel they want or need to do to get to the change that they desire. It is precisely because “what people in Baltimore want” is a complicated question, expressed by both those stressing non-violence and those resorting to violence (or “violence”) for whatever variety of reasons, that there is stress against condemning the rioters, from the vantage point as outsiders looking in.

  122. liz321 says

    @128 Antepro…

    I dropped it because nobody here cares about MLK or the way he achieved his goals. Everyone basically dismissed MLK and anyone bringing him up. Why argue about the importance of his methods when bringing it up immediately devolves into..”Oh I was just waiting for some white person to bring MLK into this!”

    He apparently has no influence on this group of commenters.

    MLK says he understood and sympathized with rioters. I understand and sympathize with the frustration of rioters too. But, what did MLK actually DO? He protested…NON-VIOLENTLY. He may have understood rioters but he sought a better way…a more effective way.

  123. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Karmacat,
    I think being heard is a huge change. What can be accomplished without that?

  124. liz321 says

    @ 131 Chris J

    They aren’t killing anyone.. However, they have injured quite a few and once you begin to commit physical violence then you have to accept the possibility that you might unintentionally kill someone instead of just hurting home, breaking some bones. People who incite violence are creating situations where someone eventually might be killed. If you burn down a building you are taking the risk that there might be someone in that building.

    You can’t promote violence and then assume that no-one is actually going to be killed.

  125. anteprepro says

    Chris J:

    Since when are the Baltimore protesters killing people?

    Cars are people too.

    liz321: So in other words, you didn’t understand any of the people who responded to you in regards to MLK? Yeah, I am hardly surprised. But that is great that you can characterize the response to you as MLK “apparently has no influence on this group of commenters”. Pure fucking class, liz. Pure fucking class.

  126. throwaway, never proofreads, every post a gamble says

    Liz321

    I wouldn’t kill people and burn down buildings of those not involved.

    More angsty moralizing and aggrandizement, replete with bullshit that hasn’t happened. Who was killed by those involved in the rioting that occurred?

  127. anteprepro says

    liz321:

    You can’t promote violence and then assume that no-one is actually going to be killed.

    And with that, liz does argue to dissolve all police forces across the nation.

  128. throwaway, never proofreads, every post a gamble says

    Liz321

    You can’t promote violence and then assume that no-one is actually going to be killed.

    Who is promoting violence? Who is condoning violence? Specific quotes would be helpful.

  129. Chris J says

    @Liz321:

    You need to read this before you start talking about what you would or wouldn’t have done had you been in the same situation as the people in Baltimore. Become aware of where your narrative of their actions is starting and stopping, and how accurate it is, before passing judgement.

    If, after you understand the whole situation, the violence is still unpalatable for you, then frame it this way. You don’t want people to feel that riots are the only way to get anything done. Therefore, you should be advocating that they stop being the unheard, start telling people to listen when black people say that the police are killing them senselessly.

    Demanding that people stop rioting without proving that it isn’t necessary is useless.

  130. says

    Just started reading this thread, but I’ve gotten through the first 10 comments, and I have to say Dark Jaguar this site isn’t supporting or endorsing violence. Erlend Meyer, I don’t think ‘burning it to the ground’ is going to be helpful at all. It certainly wouldn’t help the people in the city who are protesting, nor would it be helpful to the people who are going about their everyday lives.
    Also, Nerd, could you please find a new way to say “show with evidence”? Sheesh. Sometimes you’re a broken record.

  131. Seven of Mine: Shrieking Feminist Harpy says

    liz321 @ 133

    I dropped it because nobody here cares about MLK or the way he achieved his goals.

    Actually, what people did was quote MLK saying that white moderates like you who make the exact argument you’re making are a bigger hurdle to equality than the openly racist.

  132. liz321 says

    @139 antepro

    Oh..you know me so well. How would I know what the hell I think or mean if you weren’t here to rephrase it and point it out to me? It’s nice to have a translator interpret my words into bullshit for me. Not speaking the native language of so many commenters has truly been a trial.

    Here…I’ll stop commenting and you can make the rest of the thread up for me. You’ll have one less step to go through in coming up with dismissive snark.

    It’s been real y’all.

  133. Onamission5 says

    Liz321 @86:

    And yet the people who lined up in front of Baltimore police to protect them are black.

    Doubtless I have seen the same videos you have, and I’ve yet to see anyone put themselves between police and protestors in order to protect the police. I have seen many people use their bodies as a physical and psychological barrier to shield their fellow community members from police threat, I have seen people imploring their friends and neighbors to “don’t give them a reason” and “don’t give them an excuse” re: police chomping at the bit to beat on another black person. The fact that that’s how you see things– community members protecting the heavily armed and armored fucking police who have a history of beating and murdering black people from the anger of unarmed civilians who have a history of being beaten and murdered– does not speak well for your perspective.

  134. Chris J says

    Liz321@135:

    However, they have injured quite a few and once you begin to commit physical violence then you have to accept the possibility that you might unintentionally kill someone instead of just hurting home, breaking some bones.

    Would you happen to know who is being injured and who is doing the injuring? Can’t find the source at the moment, but I believe it said that most of the injuries were caused by the police response, and most of the injured were the protesters. Makes sense, if you think about who has the gear and who is trained to believe in physical methods of crowd control.

    Yet reports will say something along the lines of “peace returns after police action, many injured in riots.”

  135. says

    karmacat @126

    I understand the reasons for violence but has violence really worked? … Violence will get a person heard but will it lead to change?

    Jackie has some examples for you @59.

  136. anteprepro says

    Sorry liz, I didn’t know pointing out the logical implications of your arguments wasn’t fair game (you do realize that police use violence, right? I am not sure, because I’ve not seen a peep from you on the subject of the police).

    But please do stick the flounce anyway.

  137. carbonfox says

    Innocent (black) man gets his neck snapped: business as usual
    Car or building gets damaged: OMG SOCIETY IS COLLAPSING

    Destroying property because government takes money (taxes): patriotic
    Destroying property because government takes lives: OMG SOCIETY IS COLLAPSING

    I am so fucking sick of listening to white, sheltered, middle class relatives and acquaintances blather about how terrible the “riots” are, but they didn’t say a word (and continue to remain silent) about the fucking MURDERS and BRUTALITY that the “rioting” people have enduring for…well, centuries. And of course, said white morons always ending up blathering about MLK — for all purposes, insinuating that black people should be good little pets, and that when they are abused by the white powers that be, they should just say (smiling and in a cordial and pleasant voice), “Excuse me, kind sir, would you care to please remove your boot from my neck? Oh, you won’t? Sorry for the inconvenience of my request, dear sir. Please carry on, if you’re so inclined.”

    As if passive, silent, unwavering acceptance of abuse changes anything. But when (white, head-in-the-sand) people are convinced — or willfully choose to believe, rather — that racism disappeared with a magical “poof” in 1865 (or insert year of choice), of course they don’t see a need for any form of resistance. No need for blacks to get so uppity, after all.

    Cars can be fixed, replaced. Buildings can be repaired, rebuilt. However, people, once gone, can never come back. But, in our sick society, property is seen as so much more valuable than a human life. Where do we go from here?

  138. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    You bring up a good point about what worked then and how it might work now, Karmacat. I don’t think I agree with it, but I wish I was wrong.

    After Occupy I stopped believing that the press or the politicians gave two shits about anything but money.
    I’m not sure the protests of the civil rights eras could be said to have “worked”. It made significant changes, but not nearly enough. Our country is fighting against civil rights as hard as ever. What was one has been slowly taken back, bit by bit. From forced birthers restricting abortion access and states’ attempts to block same sex marriage to voter registration laws meant to keep poor people of color from voting, civil rights are not safe. The War on Drugs is just the new way we cage black people, keep them poor and tear apart their families. I do not mean to degrade the legacy of MLK or any other civil rights advocates of that era. I just think that saying the protests of the 60’s “worked” is sort of putting a Mission Accomplished banner across it.
    Maybe I shouldn’t. Maybe that is too cynical.

  139. Pteryxx says

    Jackie #150 – maybe the civil rights-era protests didn’t “work”, but did they help?

  140. laurentweppe says

    Smash windows and raise hell if that is what is necessary. But target the precinct houses. Target city hall. Target the bigots and oppressors.

    This will happen eventually, when a Robespierre or a Lenin or a Mao rises and start telling their flock that exterminating the upper class (and their enforcers, and their lackeys, and those who object to the extermination) is the best way to fix problems.

    ***

    Non-violence seemed to work well for Martin Luther King and the whole civil rights movement.

    Non violence worked well for MLK because behind the scenes, the civil right activists had the mean to shoot back. Not only that, but the South didn’t willingly abolish segregation: it was forced to by the federal State; in fact, southern schools had to be desegregated literally at gunpoint. The bullies didn’t change their behavior because they were shamed: they changed their behavior because their adversary was twisting their arms to the breaking point.

  141. says

    “My greater source of personal concern, outrage and sympathy beyond this particular case is focused neither upon one night’s property damage nor upon the acts, but is focused rather upon the past four-decade period during which an American political elite have shipped middle class and working class jobs away from Baltimore and cities and towns around the U.S. to third-world dictatorships like China and others, plunged tens of millions of good, hard-working Americans into economic devastation, and then followed that action around the nation by diminishing every American’s civil rights protections in order to control an unfairly impoverished population living under an ever-declining standard of living and suffering at the butt end of an ever-more militarized and aggressive surveillance state.”

    Baltimore Orioles COO John Angelos, son of owner Peter Angelos.

  142. Doug Hudson says

    Yet, if God wills that [violence] continue until all the wealth piled by [unjust fines and imprisonment of black people] shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood [spilled by police] shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said “the judgements of the Lord are true and righteous altogether. — Paraphrase of Lincoln’s 2nd Inaugural address.

    Perhaps MLK, Jr. isn’t the right person to invoke, here. This is part of an older struggle, unfinished business from 150 years ago. Sometimes violence is the only answer.

    I’m not saying that this is the case here–but perhaps it is. Or perhaps it will be, in the end.

  143. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Pteryxx,
    ?

    I’m not sure the protests of the civil rights eras could be said to have “worked”. It made significant changes…

  144. k_machine says

    Demanding total non-violence is just a ruse to avoid addressing the issues. In 2003, the US saw the largest protests ever (against the Iraq War) and they were non-violent. They were completely ignored. Not saying that violence is the answer, but if the protests in Baltimore were non-violent, we wouldn’t be hearing about them.

  145. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    If the government ignored Occupy, how big and how sustained does a protest have to be before they’ll take notice?

    Do we even have the same rights 60’s protesters did? Did they have “Free Speech Zones” then?
    Also, weren’t there multiple riots during the 60’s?

    Also, remember the police riot at the 1968 Democratic convention. Remember Jack Anderson, the journalist Nixon planned to assassinate. Remember the FBI trying to convince MLK to kill himself. Remember that there were more cases of shootings than the ones in Ohio. The students in Ohio were just the first white student protesters shot at. Anti-segregationists were murdered. Blood was regularly shed, just not by the protesters. It wasn’t peaceful at all.

  146. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    When oppressed peoples fail to overthrow the leaders we don’t like elsewhere in the world, we bomb them back to the stone age to “free” them.

    But violence is wrong, y’all.

    I’m sure that double standard has nothing to do with the fact the US bombs brown people.
    *eyeroll*

  147. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    We’re in how many wars now? I’ve lost track.
    But, violence never solved anything. Every good american knows that.

    That’s why we don’t have a death penalty here.
    oh…wait…

  148. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Tabby Lavalamp,
    I stand corrected. That’s absolutely true.

  149. rq says

    Rehashing and expanding a quote that’s been said again and again on twitter, but… well, you can quote MLK all you like, liz321, but you know what? You have no idea what he would say about today’s situation. You have no idea what he would think of today’s police brutality. Back in the ’60s, it was a similar-but-not-the-same fight for civil rights to be acknowledged – now the laws are there, but the practices are still somewhat at odds (see here to read about how JUSTICE!!! has been brought to ‘rogue’ cops shooting unarmed (black) civilians). And it would be great to know what MLK thinks of the current situation, because it is no doubt not the dream he had in mind…

    But you know what?
    He is fucking dead. And you know why? Because he was fucking assassinated. And you know why? Because even his non-violence was too much of a threat to white supremacy.
    So he’s dead, and you can quote him from the ’60s and the ’70s all you like, but don’t pretend for a minute that his opinions would still be the same, were he alive and breathing and thinking and protesting today.
    Non-violence.
    Show me a strategy that hasn’t gotten anyone killed, ever, and we can talk about non-violence as the ‘only viable path’.

  150. edmond says

    There’s justification in shaming the aggressor for their calls for non-violence “halfway through the war”, but the “high road” position is STILL to aim for non-violence. What is the alternative? MORE violence? That will somehow make it all better? Not ALL the cops are guilty of what happened to Gray. The mayor isn’t. The other citizens aren’t.

    It might feel good to say, “Oh, no, you started this”, but the better person does NOT say “too late”.

  151. gakxz1 says

    As long as liz321 condemns systemic state and police brutality much more than rioting, I don’t think she’s inconsistent in her convictions. When a community gets isolated/brutalized by people outside, and doesn’t have any other means of being heard or enacting change, than yes: force should not be dismissed as mindless crime, and fuck non-violence. And riots do instigate change, and force people to pay attention (and there are people calling for non-violence who are only trying to further take advantage of an oppressed community).

    But you can acknowledge this, and still advocate for non-violence in *every* situation (and so be against the rioting, so long as for every sentence you speak against rioting, you say 20 against police/state brutality). That’s not a contradiction (even if it turns out that rioting was the most useful response, and that it occurred because of a climate of oppression) . It’s called being a pacifist. Do I think that being a pacifist is the way to go here? I don’t know (I go back and forth, really). But it’s not something that should be laughed out of the room.

  152. rq says

    Oh, oh, and this: James Baldwin Tells Us All How to Cool It This Summer.

    Q. In the latest civil disorder, there seems to have been a more permissive attitude on the part of the police, much less reliance on firearms to stop looters as compared with last summer when there was such an orgy of shooting by the police and the National Guard.

    BALDWIN: I’m sorry, the story isn’t in yet, and furthermore, I don’t believe what I read in the newspapers. I object to the term “looters” because I wonder who is looting whom, baby.

    Q. How would you define somebody who smashes in the window of a television store and takes what he wants?

    BALDWIN: Before I get to that, how would you define somebody who puts a cat where he is and takes all the money out of the ghetto where he makes it? Who is looting whom? Grabbing off the TV set? He doesn’t really want the TV set. He’s saying screw you. It’s just judgment, by the way, on the value of the TV set. He doesn’t want it. He wants to let you know he’s there. The question I’m trying to raise is a very serious question. The mass media-television and all the major news agencies-endlessly use that word “looter”. On television you always see black hands reaching in, you know. And so the American public concludes that these savages are trying to steal everything from us, And no one has seriously tried to get where the trouble is. After all, you’re accusing a captive population who has been robbed of everything of looting. I think it’s obscene.

    Q. Would you make a distinction between snipers, fire bombers and looters?

    BALDWIN: I’ve heard a lot of snipers, baby, and then you look at the death toll.

    Q. Very few white men, granted. But there have been a few.

    BALDWIN: I know who dies in the riots.

    Q. Well, several white people have died.

    BALDWIN: Several, yeah, baby, but do you know many Negroes have died?

    Q. Many more. But that’s why we’re talking about cooling it.

    BALDWIN: It is not the black people who have to cool it, because they won’t.

    Q. Aren’t they the one’s getting hurt the most, though?

    BALDWIN: That would depend on the point of view. You know, I’m not at all sure that we are the ones who are being hurt the most. In fact I’m sure we are not. We are the ones who are dying fastest.

  153. anteprepro says

    Regarding Occupy:
    http://www.businessinsider.com/this-is-a-police-state-not-a-democracy-2012-12
    http://www.dailykos.com/story/2011/10/12/1025512/-Police-Violence-Another-Big-Difference-Between-The-Tea-Party-and-Occupy-Wall-Street#

    Regarding the Civil Rights Movement, from wikipedia:

    While most popular representations of the movement are centered on the leadership and philosophy of Martin Luther King Jr., many scholars note that the movement was far too diverse to be credited to one person, organization, or strategy.[4] Sociologist Doug McAdam has stated that, “in King’s case, it would be inaccurate to say that he was the leader of the modern civil rights movement…but more importantly, there was no singular civil rights movement. The movement was, in fact, a coalition of thousands of local efforts nationwide, spanning several decades, hundreds of discrete groups, and all manner of strategies and tactics—legal, illegal, institutional, non-institutional, violent, non-violent. Without discounting King’s importance, it would be sheer fiction to call him the leader of what was fundamentally an amorphous, fluid, dispersed movement…..

    4.6 Race riots, 1963–70
    4.6.1 Harlem riot of 1964
    4.6.2 Watts riot (1965)
    4.6.3 Detroit riot of 1967
    4.6.4 Nationwide riots of 1967
    4.6.5 King riots (1968)…..

    Nationwide riots of 1967[edit]
    Further information: Long Hot Summer of 1967
    In additon to Detroit, over 100 US cities experienced riots in 1967, including Newark, Cincinnati, Cleveland, and Washington D.C.[173] President Johnson created the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders in 1967. The commission’s final report called for major reforms in employment and public assistance for black communities. It warned that the United States was moving toward separate white and black societies……..

    During the Freedom Summer campaign of 1964, numerous tensions within the civil rights movement came to the forefront. Many blacks in SNCC developed concerns that white activists from the North were taking over the movement. The massive presence of white students was also not reducing the amount of violence that SNCC suffered, but seemed to be increasing it. Additionally, there was profound disillusionment at Lyndon Johnson’s denial of voting status for the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party.[174][175] Meanwhile, during CORE’s work in Louisiana that summer, that group found the federal government would not respond to requests to enforce the provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, or to protect the lives of activists who challenged segregation. For the Louisiana campaign to survive it had to rely on a local African-American militia called the Deacons for Defense and Justice, who used arms to repel white supremacist violence and police repression. CORE’s collaboration with the Deacons was effective against breaking Jim Crow in numerous Louisiana areas.[176][177]

    In 1965, SNCC helped organize an independent political party, the Lowndes County Freedom Organization (LCFO), in the heart of Alabama Klan territory, and permitted its black leaders to openly promote the use of armed self-defense. Meanwhile, the Deacons for Defense and Justice expanded into Mississippi and assisted Charles Evers’ NAACP chapter with a successful campaign in Natchez.[178] The same year, the Watts Rebellion took place in Los Angeles, and seemed to show that most black youth were now committed to the use of violence to protest inequality and oppression.

    During the March Against Fear in 1966, SNCC and CORE fully embraced the slogan of “black power” to describe these trends towards militancy and self-reliance. In Mississippi, Stokely Carmichael declared, “I’m not going to beg the white man for anything that I deserve, I’m going to take it. We need power.”[179]

    Several people engaging in the Black Power movement started to gain more of a sense in black pride and identity as well. In gaining more of a sense of a cultural identity, several blacks demanded that whites no longer refer to them as “Negroes” but as “Afro-Americans.” Up until the mid-1960s, blacks had dressed similarly to whites and straightened their hair. As a part of gaining a unique identity, blacks started to wear loosely fit dashikis and had started to grow their hair out as a natural afro. The afro, sometimes nicknamed the “‘fro,” remained a popular black hairstyle until the late 1970s.

    Black Power was made most public, however, by the Black Panther Party, which was founded by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale in Oakland, California, in 1966. This group followed the ideology of Malcolm X, a former member of the Nation of Islam, using a “by-any-means necessary” approach to stopping inequality. They sought to rid African American neighborhoods of police brutality and created a ten-point plan amongst other things….

  154. Pteryxx says

    Jackie #156: no, I basically agree. When someone says the civil rights protests “worked” and then stops there, it’s as disingenuous as saying the Civil War or the Emancipation Proclamation ended slavery or racism. Sure, there was progress, especially on paper, and then convict slavery and Jim Crow became the tactics of choice. Then the civil rights movement forced another high-water mark, and redlining and police brutality just had another layer of figleaves added on. At some point there had to be very public outrage, though, to break through the carefully preserved ignorance and complacency that covers the oppression from the outside. And the conversation’s moved on, so anyway.

    I note that last night’s live Baltimore coverage (as opposed to the same couple of incidents being run on constant loops today) mainly consisted of empty streets, except for phalanxes of riot cops and National Guard armored vehicles. Almost everyone protesting obeyed the curfew and disappeared. That was as nonviolent as they could reasonably get – but it means people hiding quietly in their homes while a heavily armed military force patrols their streets. Nonviolent it might be, but it doesn’t seem like anything I’d call peaceful.

  155. Pteryxx says

    Tony! linked this last night in the America thread but it’s relevant backstory here. Pardon the long copy-paste.

    Why blacks running from cops is entirely logical – and so common

    – 6th Street isn’t poorest, or most crime-ridden neighborhood in Philadelphia—it’s a mixed income neighborhood, with some middle class families. Yet, according to your book, you saw the police detaining or arresting someone within that four block radius, with a few exceptions, every single day.

    It’s a fact in America that in these poorer communities—and in largely African-American neighborhoods like the one I was in—you’re much more likely encounter a police officer. The level of police presence is just off the charts compared to similar white neighborhoods. So you have the increased likelihood of interaction, and the high probability that that interaction will not be good. Even if there’s no arrest, there can still be a detention, a search, whatever, and who knows how long that’s going to last? It means you won’t be home to dinner tonight. Maybe not even tomorrow. It makes you not only fearful of police contact, but also of the places where the police might go to find you—your girlfriend’s house, your kid’s school, your place of employment.

    – You noted that your assumptions behind the project changed very quickly, from the idea that only felony offenders were marginalized, to the idea of a “fugitive” subclass that’s far more complex.

    Definitely. When we began, we were focusing on the impact of mass incarceration on a community. It was based on a lot of quantitative research, and the image that we had from this research was that: first you were free, then you were charged with a felony and hauled off to jail, and after you got out came all the financial, emotional, political pressures of being a felon. That was the model: free, prison, felon. But that just wasn’t what I was seeing. I was seeing a lot of non-felons—people with low-level warrants, on probation or parole, with traffic fines or custody support issues, in halfway houses or rehab—living like fugitives, under the radar.

    […]

    If you’re part of this class, it means you don’t go to the hospital when you’re sick. You’re wary of visiting friends in the hospital, or attending their funerals. Driving your kid to school can be daunting. You don’t have a driver’s license or I.D. Most of the time, you can’t seek legal employment. You can’t get help from the government. It comes from, partly, growing up in a neighborhood where you’ve watched your uncles and brothers go to jail, and your aunts and mom entangled in the court system without ever getting free.

    – You note that women in particular face a great deal of police pressure to inform or cooperate in some fashion.

    In a poll I did of the women [living in the four block radius of 6th Street], 67% said that they’d been pressured by the police to provide information on a male family member or partner in the last 3 years. If you’ve got a low-level warrant or some probation issue, you can be violated by authorities if you don’t inform when asked. So you’re really talking about a policing system that hinges on turning families against each other and sowing a lot of suspicion and distrust. It’s very ironic that people blame the breakdown of black family life on the number of black men behind bars when the policing strategies that put them there are exactly about breaking those family bonds.

    – It seems like once you have a family member in trouble, you could be in trouble by association.

    In terms of public policy, we’re having the opposite effect that we want to see. We should be encouraging people to go work, to go to the hospital when they’re sick, to get a proper I.D. We should be making those paths stronger and easier to follow. Now we have a system where, to avoid staying out of jail, you have to avoid your friends, your family, your job. All of those are pressure points that can be used by the police to get to you.

    And as long as we have a policing model that’s based on arrest counts and convictions, as long as there’s a legal right to bring in people for things like court fees or traffic fines or technical violations of parole, your ‘re creating a class of people who are arrestable on sight—a fugitive class.

    […]

    – There’s a lot of violence in your book, but what’s surprising is how much forgiveness and reconciliation there is. You would think that some of the transgressions, like informing on someone and sending them to jail, would damage a relationship beyond repair but your book had numerous examples of rebuilding and re-bonding.

    There’s clearly a lot of love for family. But it’s also about resistance—against a system that is incredibly destructive. It’s amazing how people fight to preserve family or forgive friends who have informed or testified against them. In this neighborhood, it’s understood that you can be placed in a position where you’ll have to choose your freedom over someone else’s. Any one of us likes to think that in that position we’d be honorable or selfless, but we don’t know. For most of us that’s a hypothetical. But there are families making this choice over and over and then trying to come back together.

  156. says

    edmond @164

    There’s justification in shaming the aggressor for their calls for non-violence “halfway through the war”, but the “high road” position is STILL to aim for non-violence. What is the alternative? MORE violence? That will somehow make it all better?

    Sometimes all that’s left for the oppressed is to rise up in revolution. The “liberal” media is, for the most part, the voice of the oligarchy. The ballot box has been taken away in ever increasing numbers through jerrymandering, voter ID laws, and the collision of a racist “justice system” and laws that prohibit felons from voting.

    But hey, the oppressed should quiet down, remain non-violent. That’s been working for them so well for the past several decades. All they need to do is remain non-violent for just a little bit longer…

  157. anteprepro says

    Edmond:

    What is the alternative? MORE violence? That will somehow make it all better? Not ALL the cops are guilty of what happened to Gray. The mayor isn’t. The other citizens aren’t.
    It might feel good to say, “Oh, no, you started this”, but the better person does NOT say “too late”.

    The alternative is to let them decide what seems proper at the moment. Don’t put “violence” (self defense, destruction of property) off of the table.

    And yes, not all of the cops are guilty. The mayor isn’t. But they are part of the power structure that led to the abuse, defending the abuser, and ensuring that shit like this can happen again in the future. And it is one of many injustices that these people face every day. And also the cops ARE guilty of coming out by the dozens in riot gear, shutting down businesses and transportation after school, cracking down so hard that they instigated a riot in the name of preparing to fend one off.

    They are not saying it is “too late” and they are unwillling to stop. They are saying quite emphatically they want the police to stop doing the shit they have been doing, to clean up shop and make sure justice can be served. To start making some steps in the positive direction. It isn’t the protesters who are being stubborn, violent, and refusing to stop.

  158. says

    Liz321

    Don’t you have something better to do than play comment police?

    I ain’t the comment police, I’m a monitor. A very prestigious position that comes with all the glory, responsibility and power you just witnessed: I get to post the blog rules in bold letters.

    edmond

    Not ALL the cops are guilty of what happened to Gray. The mayor isn’t.

    Bullshit. There is a long history of police abuse in Baltimore. The “Nickel Rides”, the abuse that is suspected to be behind Gray’s death, were well known. The city even paid over 100 victims of police brutality. The mayor knew, the cops knew and they didn’t do shit to stop it.

  159. anteprepro says

    gakxz1:

    It’s called being a pacifist. Do I think that being a pacifist is the way to go here? I don’t know (I go back and forth, really). But it’s not something that should be laughed out of the room.

    The problem with pacifism in this situation is expecting OTHER people to be pacifists when they are ones in harm’s way and confronting violent people, and living in an oppressive and unjust climate where no protest means resigning yourself to police brutality. You don’t get to demand absolute pacifism of other people, telling them they have no right to defend themselves, or not even the right to damage property, because of your own pacifism. Pacifism is a great standard to try to live up to. Demanding that other people live up to it when they are the ones being assaulted borders on fucking evil, though.

    Also, the reason why liz321 got laughed out of the room was more due to her inability to comprehend or honestly engage with what other people were actually saying.

  160. Saad says

    edmond,

    Not ALL the cops are guilty of what happened to Gray. The mayor isn’t.

    Yes, all cops are guilty of what’s happening around the country. And yes, the mayors of every city are also guilty. And so is any other politician who can do something about it but is not doing it.

  161. chigau (違う) says

    liz321 used ‘ad hominem’ and no one called them on it.
    We’re getting sloppy, here, people.

  162. says

    liz321 #92:

    @ 91
    No. You’re the one who needs to read. This whole comment thread is full of people who have advocated violence and reduced non-violence to bending over and taking it from the government.

    I’ve seen one person support violence @1.
    I’ve seen many people say they understand the violence and civil unrest. Acknowledging that violence and civil unrest are very likely among a group of marginalized people who have tried all over avenues is not the same as supporting violence and civil unrest. Why is this distinction so difficult for you to understand that you’re conflating the two?

  163. says

    liz321 says @115:

    @ Gilell
    Don’t you have something better to do than play comment police?

    She’s a monitor. She’s doing the work PZ has asked of monitors. If you don’t like it, the door is ——>

    Seriously, the pettiness of this comment thread and all of the demands to say this or prove that, or shut the fuck up…it’s mind-blowing. So many of you can’t stand that someone disagrees with you. The mocking, the condescension, the dismissiveness, the name-calling.
    Petty, petty bullshit.

    What’s mind-blowing is that you think people are insulting you and calling you names because you disagree with them. That’s not the motherfucking reason you’ve gotten the kinds of responses you’ve been receiving. If you can’t even accurately characterize the views of the people you disagree with, perhaps you shouldn’t be part of this conversation.
    Scratch that.
    Given your performance in this thread, with your tut-tutting and your concern for goddamn property over human lives, you should just leave this fucking conversation right the fuck now.
    And if all those coarse words offend your fee fees, I’m sure as fuck not sorry.

  164. gakxz1 says

    anteprepro @173

    Yeah… I don’t really know what my opinion is here! On the one hand: I remember during Hurricane Katrina, when after days of horrible aid relief, the news started reporting people “looting”. When people in my family went to pile on, my instinct was to angrily respond with something like “What are you talking about! There’s a hurricane in an already mistreated neighborhood, and a ‘who gives a shit about those people’ response, and your initial reaction is to hate the people suffering the most? Because of a stolen TV set? Priorities!”

    But (on the other hand) if someone says they’re a ‘pacifist’ (or always for non-violence), and are then asked to comment on something (or just want to contribute): what are they supposed to say? “Great, there’s already horrible violence done against one group of people (much of it not reported). And now… more violence!! How fun!”. Though yes, if they expect other people to be pacifists, especially those in bleak environments…

    Anyway… I think I shall stop arguing now and listen.

  165. kayden says

    My fear is that the violence and rioting from Monday night gives some officials the excuse not focus on something else than coming to the bottom of why interacting with the police resulted in the death of a young man and the severing of his spine. The police need to be held accountable for their actions and while the frustration which led to the rioting is understandable (although in my opinion neither helpful or justified), it detracts from the real issue of police brutality.

    Watching the news now and most of what they’re talking about is the looting and destruction of buildings, which should not be the focus at all.

  166. Seven of Mine: Shrieking Feminist Harpy says

    kayden @182

    The police need to be held accountable for their actions and while the frustration which led to the rioting is understandable (although in my opinion neither helpful or justified), it detracts from the real issue of police brutality.

    Whereas handwringing in the general direction of the riots is totally not a distraction from the real issue at all.

  167. says

    Chris J’s link @141 is a good read. Here is one particularly interesting bit:

    Narrative: “All violence is always wrong.” This is such a disingenuous narrative. It literally relies on ignoring some violence (and usually top down violence which has a far more destructive aggregate effect) but not others. Like going to a salad bar of Violence In History™ and just taking what you like and ignoring the rest. It relies on ignoring the violence of the police, both during their extrajudicial murders and as a response to those upset by them. And it is conspicuously absent when others describe what they would do to defend their store fronts if they were there, or what sort of vigilantism they would engage in if they were a cop. When “please don’t be violent” only goes one way, it looks a lot like “stand there and let us shoot you.”

    You should probably not be in this country if you think violence is always wrong. You certainly shouldn’t ever buy property or anything that runs on electricity or gas. The US was founded on violence, expanded by violence, is prosperous by violence, and has not been in a war for about seventeen of its 239 years. It’s pretty much here on a legacy of violence. But, of course, that is like the edamame at a Sizzler salad bar–let’s just ignore it and pretend it doesn’t exist.

    it looks a lot like “stand there and let us shoot you.”

    You should probably not be in this country if you think violence is always wrong. You certainly shouldn’t ever buy property or anything that runs on electricity or gas. The US was founded on violence, expanded by violence, is prosperous by violence, and has not been in a war for about seventeen of its 239 years. It’s pretty much here on a legacy of violence. But, of course, that is like the edamame at a Sizzler salad bar–let’s just ignore it and pretend it doesn’t exist.

    Look, is there anyone here who watches Star Wars and thinks the rebels should just fucking obey the law. Or (among Americans) who thinks they wouldn’t have been a revolutionary during the colonial revolt? (You do know we didn’t just reasonably protest until King George let us be our own country, right?) Or who watches The Hunger Games or Divergent and thinks that if they were there, they would just quietly be respecting the proper authorities? The only way to think violence is always wrong is to suggest that America is always completely just. And that is demonstrably untrue.

    Plus…wake the fuck up. You live in a country where the right to violently revolt if you don’t like your government is enshrined in the Bill of Rights. At least that’s what you say every time someone suggests an assault rifle is not really a hunting weapon.

    People will always call for peace when what they really mean is silence.

    Police brutality and systemic discrimination of African-Americans by the criminal justice system has beat black people down over and over again in this country. Black people have tried every avenue available, and this shit *still* continues. Now, fed up with being oppressed some black people have engaged in civil unrest and property damage (and a smattering of violence against people). What *else* are they supposed to do? People like liz321 are saying “don’t be violent”. Well that doesn’t leave people with much recourse does it? When everything else has failed, why should people not engage in civil unrest and violence? They have nothing else to lose.
    I’m not condoning or condemning the civil unrest or violence. In fact, I think the focus on those aspects of the protest misses the bigger picture. I think paying attention to that ignores the root problem at the heart of the problems in Baltimore and across the country. The problem is the racism inherent in the criminal justice system that victimizes, brutalizes, discriminates against, and oppresses black bodies. Deal with *that* and things will most likely NOT progress to the point where people feel the need to engage in civil unrest and violence.

  168. says

    Jackie @150:

    I just think that saying the protests of the 60’s “worked” is sort of putting a Mission Accomplished banner across it.
    Maybe I shouldn’t. Maybe that is too cynical.

    I don’t think it’s cynical at all. I feel the same way. Many USAmericans (mostly white, but people of other races as well) think that racism is over and they point to the Civil Rights Movement. Yet these people don’t even understand how pervasive racism is. The Civil Rights Movement didn’t eliminate the systemic biases against black people in the criminal justice system. The CRM didn’t magically erase race-based implicit biases from the minds of citizens of this country. The CRM didn’t eliminate the privileges accorded to white people and withheld from black people.
    The Civil Rights Movement never ended, so it can’t be said to have accomplished as much as many people think.

  169. says

    Here’s another nice point from Chris J’s link @141:

    Narrative: “They are hurting their own cause/They’re just making things worse./They are shooting themselves in the foot/This is no way to get what they want.” This narrative is based on what people who value stability over justice want to be true. It has no actual basis in lived experience or historical knowledge. How do you know they’re hurting their own cause? How do you know they won’t be better off in two or ten years or maybe their kids’ lives might be a little different by moving a national dialogue? How do you know that by forcing the issue they haven’t overcome the inequities of systematically being made invisible? Is it your extensive experience in being a person without privilege who is flat out of options for affecting change? Is it your rich history in racial activism and all those peaceful protests you’ve been in that did a lot of good? Is it your robust knowledge of how, historically, social change has been achieved in the past? Or did you just pull that one out of your ass because it sounds like something a group who is absolutely in power over another might say?

    People like liz321 need to read the whole damn thing.

  170. says

    kayden @182:

    The police need to be held accountable for their actions and while the frustration which led to the rioting is understandable (although in my opinion neither helpful or justified), it detracts from the real issue of police brutality.

    Police brutality is one part of the real issue. It isn’t the entire issue. The protests in Baltimore were sparked by the brutal treatment of Freddie Gray by the police, but that brutality is one small part of the larger issue: an UNjust criminal justice system which oppresses and discriminates against black bodies. The police are part of that criminal justice system, but they are not the entirety of it. It can be helpful to keep this in mind when discussing these protests (or the rare instances of civil unrest).

  171. says

    Right now, the police are out of control in this country. They engage in unnecessary violence against a segment of the community that can’t hold them accountable. Being black means your existence is cause for police suspicion and are thus a potential target for this violence at any time. If you survive, you will most likely be the labeled the “dangerous” person by the public and have your life ruined as a result. If you go out of your way to cooperate and surrender peacefully, police are still likely to find a flimsy excuse to kill or beat you. Or they will have a pre-fabricated excuse and plant it on you while you bleed to death. If you are arrested for a crime you did not commit, you’re still likely to be convicted on phony evidence and false police testimony anyway and thus encouraged to plea bargain as a means of damage control. Either way, you lose. The police are an occupying force there to keep you under control, not to protect and serve your community.

    The legal system will rarely give police officers more than a gentle slap on the wrist, much less convict them for cold blooded murder, even if caught on camera. Politicians only seem interested in enabling more police violence under the guise of the War on Drugs or Terrorism for fear of being labeled “soft on crime.” When a non-violent suspect is murdered, the media often decides to spend their time digging up any piece of dirt they can find on the victim, implicitly trying to justify the police officer’s act of murder after the fact. People ignore peaceful protests, dismissing them as troublemakers wasting everyone’s time with inconsequential causes because they’d rather not look for a job.

    That’s the source of desperation and desire for immediate action. My white privilege blinders have been loosened enough for me to see that the situation is completely intolerable, and stagnant at best, if not getting worse. Inaction means more people will die.

    Yes, non-violent methods would be preferable to violence. If they got visible results. From what I can tell, these riots are happening because the powers that be have gone through a lot of trouble to prevent the usual non-violent methods from accomplishing anything. They rely on privileged people who are as naive as I once was to believe in the power of those now-impotent methods to the point that they’ve made a sanitized, revisionist version of Martin Luther King for them to discourage any other course of action.

    Yes, I want to use non-violent methods, but in these desperate circumstances, I am not going to use that preference as an excuse to imply that the rioters are stupid or savage for not trying certain non-violent methods. They very likely have tried those methods, and were rewarded with failure. If I get an idea for non-violent action, I am going to try to make it specific and be prepared to hear that it’s been tried countless times and didn’t work. I will try to understand why it failed and use that knowledge to think of better ideas.

    In short, I don’t get to play the smug condescending IT guy who assumes the person with the problem is too stupid to read the manual. I’m the n00b who found out the manual intentionally oversimplifies things and is long out of date, anyway.

  172. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Not all cops? Really, edmond?
    *shakes head*

    We really are having the same arguments over and over again, aren’t we? The minority changes but the arguments for why they should pipe down and be nice remain the same.

  173. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    It might feel good to say, “Oh, no, you started this”, but the better person does NOT say “too late”.

    If my kids were the ones getting shot, how many fucks do you think I’d give about being the “better person”?

    How can you say that an occupied population has to preform at a higher standard than their oppressors to be good people? Why should they be better than their oppressors? Why are you admonishing them for grabbing the boot that kicks them? How do you even make your fingers type those words? I’m honestly flummoxed.

    Was that meant to be comforting to black people who do not riot? Because it sounds condescending as fuck.

  174. karmacat says

    this is the title of the article if people don’t want to follow the link
    Baltimore Residents Urged To Stay Indoors Until Social Progress Naturally Takes Its Course Over Next Century

  175. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    It might feel good to say, “Oh, no, you started this”

    Yeah. That’s why they’re fighting back. To feel good. It isn’t like they’re fighting for their lives. They’re just smug. /s

  176. says

    I wonder who actually started the violence. Implicit in the calls for calm seems to be the idea that it was the civilians who set things off. You can bet that if evidence appeared showing the riot cops were the instigators we’d see all sorts of rationalisations why it wasn’t their fault.

  177. says

    Tony @191: You’re welcome.

    I’m reminded of an episode of DS9 where Sisko is dealing with the emerging Maquis and has a Starfleet Admiral speak to him as if it’s just a simple matter to talk some sense into them, get them to stop fighting, and convince them to move out of their homes. He later comments to a friend that the idyllic Earth is part of the problem: It’s easy to be a saint in paradise.

    The problem with living life on easy mode is that it’s easy and tempting to criticize the people who aren’t, rather than try to understand the additional difficulties they’re going through.

  178. grumpyoldfart says

    The local coppers all have shit-files on each other so the violence won’t stop. It will go on forever. If anyone tries to speak against the cops they will be given a peek at their shit-file and that will shut them up quick-smart.

  179. HappyNat says

    timgueguen @ 196

    Its clear the police instigated the violence, just as they have in every “riot” the past . . . 6 months? Year? Forever? On top of all the structural and historical reasons and recent events, the police are very good at putting people in a position to react. The tactics change in every situation, but they make decisions to make an unstable situation more unstable. Curfews, random street restrictions, shutting down public transportation, wearing riot gear, or bringing in tanks. The authority adds heat to a already hot fire and then points the finger when they get burnt. This isn’t stupid decision making by those in power, they want to change the focus to the “riots”.

  180. Brony, Social Justice Cenobite says

    Goodness there are some shitty human beings in here.

    I don’t mean the people supporting an oppressed population that is understandably and justifiably lashing out as their family gets killed, their police force treats them as criminals (going back hundreds of years, this is a pattern that must be followed back), their fellow citizens propagate a system that puts them in a subordinate position by design (also going back in time), and many other horrific facts. I mean the shitty ones are the ones that have to utterly ignore the point of this post like cowards and make excuses to deflect, ignore and suppress a point. They are doing this as a matter of strategy in a social conflict. They are probably doing this unconsciously (like fallacious reasoning) but that does nothing to make it go away. liz321 is the go to example but there are several others.

    Fucking use reading comprehension. If you will not do a person the respect of addressing their point they have no obligation to address yours. In fact in a situation like this with authorities literally murdering people that refusal to address a point is ignoring thing that others NEED to have heard so their families can survive. Chris J was spot on at 120 when they said

    “Riots are the language of the unheard.” Somehow, I think you keep forgetting that last part, “unheard.”

    . That can be easily tied to the people in here that simply refuse to fucking read and respond to what is being said in here.

    Serious question that must be answered by the ones whining about social self-defense: Do you believe that a people can suffer a level of abuse that leaves them no option but rebellion? If yes, all that remains is actually responding to the facts of the situation. If no, fucking admit to it already because it’s at least nice to know who my political enemies are. If you won’t answer I will take that as a no and act accordingly.

    Suffering people will do what they need to because that is human nature The only thing that can support the existence of people that can create another way is a society willing to go after authorities willing to use violence. I find little of moral concern when it comes to using violence against a violent authority that by its actions appears to care nothing about the violence they create. I’ll come right out and say it, when the social contract breaks down and society allows violence I support violence against the authorities. When there is no other option due to:
    *Imminent threat
    *Culture

    Literally culture! When the social contract breaks down that is how you must get rid of a human threat so others do not die. It’s precisely the same as killing a murderer in self-defense on a social level because there is every reason to expect that it will happen again. Society propagates behavior unless you can drive a lesson into a group all at once which is unrealistic. A group message on the other hand…*

    Additionally anyone bemoaning and pearl-clutching over violence that is unable to offer a different tool that gets actual results will be utterly ignored in the final analysis. All that human nature above will see to that. You are tasteless black lines on a screen to me. My mind will simply flush your worth away.

    *My fantasy involves the death penalty not being abandoned, but limited to the powerful as they have plenty of resources for their defense. I’m sure that has flaws somewhere but at this point in history it looks like social medicine.

  181. chigau (違う) says

    to be utterly trivial and OT:
    I just realised that the cop with the upsidedown shield looks a bit like PZ.

  182. =8)-DX says

    @Dark Jaguar #2

    Think of the innocent people who just want to get on with their lives caught up in this mess.

    Silly kitty: those are the people rioting and protesting.

  183. =8)-DX says

    Wow, for some reason I had an old version of this thread open and it exploded into 200 comments. Oops, lots to read and what looks like lots of status-quo-apologia.

  184. says

    None of this is any good.. however…. this certainly seems to be a case of “you reap what you sow”..
    This sort of thing has happened time and again (eg.. Daily Show this week) and probably will again…
    The Police just keep on sowing these seeds… it’s a bit rich (stupid) to not expect to reap the harvest eventually…

  185. unclefrogy says

    there is something else that seems to be implied when some people start going on about how the protests should be all none violent like it was advocated by the great none=violent leaders of the past or at least ignored. The protests should not be disruptive to the ordinary business of society. The truth of the matter is that the protests that were the most effective in bringing the issues to the attention of everyone that made it necessary for negotiations to be begun was the fact that they were very disruptive and provocative. They were peaceful in that they were not armed but they blocked traffic, disrupted business activity, provoked an aggressive response from their target and their sympathizers and kept come back for more regardless of the reaction. In fact if there were very little reaction then the actions would be increased until there was a reaction. As some one sad above it ain’t stopped yet because the goal has not be reached
    I was just wondering what fraction of those who were actively engaged in the destructive behavior had not had first hand experience of the abuse of authority at the hands of the police in the past, had been busted for nothing, hassled for being black in the wrong place, enjoyed the “joy ride” have a brother or father doing hard time in some dungeon.

  186. M'thew says

    Another take on the factors that lead to the current protests: The way unconstitutional housing policies are used to maintain segregation. Read From Ferguson to Baltimore by Richard Rothstein.

    Again, what you sow, you will reap.

  187. opposablethumbs says

    Non-violence – yes, of course! Absolutely! Starting with the heavily-armed, trained, uniformed gang of instigators (who are being paid to be there).
    When every death in police custody is impartially and thoroughly investigated, tried, sanctioned; when the numbers of those harmed in police custody fall to vanishingly tiny levels; when everybody has good reason to regard the police as protectors just as much as I have (and preferably more) – then I’ll criticise “rioting”. Not before.

  188. anteprepro says

    The second that police become non-violent, using non-violent means to achieve their ends, then you can feel free to demand non-violence from the citizens.

    The second that citizens have the political power and clout to wish all of these problems away into the cornfield, then you can feel free to demand that they only use that most careful, cautious, and meek tactics available to them.

    When neither of these are the case, and yet you demand of them passivity, vehemently disapproving of the oppressed making a mess of Things in response to the killing of People, the message is that you cannot support them unless they make martyrs of themselves, because otherwise you feel morally unclean. Because you only feel you can only support them if their blood continues to be shed without them raising a finger in anger or opposition. Because you care more about decorum and clean streets than the well-being and lives of those protesting oppression and murder.

    Make no mistake, I don’t condone violence. I don’t think it is ideal. I don’t think it is good. I don’t condemn non-violence. I don’t think non-violence is useless. But non-violence takes a lot of time and effort to work, needs to be very strategic and well organized with a lot of fucking ground support, and in the face of police, it puts lives at risk. It is a literal sacrifice. So I cannot DEMAND non-violence. I cannot condemn the violence of those who are themselves faced with violence. I can say what I would do, what the ideal response might be, but that is taking about ideals, a perfect response in a perfect world. But that’s all beside the point when I am not the one who is there coping with the risk of violence against myself, and beside the point when reality isn’t as kind to high-minded generalized principles.

  189. neverjaunty says

    @kayden: it doesn’t actually matter. At all. If every single protester behaved perfectly in every way, the Baltimore establishment would simply lie, and attribute either unrelated crimes or nonexistent events to “thugs” and “rioters”.

    Right now there’s a smear campaign floating around that Gray had a lawsuit for a spine injury, using photographs of court documents showing a settlement. These are using actual court documents of a settlement his family received for lead paint poisoning – in other words, somebody deliberately faked a “spinal injury lawsuit” to spread the lie that Gray was not harmed by the police.

  190. Josh, Official SpokesGay says

    Just a note to remind people that it’s perverse to continually use “violence” primarily and almost exclusively to describe damage to property. Not about injuring or killing people. But about property.

    Re-read the thread and count the number of references to “violence.” Look at how many of them are referring to stealing or damage to property. Notice how few of them are in reference to actual violence against people, such as the murders and maiming of black citizens by police.

    This is fucking morally deranged, and people like Liz321 can’t see it.

    PLEASE stop accepting this frame. Stop accepting “violence” as a synonym for “property damage” without commenting on this derangement. Don’t let people do this to the discourse!

  191. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Cops being afraid to lose their jobs is no excuse.
    My husband worked with special needs adults. When he saw a case of abuse he blew the whistle and was fired. He’s walked away from jobs more than once because he felt he had to. You know what we did? We were dirt fucking poor and we dealt with it. . That’s what happens when you speak truth to authority. Choices have consequences and personal sacrifices are made every day by people who aren’t even trying to stop murders. If your job is being a fucking storm trooper, you should not want that job. A sneak thief making money by burglary is a more moral person than a cop who would keep mum about police brutality. It isn’t as if the Nazis are going to come for their families if they speak up. They’ll just have to be broke like the people they are complicit in killing.

  192. anteprepro says

    Latest info.

    http://live.baltimoresun.com/Event/Latest_updates_from_the_Freddie_Gray_case_in_Baltimore

    Baltimore Police have completed their investigation into Freddie Gray’s death and have turned it over to prosecutors.

    3 things we learned from this morning’s Baltimore Police press conference

    — The investigation has been turned over from Baltimore Police to the State’s Attorney’s office.

    — Police determined the van carrying Freddie Gray made an additional stop that was previously unreported — this one at N. Fremont Ave. and W. Mosher St. The stop was discovered via private security camera footage.

    — Commissioner Anthony Batts at a press conference announcing the closure of the force investigation team’s work, said, “We have exhausted every lead.” Batts said further investigation will be done as warranted

    Now that the investigation into Freddie Gray’s death in police custody wrapped a day early, what’s next?

    Police investigation: The Baltimore Police Department is leading the investigation into Gray’s death a week after his April 12 arrest in West Baltimore.

    Police Commissioner Anthony W. Batts said that his department would present a report to prosecutors by Friday, and wrapped a day early. The agency has said that no new reports or information will be provided as prosecutors continue to consider the case.

    Batts also has noted that the “massive investigation” is likely to continue beyond that date.

    Autopsy: The autopsy is being handled by the state medical examiner, and Gov. Larry Hogan has asked that the autopsy report be expedited.

    Hogan said a preliminary report would be released “as soon as possible,” but a complete report would take several weeks.

    Potential criminal charges: Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby, who was elected in November, will determine whether charges are warranted against the officers involved in Gray’s arrest and transport. She has said she is conducting an independent investigation of Gray’s death.

    She has not released a timetable for her decision.

    Justice Department probe: The federal agency has opened a criminal investigation into Gray’s death. The agency has not released details, but said it would include the FBI, the U.S. attorney’s office and civil rights lawyers within the department.

    Internal police discipline: Police officials can discipline officers who violate department policy. Officials already have stated that the officers involved in Gray’s arrest – six have been suspended with pay — did not give him timely medical care and did not put him in a seatbelt when he was being transported in a police van – a violation of department policy.

    But the police department generally does not release the details of internal disciplinary actions. State law shields the personnel files of government employees from the public, and police officials generally will not talk about individual officers.

    Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake statement on the conclusion of Baltimore Police’s investigation of Freddie Gray’s in-custody death

    Today, Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake announced that the Baltimore Police Department has delivered the results of its initial investigation into the death of Mr. Freddie Gray to the Baltimore City State’s Attorney’s Office:

    “This morning, the Baltimore Police Department delivered the results of its investigation into the death of Mr. Freddie Gray to the Baltimore City State’s Attorney’s Office.

    The criminal investigation into Mr. Gray’s death is now in the hands of the Office of the State’s Attorney, which is also conducting its own independent investigation. The State’s Attorney will determine whether to file criminal charges.

    Once the criminal investigation is complete, an internal disciplinary Police Department process can begin.

    Even as the Baltimore City State’s Attorney conducts her investigation, it is important to remember that another outside, independent investigation is also taking place by the U.S. Department of Justice.

    The family of Mr. Gray wants answers. I want answers. Our entire city deserves answers into Mr. Gray’s death.

    I ask that everyone remain patient and vigilant on this path to justice.”

  193. Gregory Greenwood says

    Josh, Official SpokesGay says @ 212;

    PLEASE stop accepting this frame. Stop accepting “violence” as a synonym for “property damage” without commenting on this derangement. Don’t let people do this to the discourse!

    Exactly – allowing the discourse to be shaped in such a fashion that an equvalency is drawn between property damage on the one hand, and repeated acts of racially motivated, state-sanctioned murder on the other, cannot be allowed to stand.

    I also think it important that we look at these calls for non-violence in the context of one side being ordinary citizens who are rioting and mostly causing property damage rather than death and injury, while the other side consists of a grossly paramilitarized and heavily armed police force that has clearly spat upon its undertaking to ‘protect and serve’ the citizenry, and instead is acting as a racist cadre of partizan thugs enforcing the will of the social elite upon the rest of society by any means up to and including cold blooded murder, and all the while those who commit those murders are subsequently able to hide behind their badges and, in most cases, escape any and all punishment for their crimes. And yet, when the calls for non-violence come, they are aimed mostly, or even exclusively, at the marginalised, the disenfranchised; at the unarmed ordinary citizen standing up to what essentially amounts to paramilitary agencies of authoritarian oppression. It is much like seeing an act of bullying, and then chiding the victim for even thinking of trying to resist while ignoring the bully who is still kicking them in their ribs.

    In such a scenario, calls for non-violence applied to groups who have already tried complete submission to an ever more corrupt and oppressive system of law for forty years and who have received nothing in return other than ever worsening oppression and a pile of people dead for the ‘crime’ of being abroad while black amounts to apologia for the status quo. It is in effect a statement of allegiance to a racist and corrupt system.

    How about we start with calls for the accountability of the police? How about we actually bother prosecuting murderers with badges reliably and fairly? How about we tackle deaths and abuses of suspects in custody? Once those who are supposed to be civil servants are held to a standard of behaviour befitting their role and the authority it grants to them, then we can talk about the need for the victims of oppression to step back and look to their own behaviour, but I suspect that, once the bigotry and corruption are gone, the rioting and civil disobedience will subside along with it. Its almost as if the two things are linked or something…

  194. freemage says

    Oh, and for those who continue to believe that the protestors were solely responsible for the riot….

    http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2015/04/how-baltimore-riots-began-mondawmin-purge

    Just before the local high school lets out, the cops shut down the buses and trains, and blocked several of the roads. So you had all the kids coming out of school, and those who didn’t crib rides from a teacher were forced to just hang around, caged in by walls of cops in riot gear, with no way to get home. Just had scores (maybe hundreds, I can’t find numbers for the size of the school) of bored, scared and/or angry adolescents, forced to just hang around and wait. I can’t think of a better way to goad the teens into doing something rash. And once one of them does, well, there’s the justification for escalation.

  195. komarov says

    Just dropping in mainly to say thanks to everyone who has contributed to this thread. Like the Ferguson threads before it has been very educational, in a sad way. I am fortunate (not even American) that I am completely unable to relate to the people in Baltimore. Crap of that magnitude has never happened to me, nor is ever likely to, so asking me what I’d do if me and mine were systematically oppressed is no more meaningful than asking me what I’d do if I won the lottery or were asked to fly into space. Does not happen.

    Reading this thread, links and quotes helps quite a bit. Normally I’d default to “non-violence of course” because I’m just not equipped to imagine a situation where I might feel I need to smash someone else’s car just to be noticed.

    As others pointed out, those who have condemned the rioters fail to suggest feasible alternatives to improve the situation. Before anyone who universally condemns rioting as a means of social change even goes so far as to make any suggestions they they should really answer Brony’s question (#201):

    Do you believe that a people can suffer a level of abuse that leaves them no option but rebellion?

    If your answer is ‘no’ I think you might suffer from a failure of imagination and need not bother to argue your case. I share this failing but after reading this thread I accept that the answer must be ‘yes’. Yes, absolutely. I can’t imagine being in that situation but this abuse is clearly happening. The response may not seem sensible but it does make sense.

  196. says

    This is a followup to comment #211, in which the doctored lead paint exposure settlement was used to claim Freddie Gray had a prior spinal injury. That bogus claim, and others, was nicely debunked by journalist Shaun King.

    […] One conservative reporter is claiming that Gray severed his spine jumping from a three-story window eluding police and then running full force into a wall. Except even the Baltimore police have claimed they simply spotted him on the street.

    Other conservatives literally doctored a lead paint exposure settlement that Gray and his sister received and claimed that it was for a severe spinal injury he received in a car accident.

    Perhaps no lie being told, though, is more disturbing than the one the Baltimore police are leaking to/through the Washington Post—that Gray injured himself in the van. […]

    The Baltimore Police Department and the Washington Post are advancing the lie that after they arrested Gray, he deliberately crushed his own voice box, fractured three of his own vertebrae, and severed his own spine. The evidence they claim to have for this is a prisoner they claim is speaking anonymously about what he heard when he was put into the police transport van in a box next to Gray. […]

    Gray was CLEARLY injured before he was placed in the back of the police van […]

    It took the police nearly 38 minutes to get him to the police station, but it’s only a two-minute drive away. […] The Baltimore Police just admitted on Thursday, after security camera footage was released from a private business, that the van made at least two more stops that were not reported or included in their original timeline.
    So Gray arrived at the police station a full 40 minutes after they arrested him. When they arrived at the station, he was unconscious and unresponsive.

    The Baltimore police’s leak to the Washington Post that Gray injured himself in the van and that another suspect heard him doing it is not supported by the facts. […]

    A full six days earlier, Baltimore Police Commissioner Anthony Batts claimed that the second suspect said Gray was quiet in the back of the van.

    Gray did not have ANY injuries, cuts, scrapes, bumps conducive with someone forcefully breaking his own vertebrae, voice box, and severing his own spine. […]

    Miller states that Gray was actually completely unresponsive by the time the second suspect was loaded into the police van, which completely debunks the notion that Gray was slamming himself up against the wall in an attempt to injure himself when the other man was in the van. […]

  197. says

    Dunno if this has been posted in the “morning in America” thread (which i keep not bookmarking and can never find again -_-)

    http://feministing.com/2015/04/29/when-white-people-tell-each-other-to-be-safe-during-an-uprising/

    This may appear to be a small point in the grand scheme of the conversations sparked by the Baltimore uprising but the number of times I have seen this on Facebook over the past few days (and time and time again before that) is too many to count.

    I lived in Maryland growing up so I have a good number of friends on social media who live somewhere in that state. And as a result, my Facebook feed is littered with statuses by wealthy, non-Black folks who live nowhere close to West Baltimore telling me that they “got home fine” and comments by their friends urging them to “be safe.” It reminds me of WashU parents and its administration telling students to be “safe and secure” during the protests in Ferguson. It reminds me of expat Americans posting about their “safety” every time protests break out in Tahrir. And it reveals a lot about what we mean by “safety” and whose and what kinds of safety take priority.

  198. says

    Another viewpoint: a reporter talks to Baltimore rich people attending the Maryland Hunt Cup:

    […] It’s a gathering that brings together Baltimore’s furtive network of white elites, which is spread over a network of a dozen prep schools and half a dozen country clubs, which is employed by Johns Hopkins and T. Rowe Price and Legg Mason (all headquartered here in Baltimore). Hunt Cup means that spring is here. Hunt Cup means that you can eat canapes out of the back of your car. […] Hunt Cup means that you can smoke pot in front of the cops.[…]

    “Do you know about the protest?” I asked.

    “It’s kind of stupid,” the boy in the yellow shorts said. “I think it’s a racial thing. Just because one African-American man died, they all team up. […]”

    I chatted up two 50-something men standing leisurely by a cream-colored Jeep.

    “You want to know what I think,” said the one in the Black Dog Martha’s Vineyard sweatshirt. “The cops have the hardest job in the world besides our troops in Afghanistan. You know, and I tell my kids this, if a cop tells you to stop, you stop. It’s sad what happened to this guy, but let the police do their job. […].”

    “Baltimore is a shithole,” said the man with the cigar. He wore a navy blazer with a pocket square. […]

    “This guy,” said the man in the gray sweatshirt. “His spine was broken before the cops picked him up. I talked to doctors at Johns Hopkins. But his spine was already broken.”

    Ah, there’s that bogus claim about the spine already broken. I guess you know which news outlets those guys listen to.

    […]“Every time a black person dies, the media covers it. If it was a white person, we wouldn’t be out here talking about it. Al Sharpton comes in. Al Sharpton. He’s the reverend of what? What church does he get up in front of every week and preach God’s word?” […]

    Baltimore is the setting of Bob Dylan’s ballad “The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll.” The titular Hattie Carroll was a black bartender at a Baltimore society gala in 1963, who was assaulted by the wealthy tobacco farmer William Zantzinger and later died of her injuries. Zantzinger served six months in jail for manslaughter and paid a $625 fine. He was regarded as a gentleman. […]

  199. says

    In 1967, Martin Luther King, Jr. spoke at the American Psychology Association’s Annual Convention in Washington D.C. A full transcript of his speech is available at the link, but I wanted to highlight this segment, where he discusses riots:

    Urban riots must now be recognized as durable social phenomena. They may be deplored, but they are there and should be understood. Urban riots are a special form of violence. They are not insurrections. The rioters are not seeking to seize territory or to attain control of institutions. They are mainly intended to shock the white community. They are a distorted form of social protest. The looting which is their principal feature serves many functions. It enables the most enraged and deprived Negro to take hold of consumer goods with the ease the white man does by using his purse. Often the Negro does not even want what he takes; he wants the experience of taking. But most of all, alienated from society and knowing that this society cherishes property above people, he is shocking it by abusing property rights. There are thus elements of emotional catharsis in the violent act. This may explain why most cities in which riots have occurred have not had a repetition, even though the causative conditions remain. It is also noteworthy that the amount of physical harm done to white people other than police is infinitesimal and in Detroit whites and Negroes looted in unity.
    A profound judgment of today’s riots was expressed by Victor Hugo a century ago. He said, ‘If a soul is left in the darkness, sins will be committed. The guilty one is not he who commits the sin, but he who causes the darkness.’
    The policymakers of the white society have caused the darkness; they create discrimination; they structured slums; and they perpetuate unemployment, ignorance and poverty. It is incontestable and deplorable that Negroes have committed crimes; but they are derivative crimes. They are born of the greater crimes of the white society. When we ask Negroes to abide by the law, let us also demand that the white man abide by law in the ghettos. Day-in and day-out he violates welfare laws to deprive the poor of their meager allotments; he flagrantly violates building codes and regulations; his police make a mockery of law; and he violates laws on equal employment and education and the provisions for civic services. The slums are the handiwork of a vicious system of the white society; Negroes live in them but do not make them any more than a prisoner makes a prison. Let us say boldly that if the violations of law by the white man in the slums over the years were calculated and compared with the law-breaking of a few days of riots, the hardened criminal would be the white man. These are often difficult things to say but I have come to see more and more that it is necessary to utter the truth in order to deal with the great problems that we face in our society.

  200. says

    I’m a Baltimorean (moved there from NYC in 1968 at the age of 6) and lived there until 1999. The first place I lived that I could call my own was a little rowhouse a couple blocks from Memorial Stadium (and a block from John Waters) I remember when the desegregated the schools. My family moved there when my dad got a good job offer at Johns Hopkins because they lost a lot of people after the riots when Martin Luther King was shot; real estate was cheap.

    Real estate in Baltimore was cheap in 1968 because after the riots there was “white flight” to the massive suburbs that developed all around the city. Growing up, I remember occasionally going to the sniny new “shopping mall”(a new idea then!) that had opened up in one of those wealthy new suburbs in Columbia, MD – 20 miles outside of the city. ~10 years later, White Marsh, 25 miles north. ~15 years later Owings Mills.. The city was ringed with quiet, clean, nice suburbs filled with all the people who had left Baltimore and gotten lawns. Meanwhile, as I meandered through grade school and high school, downtown was a bit of a pit around the old harbor, with a “block” of porn stores and strip clubs stretching from what is now Harbor Place to Little Italy. Fells Point – now a little cluster of nice restaurants for hipsters – was a place you didn’t go if you were smart. The inner harbor was fenced off. That was all unknown territory for me because I couldn’t work my bicycle fast enough to get through there safely.

    In the late 70s a pattern began, which continued to this day. Starting with Baltimore’s mayor William Schaeffer, there were attempts to renovate and revitalize. Those attempts amounted to gifting big incentives to developers to come build nice things downtown. It started with Harborplace, which was a downtown mall built by the Rouse Co., on a piece of the inner harbor which was more or less given to Rouse by the city. It turned into a really spiffy destination that pulled other businesses and restaurants down, and there was a pretty lively period of revitalization down the downtown axis. Meanwhile, in the neighborhoods where segregation had allotted to African-Americans things more or less stayed the same. The renovated areas acted as a draw for suburban money to come down and have dinner in Baltimore and then flee back out to the suburbs again. Some truly horrible ‘projects’ were built – basically along the same lines as low-cost apartments everywhere: designed to warehouse low-income residents in rent-controlled subsidized housing where, in principle, they might be able to eventually … what? There were enough waiters for the restaurants in Harborplace, and the malls in the suburbs hired suburban kids, and soon the ‘projects’ were segregated, depressed, drugged, dangerous, and dismal. Baltimore tried to do attractive low-income housing by demolishing the projects and making modern versions of the rowhouses that were there before the projects went up. But the underlying problems were unchanged.

    I remember the 80s when the influx of cocaine (which we now know was a result of CIA interference in Central America opening new markets in American inner cities-1) the late 80s had Baltimore and Washington as “the murder capital of the country” and it was spooky. By then, I had moved from my parents place and lived down near the stadium. Sometimes you’d hear gunshots and sirens. But the dirty secret the media didn’t talk about was that the violence was almost entirely segregated into African-American neighborhoods. The statistics told the truth: in the murder capital of the USA, 100% of the dead were African-Americans. Other than being on Eyewitness News, it was not a problem to do anything about. Drugs… in the 80s I remember the suburban kids would come to town to score drugs then go back and get high at their boring shopping mall jobs. Those kids were left alone. And, seriously, I understand and sympathize (I’ve done my share of drugs, and perhaps a bit of someone else’s share, too) if I was desperate and had no options, no opportunity, and my choices for how to make money was to wait tables, courier drugs, or waste my time trying to gnaw my way out of a trap, I’d have been blasted every waking day until it was over. I used to commute to my nice job in the suburbs and drove through those neighborhoods and, yeah, car-jacking was a problem so I kept my windows rolled up and my doors locked and went fast. That still hasn’t changed. I worked at Hopkins Hospital in the 80s and it was scary. They were always pulling people into the ER with gun and knife wounds. Never white people. And AIDS began to burn the segregated population, the enclaves in East and West Baltimore were devastated; the suburbs were OK. The expense of dealing with the travails of the segregated parts of the inner city was a great weight that always pulled the city down down down and since the tax base had left the city there was nothing to do.

    The roads in and out of Baltimore go through the nice areas, which is funny because you think it’d be easier to put roads in the broken down parts. But there’s a north/south axis through the Jones Falls out to the nice suburbs to the North, and an exit out the bottom of the city for the bank workers, stock brokers, and baseball/football fans to get to the suburbs to the West. An attempt to make improved access through by Mondawmin mall: blocked. An attempt to extend Rt40 through West Baltimore: started by dropped. Once the problem was solved for the suburbanites, there was no money left for anyone else because the tax base had plummetted and the surrounding counties were where all the money lived. So big chunks of Baltimore just festered. They still fester. It’s a damn shame. The model of “build nice stuff to lure the suburbans in to the city” extended: Baltimore enslaved to the NFL and Major League Baseball built palatial stadiums (and didn’t worry overmuch about the impossible traffic and parking problems that ensued) and shut down Memorial Stadium (allowing that part of town to cough, die, and head toward slum) meanwhile telling the ridiculous lie that “no tax money is being used” and funding the mess with lottery money – a tax on hope and poverty – while closing schools because of lack of money, and letting roads turn into potholed messes.

    And through it all, the police. As a privileged white kid, I always saw the police as ‘on my side’ (I wince when I think of that) until I realized that they weren’t. When the drug dealers moved into my neighborhood in the 80s I asked the police if they could do anything and they said “no.” When I was stuck up at gun-point near where a guy I knew had been shot to death a month before, I ran to a cop car that was idling on North Avenue and was told he couldn’t help me because it was in a different precinct and besides, the guy was probably gone by now .. and if he had a gun he was best left alone. When I got a job that took me further outside of the city, I took it, and moved out way past the suburbs and have no intention of ever living in a city again.

    Baltimore’s cops mostly live in the suburbs and commute in to their “us versus them” jobs, because the suburbs don’t really need all that many cops.

    Baltimore made a decision in the 1970s that the only way it could recover from the flight of wealth after the riots was to court suburban money and lure it into the city. So the whole city became aligned along the axis of: keep the valuable ‘nice neighborhoods’ nice, and keep the real estate moguls and professional sports teams and restaurant franchises happy, and, uh, fuck. They threw up their hands and quit before they really gave any thought to undoing the foundational damage of Jim Crow and dealing with the wealth-flight by building wealth in the city. I have no idea, seriously, how that could be done. I always come back to investing in education and infrastructure and making it possible to start businesses through access to capital. But instead, Baltimore has a kickass baseball stadium and football field and fuck all else. And cops that exist to serve that ridiculous imbalance. I really don’t see how the situation can unscrew itself now that it’s screwed up so tightly. I certainly understand why anyone would want to go burn a few cop cars, though; they are the face of a very complex and foundational system of oppressive mismanagement.

    I’m saddened at how happy I was with the cool mall that grew up around the inner harbor (I mean, it really is NICE) because I didn’t realize it was built for me, and the prices put even walking in there out of the reach of all the people who actually lived around it. At the time we thought of William Donald Schaeffer as a grumpy old coot who had his heart in the right place (he was the architect of the ‘court the suburbs’ strategy) and at the time there were very few voices who asked whether it was corrupt to give valuable land to developers so that they could make it more valuable and use that value to … build gated communities and malls in the suburbs.

    I know I’m rambling but maybe some of this from one Baltimorean’s perspective might help.

    (1: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CIA_involvement_in_Contra_cocaine_trafficking )

  201. says

    Tashiliciously Shriked @220:

    Here is the link to the thread, which is now called “Reagan’s ‘morning in America’ has acquired a different resonance”. After three months, WordPress no longer allows a post to remain open, so PZ has had to start new ones (which I’m quite glad he’s done, given the resources provided in the thread).

  202. says

    Marcus @223:

    I know I’m rambling but maybe some of this from one Baltimorean’s perspective might help.

    Can’t speak for anyone else, but I found your perspective insightful. Thank you.

  203. says

    Tony @#225
    Thanks.

    When I started to write that I couldn’t stop; there were too many memories pouring over me. I feel sad and angry and ashamed right now because there’s all this little shit that you don’t realize when you’re growing up in the middle of it. Because it seems reasonable to you, you never look far enough to wonder if it’s reasonable enough for everybody. Maybe a saint does.

    There are so many things about growing up in that kind of environment that slam back into you when you remember them in this kind of context. For example, I remember how there were concerted attempts to block Baltimore’s pathetic ‘light rail’ system from actually connecting the city to some of the suburbs. I remember those discussions (around the late 80s) and it was basically: “how can we in the suburbs get in to the baseball games without getting stuck in traffic, but OMG we have to keep ‘the people from the inner city’ from coming to ‘our’ nice shopping malls.” There was huge debate about how to do that and it’s only as I think about it now that I realize that it was done. The reason parking is so expensive in Harborplace is to make it too expensive for someone poor to go to Harborplace. And in Baltimore, “poor” means “African-American”.

    It’s oppression woven into the very fabric of the society, so finely and smoothly that I grew up surrounded by it, taking advantage of it, and didn’t see it, and I’m really angry and ashamed of it right now.

  204. says

    I’ve only read about half of these comments but the endless back and fourth bickering is getting to me. I’m not going to pretend I have a good solution to this problem, but I do know what I would be doing if there was some kind of riot going on. I’d post signs on most of my property and buy a goddamned 12 gauge and plenty of shells. The sign would simply say that ANY trespassers will be shot on sight. While I get that the nonviolent protests weren’t working what we are talking about is Anarchy. If that happens and anyone shows up with intent to harm or damage any part of my prosperity, they get a twelve gauge to the upper torso.

  205. Saad says

    Ryan Dietz, #228

    Well, yeah, if you’re under attack you have the right to defend yourself.

    But… why bring that up in a discussion about protests and rebellions springing from racist police officers murdering black people?

    If that happens and anyone shows up with intent to harm or damage any part of my prosperity, they get a twelve gauge to the upper torso.

    Actually, you sound pretty fucking paranoid and pretty fucking dangerous. Did a protester attack your home or something?

  206. Nerd of Redhead, Dances OM Trolls says

    If that happens and anyone shows up with intent to harm or damage any part of my prosperity, they get a twelve gauge to the upper torso.

    Well, aren’t you somebody special.,…Not in a good way.

  207. chigau (違う) says

    Ryan Dietz
    Perhaps you should strike first.
    Get them before they get you.
    Nuke ’em from orbit.

  208. says

    Ryan @228:

    I’ve only read about half of these comments but the endless back and fourth bickering is getting to me.

    You poor, poor dear. You could, like, stop reading. That would solve your problem. And probably keep us from reading more of your apathetic comments that show more concern for goddamn property than human lives.

    I’m not going to pretend I have a good solution to this problem, but I do know what I would be doing if there was some kind of riot going on. I’d post signs on most of my property and buy a goddamned 12 gauge and plenty of shells. The sign would simply say that ANY trespassers will be shot on sight. While I get that the nonviolent protests weren’t working what we are talking about is Anarchy. If that happens and anyone shows up with intent to harm or damage any part of my prosperity, they get a twelve gauge to the upper torso.

    No, we are not talking anarchy. Check out the quoted material I posted @222. Or pull you head out of your ass and recognize that the civil unrest (read: riots by some people) is a response to a much deeper problem. One that won’t be solved by you grabbing a gun and killing people because they touched your grass.

    It’s so lovely that amid the issues of police brutality and use of excessive force, the continued denial of the civil and human rights of African-Americans, rampant economic inequality, disproportionate incarceration of black bodies, and racist police policies like Stop N Frisk or Broken Windows, that your focus is on my poor property.
    The boot of white supremacy is still pressed against the neck of blacks across the country (as well as Hispanics and American Indians), but that’s not a big deal to you apparently.

    You’re a swell individual.

  209. says

    It’s more that people are “tut-tuting” each side too much in this “debate”.

    I’m having some trouble explaining my vicious cycle thoughts to myself, so I apologize if what follows makes no sense or is hard to read but here goes.

    Rioters are rioting about police brutality. Okay this makes sense.

    Cops get called because there is a threat to public safety and personal property. Also makes sense.

    Police feel threatened, because they are humans and I’d like to see anyone stay calm and feel un-threatened in front of a large group of angry people that are burning things and smashing business windows etc.

    Police have been trained to react towards a threat to them self with force if necessary (necessary being determined by the officer if they think their life or the lives of any citizens are threatened). Not perfect, but what are you going to do if it looks like someone is going to stab/shoot you… Or hell, bash your head in with a rock, and your job is to stop the threat?

    More protestors get killed by even the ” innocent” or “good” cops (or whatever you want to call them).

    More violent protests because more protestors get killed or injured.

    Rinse, lather, repeat.

    Should we descend to Anarchy on the streets? Should cops not be able to defend themselves if they feel threatened?

    Is the system perfect? Hell no. Do some or even most cops get a bit bully-ish or commanding? Yes, of course, but part of their job involves upholding laws, if they tell you to stop doing something you should probably stop and at least listen to them.

    Do I think that getting shot in the back while handcuffed is excuse able? Hell no. How could anyone be a threat in that situation?!

    Should cops be held to the same standards as any other human being in the United States? YES!!! Probably even more so than most.

    Do I feel that anyone that kills anyone else should be put to death? Quite honestly, yes, I do depending on the situation. Visible threat to yourself or others? Your fine. Running away while cuffed and you shoot him? Instant death sentence, no questions asked.

    Again, do I have a good answer for how to implement this ideology? No, tragically I don’t, because not all people believe that all people should be treated the same, because there are racist, bigoted, self-righteous, self-important fuckwits EVERYWHERE.

    Is my original response extreme? Of course, but if we truly wish to move into anarchy then everyone would be responsible for looking out for themselves and their family first, and ask questions later, or never.

  210. chigau (違う) says

    anarchy
    You keep using that word, I do not think it means what you think it means.

  211. savant says

    Ryan Dietz @ 236

    because there are racist, bigoted, self-righteous, self-important fuckwits EVERYWHERE.

    Just a question to think about (for everyone, really): how do you know you aren’t one of those?

    If you don’t have an answer to that question, you might want to look into one.

  212. says

    Ryan Dietz:
    You really need to pay better attention to media outlets that are not mainstream. If you did, you’d know that the protests in Baltimore have been overwhelmingly peaceful:

    As you read most of the nationwide coverage, the various news media and websites do admit that most of the protesters were peaceful as you read further down their stories, despite the attention grabbing headlines that speaks of only the violence, destruction and criminal mischief of a few. Unfortunately there will always be a few agitators in any crowd this size. Some of which are purposely positioned among the peaceful protesters for just that reason.

    After what has been going on with black men being killed nationwide without any justice taking place even after grand juries, video evidence, incidences being ruled homicide by medical examiners, No officers go to jail, very few cops lose their job and the Ferguson officer who killed Mike Brown was allowed to retire and protect his pension, there is a sense of frustration in these protests, yes!

    What happened in the streets of Ferguson was worst by comparison. But let’s be very clear, the scene the media is describing, the picture being painted with all headlines are something no one, I repeat NO ONE wants to see. What they’re showing you are the actions of 100 or so people, there were 10,000 people there, and despite some of the headlines, and you can see by the pictures below all the protesters were not black and out of control. And despite what a local pastor would have you believe, some of those who were acting up the most were doing so before those (he called outsiders), who came to town in support showed up.

    Words have power, they create perceptions that make other actions possible and allow the most outrageous of explanations why they kill black people believable and acceptable by other groups of people. Let’ be clear here, NO ONE wants to truly see Scenes of Chaos: 1,000’s of Frenzied Protesters Rioting In Baltimore, the city would truly still be burning. But they media will show the worst or the worst, you know if it bleeds it leads. It’s true it’s great for ratings which leads to heavy advertising revenue, but it is not good for our community or the race relations nationwide.

    Just like the media takes the liberty to show the worst of the worst like they did in Baltimore, I am taking the liberty to show the worst of the worst in their reporting and calling them out. It’s important to not allow the mass media to distort the narrative and take away from the message of this fight for justice.

    What they don’t report was there were, “Muslims, Christians, Jews, Blacks, Whites, Asians, Young and Old, Rich and Poor people all united and standing harmoniously against common oppression,” shared one of the organizers Frank ‘Sha’ Francois. The demonstration was sponsored by a wide coalition of social justice groups, including Malik Shabazz of Black Lawyers For Justice (BLFJ), Carl Dix of Stop Mass Incarceration (SMIN) and brother Ted Freedomfighter Sutton of Sutton House, just to name a few who came in support of their brothers and sisters in Baltimore. Support for justice of Freddie Gray, 25, who was arrested one week ago, in West Baltimore. Who died on April 19th, from injuries sustained while he was in police custody.

    You’re all worked up over the wrong fucking thing. The problem is not rioters. The problem is a racist as fuck criminal justice system that has been oppressing African-Americans (and other people who are not white) for centuries. Since you’re so worried about property over human lives, why don’t you do your part to dismantle the white supremacy engine that drives some African-Americans to such a point of desperation that they engage in civil unrest. Do that and odds are your precious property won’t be endangered.

    Compared to those shattered lives, property-whether it’s a CVS or your fucking lawn-do not fucking matter.

  213. Saad says

    Ryan Dietz, #236

    Cops get called because there is a threat to public safety and personal property.

    You got that backwards.

    Police have been trained to react towards a threat to them self with force if necessary (necessary being determined by the officer if they think their life or the lives of any citizens are threatened). Not perfect, but what are you going to do if it looks like someone is going to stab/shoot you… Or hell, bash your head in with a rock, and your job is to stop the threat?

    The police is shooting, choking and beating the shit out of black people. But it’s a some property damage resulting directly in response to the murders that really gets to you.

    More violent protests because more protestors get killed or injured.

    Rinse, lather, repeat.

    No. More protests because black people keep being murdered by racist police.

    Also, the protests are not violent. They’re peaceful. Why are you blind to the peaceful protests?

    Also, refer to Josh’s #212 about your use of the term violence to describe property damage.

    Do some or even most cops get a bit bully-ish or commanding? Yes, of course, but part of their job involves upholding laws, if they tell you to stop doing something you should probably stop and at least listen to them.

    Did you seriously just say if the cops tell you to stop doing something, you probably should? How fucking clueless are you about this situation?

    Do I think that getting shot in the back while handcuffed is excuse able? Hell no. How could anyone be a threat in that situation?!

    Should cops be held to the same standards as any other human being in the United States? YES!!! Probably even more so than most.

    Do I feel that anyone that kills anyone else should be put to death? Quite honestly, yes, I do depending on the situation. Visible threat to yourself or others? Your fine. Running away while cuffed and you shoot him? Instant death sentence, no questions asked.

    I don’t believe you.

    Let me ask you one question though: Just what do you think uprisings and rebellions look like? Historically… what do you think all those brave white admirable heroes who have rebelled throughout history actually did?

  214. Brony, Social Justice Cenobite says

    It’s almost like someone stuck poor Ryan with a branding iron.

    @ Ryan Dietz
    Here you go dear, something in here should help.

    Your choice to deliberately wrench attention from the results of a racist society also makes sense. You will not like the ways that it makes sense. Your emotional priorities are clear. You choose to try to distract attention from societies ills with a special reminder that white people will still kill when the social contract breaks down.

    Why should I consider you an ally of any sort right now?

  215. Saad says

    chigau, #237

    I think the Zimmerman wannabe already has “ideas”.

    That’s unfair. Ryan has clearly said he doesn’t have any ideas. He just can’t stand seeing a car burn.

  216. Nerd of Redhead, Dances OM Trolls says

    Ah, a liberturd gun-nut trying to sound intelligent. Bwahahahahahhaa. A contradiction in terms. Oxymoron at its best.
    Somebody thinks they are more special than others, without evidence that what they think isn’t a delusion.

  217. says

    Ryan Dietz @236:

    Do I feel that anyone that kills anyone else should be put to death? Quite honestly, yes, I do depending on the situation. Visible threat to yourself or others? Your fine. Running away while cuffed and you shoot him? Instant death sentence, no questions asked.

    You’ve not really given this much thought have you? The above is not a consistent position on killing others. You begin by saying that you feel anyone who kills anyone else should be put to death. But then you say there are circumstances where killing others is acceptable. Which means you don’t think that anyone who kills anyone else should be put to death.

    Oh, and btw, the position you hold on killing others, for all that it is somewhat incoherent, is vile. As a Humanist, the idea of putting someone to death for killing others is abhorrent. It’s nothing more than the barbaric ‘eye for an eye’ mentality or retribution. I guess you don’t believe that human rights are for all human beings.

  218. says

    Do some or even most cops get a bit bully-ish or commanding? Yes, of course, but part of their job involves upholding laws, if they tell you to stop doing something you should probably stop and at least listen to them.

    Authoritarian alert!
    Authoritarian alert!

  219. says

    By the way, the other thing that’s funny about Ryan’s “stand your ground” ideology is that if he ever did find himself confronting an armed and dangerous person who had come onto his property in a threatening manner: it would most likely be a cop. Pointing shotguns at cops is a bad idea, chickenhawk. They come in packs.

  220. says

    Ryan Dietz @247:
    Firstly, it’s a common courtesy to use the nym and/or (preferably ‘AND’) comment number when responding to people (as I’ve done above). Also, quoting the material you’re responding to makes it easier to follow the conversation. To quote someone do this-
    <blockquote> place quoted text here </blockquote>
    This will result in this:

    place quoted text here

    Just remember to close your tag with the ‘/’

    Secondly:

    Gee, thanks for comparing me to such a FANTASTIC individual (sarcasm by the way)

    Your disregard for human life makes the comparison to Zimmerman appropriate in my eyes.

  221. says

    Marcus @249:

    By the way, the other thing that’s funny about Ryan’s “stand your ground” ideology is that if he ever did find himself confronting an armed and dangerous person who had come onto his property in a threatening manner: it would most likely be a cop. Pointing shotguns at cops is a bad idea, chickenhawk. They come in packs.

    Of course, given that Ryan is a white guy (check out his FB profile), chances are that he would probably emerge from a police encounter-even one where he brandishes a gun and/or threatened cops-relatively unharmed. If he were black OTOH…

  222. numerobis says

    Tashiliciously Shriked @220, quoting someone else:

    It reminds me of expat Americans posting about their “safety” every time protests break out in Tahrir

    My sister was almost an expat posting about her “safety” — except for the part about posting, since there was no internet. She was living on a side street a few blocks from Tahrir during the revolution. Security forces drove down her street firing tear gas and water cannons, and, judging from what she found on the street later, live ammunition. Thankfully she’d moved elsewhere before the coup, so she didn’t get a reprise. She had friends killed and tortured. The military regime aren’t fucking around: nearly 1,000 killed in few days of the revolution, more than that in the coup, and unknown but large numbers since.

    Definitely people overstate the effect of protests and police riots on the general life of the city. I’m in Montreal, a war zone if you listen to the news, though I keep not hearing about protests until after they happen. Tahrir was not at all in the same league.

  223. says

    @Tony, I don’t know whether to like you or dislike you. I honestly wasn’t aware that a majority of the protestsors have been peaceful, but then you follow up with personal attacks because why?

    I will also admit that I have trouble coherently communicating the point I’m trying to make, which occasionally means even I loose track of the point I’m trying to make.

    Also, a rather unrelated question for you. As a humanist, what do you feel should have been done to someone like Hitlar had he not taken his own life? Is there not something akin to true evil in the world, and if so, how is continuing to let that evil continue un checked more or less vile than not allowing it to continue? I’m genuinely curious as to your thoughts on this side pondering, which can be difficult to convey through text.

  224. says

    Ryan@#253: I’m genuinely curious as to your thoughts on this side pondering

    Just Asking a Question, eh? (Bit of a derail, don’t you think?)

    Hitler could have been taken out of power and retired to someplace where he couldn’t cause any more harm; there’d be no need to kill him. Just make sure he can’t cause any more harm. You know, kind of like how Dick Cheney and George Bush and Henry Kissinger’s hands have been taken off the steering wheel.

    Retributive violence isn’t about ‘justice’ it’s about the people engaging in the retribution. And it’s not pretty.

  225. says

    Marcus@#254 if nobody can tell, I’m new to this particular bored, and yes, it is a bit derailing.

    Unfortunately I followed this post from a friends FaceBook page and foolishly didn’t bother to check if there was any rules to posting or if there was a way to send a private message to a particular person for such side questions.

    Feel free to take it down or (if possible) edit it if it detracts from the conversation.

    Isn’t the violent portion of the protests retributive violence in its own way?

  226. says

    Ryan Dietz @253:

    @Tony, I don’t know whether to like you or dislike you. I honestly wasn’t aware that a majority of the protestsors have been peaceful, but then you follow up with personal attacks because why?

    It doesn’t bother me one way or the other if you like me or not.
    I’ve criticized you because of the horrible things you’ve said.
    I’ve criticized you because you’re speaking as if you understand what you’re talking about when you’re speaking from a profound position of white privilege coupled with staggering ignorance. It might be hard for you to hear someone be so blunt, but I make no apologies.
    You are the one who came in here deriding protesters without having a full understanding of what they’re going through.
    You’re the one who is talking about the situations in which you’d kill someone.
    You’re the one placing greater value on property than human life.

    All of that–the ignorance, the disregard for human life, the elevation of property over human life-that’s grounds in my book for not being nice. You’re deserving of the “personal attacks” you’ve received.

    I will also admit that I have trouble coherently communicating the point I’m trying to make, which occasionally means even I loose track of the point I’m trying to make.

    Take the time to communicate more clearly then. Practice at it. You don’t have to respond to every comment someone makes to you. You can take the time to clearly think through your positions, as well as the implications. What do I mean by that?
    I already mentioned one example @246. You haven’t thought through the implications of your opinion that “anyone who kills anyone else ought to be put to death”.

    For another example, you said above that if a rioter set foot on your property, you’d shoot them. That statement reveals quite a bit about you. It shows that you value property over human life. Why is that?

    Also, a rather unrelated question for you. As a humanist, what do you feel should have been done to someone like Hitlar had he not taken his own life?
    Is there not something akin to true evil in the world, and if so, how is continuing to let that evil continue un checked more or less vile than not allowing it to continue?

    I’m talking about everyday human beings, not that one in a billion vile human being. But no, I wouldn’t have a problem if someone had put a gun to Hitler’s head and killed him. Such evil is not something most people will encounter in their lives, so it’s a pointless gotcha attempt on your part.

  227. savant says

    Ryan Dietz @ 255,

    Welcome to Pharyngula! It is not for the faint of heart or the weak-willed. This board is positively merciless when it comes to bad ideas, logical flaws, and immoral or amoral statements.

    That’s a good thing. No better way to burn away the bad ideas in ones’ head than to have them exposed to fire.

    I hope you stick around. We all gather cruft in life, it’s worth it to occasionally burn some of it off.

  228. Saad says

    Ryan, #255

    Isn’t the violent portion of the protests retributive violence in its own way?

    Violence? You mean the police attacking people?

    Oh, you mean the few people who damaged some property. No, it’s not retributive. It’s an outburst of rage because they’re marked for execution by white police officers.

  229. says

    Ryan @255:

    Marcus@#254 if nobody can tell, I’m new to this particular bored, and yes, it is a bit derailing.
    Unfortunately I followed this post from a friends FaceBook page and foolishly didn’t bother to check if there was any rules to posting or if there was a way to send a private message to a particular person for such side questions.
    Feel free to take it down or (if possible) edit it if it detracts from the conversation.
    Isn’t the violent portion of the protests retributive violence in its own way?

    Ok, my advice to you is to stop commenting and read this thread.
    Then go read the posts in this thread. Warning: there are a *lot* of posts and it is two pages of material. If you choose to dive into it, reading all the posts-hell, reading half of them-will take time. Not a few hours worth of time, but a few days worth of time. It’s a thread with a metric fuckton of links and resources for people to understand racism in the United States. The inciting event that led to the creation of that thread was the death of Michael Brown, Jr. at the hands of ex-police officer Darren Wilson in July 2014. You may have heard of that event. But that thread expands far beyond that event. It discusses relevant material concerning the inherent racism in the USAmerican criminal justice system. It discusses the history of racial violence in the US. What you’ll read (assuming you choose to educate yourself) won’t be pretty. It’s actually pretty fucking horrifying. But you owe it to yourself to end your ignorance.
    Another piece of advice if you choose to read that thread: whatever you think you know, set that out of your mind. You’ve displayed quite a bit of ignorance already in this thread (observation, not personal attack), so you need to be prepared to accept that the things you thought you knew were wrong. You have to accept that you are wrong. That’s a simple fact of life. You can reduce some of your ignorance by educating yourself on subjects like racism, prejudice, and bigotry but you have to be willing to learn.
    In addition, you might want to read up a bit more about Humanism, if you’re interested. You can start here:
    http://americanhumanist.org/Humanism/What_is_Humanism

    When it comes to human rights, I suggest you read the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

    ****

    If you’re still reading this far into my comment, I want to let you know that I was in a position similar to yours several years ago. I arrogantly thought I had answers to many problems in my life, this country, and around the world. I thought I was informed about important issues. I knew nothing. In fact, I knew less than nothing, bc I wasn’t even aware that there was more I needed to know. A great deal of my education has come as a result of reading comments here at Pharyngula and clicking links provided by commenters. I’ve learned about how pervasive sexism, racism, misogyny, homophobia, and transphobia are. I’ve learned that not only are internalized racism and homophobia very real, but I, suffer from it. Yes, me-a black gay guy. It’s the result of growing up in a society that is racist and homophobic. I also realized that I had a host of sexist and misogynistic beliefs. It took a genuine attempt on my part to understand these subjects and a willingness to search deep within myself in the dark and dingy corners of my mind. I chose to do so because as I began to realize that I didn’t know as much as I thought I did, I realized I didn’t want to be as ignorantly arrogant. It was hard. Can you imagine what it’s like to be a gay guy confronting the fact that internalized homophobia has led you to dislike other gay people simply because they don’t act like men should? Yeah, that was me. I fell for gender stereotypes that tell us how men and women are supposed to act. Those stereotypes fed into my internalized homophobia. There is so much more that I’ve had to confront, and I’m sure there’s more that I will find in the future. But as I’ve discovered more and more parts of myself I’m not fond of, it has become easier to reject those notions. But I’m not doing so willy nilly. As a freethinker, I’ve come to realize the importance of ensuring that my opinions and beliefs are backed by science, logic, and reason. It’s been immensely important to me, and I think there is value in freethinking for you as well.
    I truly hope you take my words to heart, whether or not you decide if you like me or not. As I said, I could care less if you like me, but I do care if you’re a good human being. Because we don’t have enough of those in the world.

  230. says

    Also, Ryan:

    Isn’t the violent portion of the protests retributive violence in its own way?

    Since it doesn’t appear that you’ve read it [my comment @222], here is a portion of a speech Martin Luther King, Jr gave back in 1967. It ought to help you better understand the civil unrest in Baltimore:

    Urban riots must now be recognized as durable social phenomena. They may be deplored, but they are there and should be understood. Urban riots are a special form of violence. They are not insurrections. The rioters are not seeking to seize territory or to attain control of institutions. They are mainly intended to shock the white community. They are a distorted form of social protest. The looting which is their principal feature serves many functions. It enables the most enraged and deprived Negro to take hold of consumer goods with the ease the white man does by using his purse. Often the Negro does not even want what he takes; he wants the experience of taking. But most of all, alienated from society and knowing that this society cherishes property above people, he is shocking it by abusing property rights. There are thus elements of emotional catharsis in the violent act. This may explain why most cities in which riots have occurred have not had a repetition, even though the causative conditions remain. It is also noteworthy that the amount of physical harm done to white people other than police is infinitesimal and in Detroit whites and Negroes looted in unity.
    A profound judgment of today’s riots was expressed by Victor Hugo a century ago. He said, ‘If a soul is left in the darkness, sins will be committed. The guilty one is not he who commits the sin, but he who causes the darkness.’
    The policymakers of the white society have caused the darkness; they create discrimination; they structured slums; and they perpetuate unemployment, ignorance and poverty. It is incontestable and deplorable that Negroes have committed crimes; but they are derivative crimes. They are born of the greater crimes of the white society. When we ask Negroes to abide by the law, let us also demand that the white man abide by law in the ghettos. Day-in and day-out he violates welfare laws to deprive the poor of their meager allotments; he flagrantly violates building codes and regulations; his police make a mockery of law; and he violates laws on equal employment and education and the provisions for civic services. The slums are the handiwork of a vicious system of the white society; Negroes live in them but do not make them any more than a prisoner makes a prison. Let us say boldly that if the violations of law by the white man in the slums over the years were calculated and compared with the law-breaking of a few days of riots, the hardened criminal would be the white man. These are often difficult things to say but I have come to see more and more that it is necessary to utter the truth in order to deal with the great problems that we face in our society.

  231. cicely says

    Dark Jaguar:

    […] but violence just… isn’t the answer.

    And yet…USAian troops in Iraq…in Afghanistan…drones bombing Yemen…Syria…hawkish politicians drooling with eagerness to attack Iran….
    Goodness knows, I’m game to get offa this particular merry-go-round, but a whole lot of people who are shock/horroring about Baltimore…Ferguson…hell, we all know the list, don’t we?…and going on about how “Violence doesn’t settle anything”, do not seem to recognize their implicit hypocrisy.

    Gonna trudge through the thread, now.
    *sigh*

  232. says

    Salad, #258

    I understand that the main reason, and the most important part of this riot is based around the value of human life, however, I don’t see that destroying ANYTHING is the proper response.

    Part of the reason my earlier knee jerk reaction was so violent is that, yes, it is a tragedy that a cop killed another innocent person (Black, White, Hispanic, Native American, purple, I don’t care). However, if there is to be destruction of anything, why not make it destruction of public infrastructure, your own personal property, or targeting the police directly?

    Why does some random average stranger deserve to have their property destroyed?

    Why not speak directly to the Mayor or the Police Chief, someone who may actually be able to influence a change, and if they aren’t able to, petition to have them removed from power in favor of someone who will help enforce change?

    My (possibly poorly worded) $0.02

  233. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Ryan Dietz,
    The protesters ain’t coming for you, dude. I think you are about as safe as safe can be, unlike black people in the US.
    If the cops come for you though, your little shotgun isn’t going to save you, Rambo.

  234. savant says

    Ryan @ 264

    I assume that your mistype of Saad’s name was due to an autocorrect?

    The answer to your misconception is quoted by Tony @ 260, and elsewhere. Read it. Read the material that’s been linked in other places too. It’s worth it, for your sake.

  235. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    I don’t see that destroying ANYTHING is the proper response.

    Well, you clearly know better than the protesters themselves. /s

    Tony,
    Don’t you know? Expecting white people to educate themselves about racism is the REAL racism. We should treat Rambo Dietz’s uniformed opinion as more valid than the opinions of the people responding in desperation to the danger they are and have been in. /s

  236. says

    Okay, I’ve got to give myself some help here and actually dig out the laptop… First, (probably closer to the 2nd or 3rd strike) against me is that I’m trying to read all this on my phone.

    That andthe auto correct is (occasionally) causing trouble as well. I’m sorry Saad, I didn’t mean to misspell your name.

    Also, I think I do like you Tony, thank you for the in depth response and the links.

    I probably won’t be getting around to reading much more tonight, but if I can get on to this page at work, it will give me a bit of “light” (haha) reading to do between calls tomorrow.

    I also want to apologize to all you fine folks for blundering around, and thank you for semi-putting up with my hotheaded and knee jerk responses.

  237. says

    Why not speak directly to the Mayor or the Police Chief, someone who may actually be able to influence a change, and if they aren’t able to, petition to have them removed from power in favor of someone who will help enforce change?

    On the one hand, this is so fucking naive that I could cry.
    On the other hand, it’s a fucking massive insult, bc African-Americans have been trying this for generations and no one will fucking listen! This is not an idea that holds any merit. In a world where things were a bit more fair and Black Lives actually Mattered, talking to those people in power might actually work. But here in the real world, where things are most decidedly NOT fair and the criminal justice system has been telling black folks for centuries that their lives don’t matter, this bit of advice doesn’t. fucking. help. In fact, it’s less than helpful. It’s condescending and patronizing.

    Guess someone didn’t want to take my advice on shutting up and learning. Oh well, I tried.

  238. Jackie the social justice WIZZARD!!! says

    Ryan would proudly and without compunction blow off someone’s head for threatening his safety.

    …but breaking windows is wrong if mere black folks are the ones in danger.

    Just say’n.

  239. Saad says

    Ryan, #264

    Salad, #258

    LOL! That’s the best typo of my name I’ve seen so far. :D

    Why does some random average stranger deserve to have their property destroyed?

    They don’t deserve it. Nobody has said they deserve it.

    But if one is knowledgeable of the situation, what purpose does it serve to criticize the few protesters who destroy things? It’s an uprising. Black people are being executed on a regular basis on white police officers’ whim. And then the country moves on like nothing happened. Black people are free game for police officers to assault and murder in plain daylight. Tell me in light of all this, what statement would I be making sitting behind my computer saying “Oh, those few people shouldn’t have torched those cars.”

    Basically: Destruction of some property as a (very small portion of the) response to wanton destruction of human lives. No way I will focus on the burning car. Not even for a second. Because then I would have to spend the rest of the day speaking against the police to keep it in proportion.

    Why not speak directly to the Mayor or the Police Chief, someone who may actually be able to influence a change, and if they aren’t able to, petition to have them removed from power in favor of someone who will help enforce change?

    What do you think all the protesters have been doing? And what do you mean directly to the mayor? Is the mayor in a bunker without any phones, TV, or internet?

  240. Saad says

    Jackie, #270

    Ryan would proudly and without compunction blow off someone’s head for threatening his safety.

    …but breaking windows is wrong if mere black folks are the ones in danger.

    ^ Think about that, Ryan.

  241. says

    #269 Why not speak directly to the Mayor or the Police Chief, someone who may actually be able to influence a change

    See, that’s part of the problem. I probably could because: white, tech entrepreneur, can potentially spend money for or against a mayoral campaign…. That’s because I’m a Privileged White Guy. If I asked my publicist to start calling city hall and arrange a conversation with the mayor, there’s about a 10% chance it’d happen. If my high school buddy Chris, who owns a huge business in the Baltimore suburbs tried to talk to the mayor, there’d be a 100% chance it would happen. If Tony tried to talk to the mayor, he’d be lucky if he didn’t wind up on a DHS watch-list. Same deal: if I went down to city hall and started politely asking to meet with someone, I’d get a run-around and probably waste my day. But there’d be a 2% chance I’d actually get a meeting (just to make me go away). If Tony tried it, he might get a ride in a police car. And if he was unlucky he might wind up breaking his own neck to make the cops look bad, or something like that.

    The thing about privilege is that if you grow up in it (like I did!) it’s like the water that a fish moves through: the fish doesn’t know it’s there. It’s just the fish’s reality. If you want a better understanding of some of that, I highly recommend John Scalzi’s article here: ( http://whatever.scalzi.com/2012/05/15/straight-white-male-the-lowest-difficulty-setting-there-is/ ) That article blew my mind. Blew my mind with realization of how utterly stupid I’ve been for 49 or so years.

    Other than Scalzi’s article the one thing (to your question) that made me realize that the US has a serious serious problem is this: when Mark Zuckerberg got annoyed about some government issue regarding Facebook – he called President Obama to talk it over with him. Think about that for a minute. President Obama took his call. I suspect that President Obama wouldn’t take Tony’s call any more than the Mayor of Baltimore would. But you damn sure know the Mayor of Baltimore would take Mark Zuckerberg’s call. Why? Because he’s a billionaire.

    You know the old saying “money talks” right? Well, it’s true. Which means the poor are silenced. If I get abused by a cop, I can decide if I want to take out a loan and sic an attorney on them and make them really really unhappy. A poor person has two choices: 1) shut up and take it or 2) just be glad they didn’t hurt you worse. It takes some soul-searching to realize this. When I get stopped by a cop, they are polite and call me ‘sir.’ So I don’t see how bad the cops can be. So, I could be puzzled about what the fuck is wrong with the rioters. But a person whose not privilged as thoroughly as I am would be wondering what the fuck is wrong with the cops. Scratch that. They already know exactly what’s wrong with the cops.

  242. says

    This is also worth a read:
    http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2015/04/how-baltimore-riots-began-mondawmin-purge
    As I mentioned earlier: I grew up in Baltimore. Some of my friends went to the big high school right across from Mondawmin Mall. When school gets out, yes, there are mobs of kids on the street; they are going home. So, apparently, the police thought it would be good crowd control to shut down the buses (to, um, whaaaaat?) and then started firing alerts that there were ‘gangs of kids’ on the street looking for trouble.

    Read that and ask yourself “who is part of the problem here?”

    You can tell who’s prepared to start a riot by how they dress. Usually, the people who show up at the riot in black body armor with shields and helmets and guns — they’re the ones prepared for the riot. See how that works?

    (PS Tony: you’re awesome.)

  243. AtheistPowerlifter says

    @ Tony

    Regarding your comment # 259.

    Thank you.

    I have just had my consciousness raised.

    AP

  244. cicely says

    liz321: Cameras on all law enforcement in the carrying out of their duties—yes, absolutely! And in a perfect world, that would solve the problem, immediately. Stop it cold.
     
    This is not that world.
     
    Even in an “It’s all good, so long as you Don’t Get Caught world, that’d have a chance of stopping law enforcement officers from continuing to “police” according to what seems to be Time-Honored Tradition—if it hadn’t been demonstrated to the offenders, time after time, and recently, even after Ferguson, when it’s obvious to anyone following current events at all, that for now, at least, People Are Looking—that the evidence will be ignored.
     
    And so, Business goes on As Usual, and they don’t seem to understand that they are doing anything wrong.
    In their minds, they aren’t.

    A Masked Avenger:

    Police are working overtime to correct this situation, by introducing new legislation to ban videotaping of police.

    And by trying to make the videotape from cop cars (and presumably, individual cameras) unavailable to the public—unless such release is, on a case-by-case basis, approved.
    Any guesses as to the biases of the likely “approvers”?

    80

  245. qwints says

    Baltimore City State’s Attorney just called it an illegal arrest and homicide. Driver of the van getting charged with 2nd degree murder, 5 other officers getting charged with manslaughter and assault.

  246. says

    This is a follow up to comment #25, in which urban renewal, or the lack thereof, is discussed as one of the problems faced by black neighborhoods.

    Caught most in the middle is a $55.3 billion housing and transportation measure that is fast becoming the new ground zero in the appropriations wars this summer and a symbol of Washington’s retreat from public investments in poor urban neighborhoods like Baltimore’s.

    The federal lead-hazard-abatement program? Republicans cut it by a third. Capital funds to maintain public housing? Slashed in half as compared to the Bush/Cheney era. Choice Neighborhood grants? President Obama requested $250 million. House Republicans intend to spend $20 million, which is just a quarter of what Congress approved for the program just last year.

    Unbelievable. With situations like those in Baltimore staring them in the face, Republicans cut the urban renewal funds.

    http://www.politico.com/story/2015/04/house-budget-urban-renewal-program-cuts-baltimore-riots-117514.html

  247. says

    Cross posted from the Lounge:

    Well, thank goodness. Freddie Gray’s death has been ruled a homicide:

    All six Baltimore police officers involved in the arrest of Freddie Gray have been criminally charged, Baltimore State Attorney Marilyn Mosby said Friday at a press conference. Warrants have been issued for their arrest. Mosby’s announcement was met with cheers from those in attendance. […]
    Officials have ruled his death a homicide.

    http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/marilyn-mosby-officers-charged-death-freddie-gray

    More on the fact that the face of Justice is making an appearance in Baltimore:

    In her remarks this morning, Mosby added that Gray’s arrest was itself illegal and that the young man had committed “no crime.” There have been reports that Gray was carrying a switchblade, but the state attorney told reporters this morning that Gray’s knife was not a switchblade and was lawful under Maryland law.

    WBAL’s report added that the officer driving the police van that transported Gray will face the stiffest criminal charge — second-degree murder — while the other officers will face charges of “involuntary manslaughter, assault and illegal arrest.”

    Maddow Blog link

  248. says

    While it is encouraging to hear the offending officers are being charged, I’m still expecting disappointment down the line. Let’s hope the legal system doesn’t live down to those expectations.

  249. toska says

    While it’s important to remember that it isn’t any where close to being over yet, the fact that the officers are criminally charged is a victory. It’s a victory for the activists, because history and statistics tell us that consequences for murder are extremely rare for cops. Much like their colleagues responsible for the 100+ settled cases of police brutality in Baltimore, these cops likely would not be seriously penalized if it weren’t for the activists in Baltimore (and there’s still a good chance that they won’t). The media would have never paid attention if the protests hadn’t turned into riots. That’s the sad fact. For those who chide the protesters (even though the vast majority were peaceful, and many eye witnesses claim that police harassment of black teens was the catalyst for any escalations) and lecture about non violence, do you think the DOJ would have investigated the Ferguson PD if it weren’t for the riots? The media didn’t show up to Ferguson until there was tear gas and flames.

  250. says

    A prosecutor from Detroit advised Baltimore police to just shoot the protestors:

    The Assistant Prosecutor of Detroit, Teana Walsh, posted the following disturbing words on Facebook.

    So I am watching the news in Baltimore and see large swarms of people throwing bricks, etc at police who are fleeing from their assaults … 15 in the hospital already. Solution. Simple. Shoot em. Period. End of discussion. I don’t care what causes the protestors to turn violent…what the ‘they did it because’ reason is…no way is this acceptable. Flipping disgusting.”

  251. says

    Here’s a great article for those chiding the protesters for civil unrest:
    https://www.opendemocracy.net/transformation/kazu-haga/problem-with-wanting-peace-in-baltimore

    Peace disgusts me.

    Let me clarify.

    We all want peace. Even in the prison system, where I often work with people who have committed serious acts of violence and who are very comfortable using violence — people want peace in their lives.

    But calls for people to be “peaceful” in the face of the most recent police killing infuriate me. The calls for “peace” that act as a euphemism for “stop protesting” sickens me. When law enforcement and politicians tell people to protest “peacefully” as a way of saying “stop being so mad,” it repulses me. The gross and dangerous misunderstanding that people have of the concept of “peace” disgusts me.

    In 1956, a young woman named Autherine Lucy became the first black student enrolled in the University of Alabama. From the first moment she stepped foot on campus, there was violence. People rioted. And in response, the school expelled her, blaming her for inciting the violence. The next day, with Autherine expelled from campus, the riots stopped. The local newspaper ran a headline that read, “Things are quiet in Tuscaloosa today. There is peace on the campus of the University of Alabama.”

    And that peace disgusts me.

    People too often associate “peace” with quiet, with calm, with candles and kumbaya. People too often understand “peace” simply as the absence of tension. And that is a problem.

    In a sermon he gave in response to the incident, Marin Luther King Jr. described this peace as a “negative peace.” A false peace, the simple absence of violence that came at the expense of justice.

    It is this understanding of peace that allows people to justify going to war to create peace. “If we just kill all the bad people, then we will have peace.” It is this understanding of peace that allows us to justify mass incarceration to create peace. “If we just lock up all the bad people, then we will have peace.” And it is this understanding of peace that allows people to demand “peace” from the Black Lives Matter movement. “If the protesters would just stop yelling, we would have peace.”

    And it’s true, if all we want is the quiet, calm, polite “negative peace.” If all the protests stopped, Baltimore would be quieter and calmer than it has been recently. If we simply arrested all the protesters, Baltimore would be “peaceful.” But as King reminded us, “This is the type of peace that all men of goodwill hate. It is the type of peace that is obnoxious. It is the type of peace that stinks in the nostrils of the Almighty God.”

    Yes, these protests are loud. Yes, there is tension in the streets. Yes, the marches are disruptive. And that’s the point.

    Peace is a messy process. Justice is loud. If people think that building “peace” in a society as violent as the United States is a neat, calm and pretty process, they are in for a surprise.

    Yes, there has been violence in the streets of Baltimore. And as a trainer and practitioner of Kingian Nonviolence, I don’t think breaking windows is the most effective tactic. However, it infuriates me each time I hear some talking head denouncing the violence and criminalizing the protesters who are in the streets.

    Yes, windows have been broken and police cars have been smashed. But in Kingian Nonviolence, we teach that all conflict has history, and we typically only see the moment that the conflict erupts. We have a tendency to look only at the moment of eruption to try to understand what is happening. Sometimes, a conflict has days or weeks of history that we don’t see before it erupts. And sometimes, a conflict builds for 500 years before erupting. What is happening in Baltimore is the result of 500 years of systemic racism and violence. Much like Autherine Lucy being accused of inciting violence, accusing the protesters of violence is ignoring the much larger systems of violence that they are responding to.

    The actions that the protesters have been engaged in are a response to that violence. The violence of police brutality. The violence of poverty. The violence of structural racism. People are fed up, and their actions are not violent as much as they are actually a cry for peace — the positive peace that only comes about through justice. It is the deep yearning and desire for peace and justice that is moving people into the streets.

  252. says

    Informative and iluminating discussion, as usual. Special thanks to Tony.

    One thing that I learned today totally boggles my mind and I cannot resist mentioning it, altough it is totally trivial – I just learned, that switchblades are illegal in U.S. on federal level.

    When I read this my jaw literally dropped. You can own (multiple) automatic rifles with sniper optic, guns with ammo extension etc. In some states you can even carry them in the open. And republicans are in furor whenever it is proposed that this insanity should be regulated.

    And pocket knives with spring are illegal. Whut teh phuck????? Again, I fail to understand the logic that U.S. lawmakers follow.

  253. Menyambal says

    Charly, that switchblade business was indeed rooted in discrimination, or at least fear of those different, from the start. Italians and blacks were the stereotypical carriers.

    There is also a ban on what are called “butterfly” knives, which are much slower to open, because they are mostly from the Philippines. Those are the ones where the handle folds in two halves to cover the blade, and opening requires a flashy hand dance.

    In addition to all you said about guns, there are knives that open just as fast as a switchblade, that are immensely popular. I refer to the “thumb opening” trend. Many folding knives now have a little knob or hole that allows them to be pushed open by the thumb of the hand holding it. (This is opposed to having to dig with a fingernail of the other hand.) This is faster than a switchblade.

    I have a couple of thumb-openers that, when properly oiled, don’t even required the thumb push. Just a shake of the hand, and the blade clacks open, heavier and louder than any switchblade in a bad movie.

    The other knife trend is a pocket clip on the side, so the knife isn’t drifting around at the bottom of a pocket. It can be carried like a pen, at a pocket top, or at the waistband, inside or outside. (When I go to school, I trade my knife for a pen, in the same location and reflex.)

    I carry a thumb-opener inside the top of my front trouser pocket, with the clip out. (The clip is black plastic, so it doesn’t look like like a knife, and my shirt often hangs over it.) I only carry it as a tool, in a handy location, but I would probably beat a switchblade in a quick-draw and intimidate contest (mine’s much shorter, though). And a butterfly would still be dancing about when mine went clack. (And mine is sturdier and safer to use.)

    Anyhow, my point was that two of the common trends among knives make a ban on switchblades totally pointless. The good, honest, rednecks and hunters are carrying flickknives now, ready to hand.

    (I once met a trailer-trash lad who had just been evicted and who was transporting his knife collection on the bib of his overalls. A good kid, but damn it was a picture.)

  254. Pteryxx says

    For y’all’s information I’ve added info to the current Morning in America thread, including the full list of charges here, the transcript of prosecutor Mosby’s statement here (warning – it includes a disturbing, step-by-step account of the officers’ callous indifference), and an explanation of the charge of “depraved heart” murder here. Thanks to Tony! and Lynna and everyone else I’ve forgotten for the links.

  255. says

    The rightwing response to Marily Mosby’s announcement has been, in part, to demean her for the crime of being female.

    A sports editor at the Daily Caller, the conservative news site run by pundit Tucker Carlson, described the Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby as “sexy” and said he “wouldn’t mind being unrestrained in the back of Ms. Mosby’s paddy wagon” in an article published on Friday.

    Earlier in the day, Mosby announced her decision to charge six police officers allegedly involved in the case of Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old Baltimore man who died from injuries sustained while in police custody.

    In the Daily Caller article, headlined “Let’s Be Honest: The Baltimore State’s Attorney Is Kind Of A Smokeshow,” sports editor Christian Datoc wrote:

    Throughout the presser, the 35-year-old prosecutor managed to maintain a fiery, authoritative demeanor AND flashed some serious “crazy girl” eyes, a combination which — if truth be told — I found incredibly sexy. […]

    Link

  256. says

    The “justice” system in Baltimore is unjust on several levels, as we’ve seen. Let’s add the bail amounts levied against African Americans to that list.

    An 18-year-old Baltimorean who participated in riots on Saturday now faces bail of $500,000, something his family cannot afford and a higher bail than the cops involved in the death of Freddie Gray Jr.

    Allen Bullock, who was photographed in the act of smashing a police car, faces eight criminal charges — all misdemeanors — including rioting and malicious destruction of property. His stepfather, Maurice Hawkins, encouraged Bullock to turn himself in.

    Now, he faces bail that far exceeds his family’s ability to pay. “By turning himself in he also let me know he was growing as a man and he recognized what he did was wrong,” his mother, Bobbi Smallwood, told The Guardian. “It is just so much money.”

    The police officers who were charged on Friday by Maryland State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby in the death of 25-year-old Gray posted bail bonds of $250,000 to $350,000 each. […]

    The officers are charged with more serious crimes, but their bail is less. Sheesh.

    The problem of racial or ethnic minorities being hit with higher bail amounts than their white counterparts is also well documented. The Sentencing Project pointed out in a report released last year that “blacks and Latinos are more likely than whites to be denied bail or to be imposed a bond that they cannot afford” and that they are more often considered “flight risks because of their lower socioeconomic status, criminal records, and because of their race.” […]

    Think Progress link

  257. says

    More asinine remarks that were aired on Fox News:

    During a segment of Your World with Neil Cavuto on Fox News, Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke compared the investigation of Freddie Gray’s homicide to human sacrifice and the Duke lacrosse case.

    “This neophyte prosecutor stood up there and made a political statement, Neil. And I say that because she’s chanting or voicing some of the chants from this angry mob,” he said, before diving into his experience as a veteran homicide detective and calling Mosby an inexperienced prosecutor. “I’m not going to silently stand by and watch my brother officers offered up as human sacrifices thrown like red meat to an angry mob, just to appease this angry mob.” […]

    http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2015/05/02/3654162/milwaukee-county-sheriff-charging-officers-freddie-gray-case-human-sacrifice/

  258. Dark Jaguar says

    I’ve been keeping up on this story, mainly through comedy reports, but still, it’s stunning. Apparently, there’s a “boys will be boys” attitude to riots after a game of sportball. (I hadn’t noticed this attitude, being utterly sickened at sporting riots as I normally am. I’m consistent I tells ya!) There’s apparently a double standard. It bears saying that a LOT of the protesters are doing so peacefully. Among them? The big-name gangs of Baltimore. That one’s a shocker, but certainly welcome. They all declared a truce with each other and are working hard to both aid in the protests and call a cessation to violence where they see it. On Larry Wilmore’s show, they stated their intent to keep this truce going long after the protests end. I hope so, they’re inspiring. (I LOVE a “redemption” story.)

    Meanwhile, in the middle of a protest a police van just sorta disappeared a black protester in front of a camera… Not a good look.

  259. anteprepro says

    Dark Jaguar: Isn’t it fucking amazing how informative those “fake news” comedy programs can be?

    Also, I have noticed there is no clear response to sports rioting. I know that when it happens at a local college campus, it is usually viewed with disgust. (It is essentially considered an extension of its perceived party culture, and there is a bit of ageism and classism involved in the disdain and the continued negative reputation of the school, because it is a big state school instead of a nice quiet private college). But the disgust is also mild and dismissive. There is no real condemnation of it, because it is viewed as essentially ridiculous. Silly and absurd. It is not taken seriously at all, except by those who actually suffer directly because of it. I suppose you could say something similar about Black Friday stampedes and similar shit. It is viewed as horrible yet also comical and not worthy of any serious criticism or condemnation, because it is just stupid shit that stupid people do. A dark comedy version of America’s Funniest Home Videos. A bitter joke about humans basically being pack animals. A wacky news story to briefly look at as a palate cleanser between updates on the latest gun deaths and coverage of the contenders for 2020 elections.

    But when riots happen due to anything resembling a cause, especially a cause perceived as liberal, it is not a matter to just briefly bring up, shake your head a little, and move on. Suddenly a matter of much criticism, consternation, debate, and handwringing. Though, in fairness, it is precisely because there is a cause or a point that this probably happens. There is obviously no point to the sports riots, but there is also obviously a point to these ones. And that may be way the double standard exists, aside from racism and classism and police apologetics and antipathy towards liberal politics and so on. But I still imagine all of those play a role still.