Thursday, July 20, 2017

It's a shame when people (media? police?) want to turn real problems into a reverse race thing (which is...still...a race thing) the moment those issues fall outside the confines of their 'bigotry script'. It probably has a lot to do with 'the powers that be' and their enablers (the mainstream media) wanting to control the direction of the fallout when people within their shameless, irresponsible group of bigots violate the larger social ethics code - in order to protect the criminal cops (or clergy or politicians or doctors or whoever else is using this excuse to escape justice). At any rate, society is becoming a lot more skilled at exposing this BS and seeing that those who fall afoul of what is right answer for it - even if it does take 'exceptions' of what seems to happen far too often to bring it to light. Situations like these have no possible alternative cause, so they are much harder for bigots and people trying to cover their asses to frame into anything other than someone who just wasn't doing their job (and ended up murdering someone instead), rather than what happens in the more common and regularly seen violations of ethics that many people and groups have been trying to bring to light for a long time - which are buried in bigoted rhetoric and excuses. In this case, it is clear what is going on, since [*and I am not stereotyping or race-baiting, just pointing out what would usually happen*] a muslim policeman shot a white woman...and gave no clear reason...for days. However, since the muslim was a police officer, the fact that he was muslim (a common focal point of bigots) and the fact the woman was a white Australian woman (crime against white people often result in prosecution which favors white people) were not even considered in this case - in favor of 'the policeman's code' or defending another crime committed by a failure of a law enforcement officer. Maybe we will see some progress now...but it is a shame it has to come to this and that the truth couldn't have been seen well before hundreds of black folks (many unarmed) lost their lives.


It's a shame when people (media? police?) want to turn real problems into a reverse race thing (which is...still...a race thing) the moment those issues fall outside the confines of their 'bigotry script'. It probably has a lot to do with 'the powers that be' and their enablers (the mainstream media) wanting to control the direction of the fallout when people within their shameless, irresponsible group of bigots violate the larger social ethics code - in order to protect the criminal cops (or clergy or politicians or doctors or whoever else is using this excuse to escape justice). At any rate, society is becoming a lot more skilled at exposing this BS and seeing that those who fall afoul of what is right answer for it - even if it does take 'exceptions' of what seems to happen far too often to bring it to light. Situations like these have no possible alternative cause, so they are much harder for bigots and people trying to cover their asses to frame into anything other than someone who just wasn't doing their job (and ended up murdering someone instead), rather than what happens in the more common and regularly seen violations of ethics that many people and groups have been trying to bring to light for a long time - which are buried in bigoted rhetoric and excuses. In this case, it is clear what is going on, since [*and I am not stereotyping or race-baiting, just pointing out what would usually happen*] a muslim policeman shot a white woman...and gave no clear reason...for days. However, since the muslim was a police officer, the fact that he was muslim (a common focal point of bigots) and the fact the woman was a white Australian woman (crime against white people often result in prosecution which favors white people) were not even considered in this case - in favor of 'the policeman's code' or defending another crime committed by a failure of a law enforcement officer. Maybe we will see some progress now...but it is a shame it has to come to this and that the truth couldn't have been seen well before hundreds of black folks (many unarmed) lost their lives. - “Some white people don’t feel the tragedy until one of them is murdered.”

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