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Yup. So much for "white people don't burn their town".
What's worse, a woman who has her cake business burned in an angry riot, or the man who has his hot dog stand destroyed when the local team wins ?
Yup. So much for "white people don't burn their town".
Thanks for posting that. It might be the only post I've seen on this board that has this often overlooked concept called perspective.
When the St. Louis-area police brought out all its military equipment and camouflage to bear against its own citizens protesting the shooting of Michael Brown this summer, they finally drew some national attention to the serious problem of overmilitarized local law enforcement agencies.
Speaking of perspective, here's my favorite sentence from the article:
Looking at the media as one great big "them" is an impediment to actually trying to hold any particular media outlet to account for careless use of language.
What in the world does this have to do with over militarized law enforcement? How is this a problem at all given the level of rioting (terrorism) that was going on?
What in the world does this have to do with over militarized law enforcement? How is this a problem at all given the level of rioting (terrorism) that was going on?
If you look around at other police forces, Rev, you will see an uptick in militarized equipment purchases. A county police force here in the metro Atlanta area has a heavily armored SWAT tank that serves no purpose. They've never needed it, but they still have it.
Not saying it is not an issue. But it is not an issue that has anything to do with Ferguson. two separate things.
Okay, I can see that. There is an argument that some police forces will try to "up their game," so to speak, in order to be prepared for the next episode of whatever is going to happen, and so they will use Ferguson as a rallying point of why they should be allowed access to more militarized gear.
You have people on the conservative/libertarian/self-sufficient side of the aisle saying police militarization is unnecessary but proves the government is arming itself for a citizen revolt.
You have people on the liberal/statist side of the aisle saying that the police should never use force, regardless of the situation. It's odd, because you'd think those roles would be reversed, given the conservative love of militarization, but that's what I've seen and read online.:BangHead:
If you look around at other police forces, Rev, you will see an uptick in militarized equipment purchases. A county police force here in the metro Atlanta area has a heavily armored SWAT tank that serves no purpose. They've never needed it, but they still have it.
Is it they don't need it, because they have it?
Now, maybe I missed it, but what was the extent of the damage in Keene, New Hampshire?
I don't care if the police have surplus military equipment. I don't like any kind of property destruction whatsoever.
The press is stupid. They say that CNN thought that there should be riots--I myself am never in the airport where they have CNN so I never watch them and don't know. Rich college boy hooliganism is intolerable. I don't know why Nixon did not deploy the National Guard last night in Ferguson. About 90% of the arrests were out-of-towners. The riot in Ferguson was the work of professional rioters such as the OWS crowd and other assorted misfits.
Once the gunfire started in MO, the police and National Guard should have used more force to stop the burning down of stores and buildings.
It is time for domestic tranquility and it is time for handling grievances through the legal channels.
That is awesome. :laugh: I had a buddy who went to West Virginia University in Morgantown. While watching the Ferguson riots he said that people in Morgantown simply call that "gameday."
I wanted to organize a protest when they stopped making Twinkies. But I was afraid it would become violent.