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racism in the US will never be overcome.
Ferguson provides us with something of an example.
I also expect that as time goes on, Policing Departments across the country are going to come to respect the rights of African Americans by taking the approach that if someone sees a Black person breaking the law, the Police Department will dispatch Black Police Officers to handle the situation.
I'm sick of you and to whoever gave you stars they need to post and come out of the shadows, explain what position of yours they actually agree with, because as far as i can tell you should be post banned for your activity in this thread.
He speaks a kind of truth you can't get in any other way
originally posted by: Shamrock6
"I was stopped for walking!"
Yes. Yes you were. You were stopped for walking in the middle of the road, with traffic. Instead of using the sidewalk 30 feet to your left, facing oncoming traffic.
And then you pulled the race card. I have to wonder if the race card would've been pulled if the dashcam showed her being run over by somebody instead of this interaction.
Wait. No, I don't have to wonder.
Sick of me yet?
originally posted by: TorqueyThePig
a reply to: TonyS
The whole "police departments should reflect the racial makeup of the towns they police" always confused me.
What do you suggest if Ferguson PD (or any other PD) cannot find enough willing black candidates that want to be, or are qualified to be police officers?
Force them?
Trust me, the feeling is mutual.
A few fellow posters have already dismissed the OP outright, without considering the evidence or the arguments. It's quite easy to do—"I'm offended, therefor it must be untrue". They made a point out of letting it be known as well, and then berate their fellow posters who are actually willing to discuss it. It's called appeal to emotion—if that's what you value, I'm sure you'll find quite a bit of that.
originally posted by: reldra
originally posted by: Shamrock6
"I was stopped for walking!"
Yes. Yes you were. You were stopped for walking in the middle of the road, with traffic. Instead of using the sidewalk 30 feet to your left, facing oncoming traffic.
And then you pulled the race card. I have to wonder if the race card would've been pulled if the dashcam showed her being run over by somebody instead of this interaction.
Wait. No, I don't have to wonder.
She was on the side of a residential road. I seem to walk on either side of my street that a car is not moving on. I have never been pulled over by police for that. On a busy street, it is very important to walk against traffic if there is no sidewalk. Not imoprtant on this street.
Why did a truck have to come to a quick stop? It didn't see her- not possible. The traffic too heavy to go around? No.
originally posted by: TonyS
originally posted by: TorqueyThePig
a reply to: TonyS
The whole "police departments should reflect the racial makeup of the towns they police" always confused me.
What do you suggest if Ferguson PD (or any other PD) cannot find enough willing black candidates that want to be, or are qualified to be police officers?
Force them?
That issue has been extremely difficult for municipalities across the US to deal with. One city I'm aware of has been working at this problem for about the last 16 years. The first thing they do is lay off or "early retire" the white cops. Then they hire back the most qualified of the white cops and put them into training positions. At the same time, the local "Police Acadamey" only accepts candidates "of color", in this cities case, Hispanic and Black. They found they weren't getting enough candidates of the appropriate "diverse" racial identifications so they lowered the requirments an relaxed rules to allow former felons of certain types to apply and become cops.
Its taken nearly 16 years, but today, the police force is racially balanced.
Voila!
to be fair she did seem to be walking erratically and not in a straight line. hmmm why didn't she just walk on the sidewalk???
originally posted by: Sremmos80
a reply to: interupt42
Her article was wrong, though if their issue was just about safety couldn't they just tell her to walk on the other side of the road? But ya she could have just gave her name and been done.
Now should people be calling for her job?
I do agree that the university has the right to fire her if they feel she represented them in a bad way but that is their decision.
She never called for the cops jobs.
originally posted by: conspiracy nut
to be fair she did seem to be walking erratically and not in a straight line. hmmm why didn't she just walk on the sidewalk???