U.S. Riots of May 2020 over George Floyd and others - ITT: a bunch of faggots butthurt about worthless internet stickers

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The player who came up with the chant, Lawrence Wright, is black. He’s not happy with the decision.

"Wright, who was planning to launch a line of bobbleheads, shirts and No. 4 jerseys with the phrase he is well known for, said he was most upset that there was no discussion about it."

Ahaha so Black man was all set to cash in on his phrase when the white man cancelled it and fucked up his business plans. See? The white man always trying to keep the black man from making money!


Posting just for fun, but still the best comment about that photo:

AOC BOyfriend.jpg





"All that proves is that you're becoming a racist, just like Derek!"-Some SJW, probably. Makes you wonder if this scene, just like that one infamous Red Skull comic, was made to discredit right-wing talking points by putting them in the mouth of a literal neo-nazi.

Are you talking about this one? It's amazing that media is so terrified of liberals and lefty cancel culture that the only way they can say the truth is to have a bad guy say it.

full red skull.jpg
 
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That's a weird one, but apparently people who know him personally say he talks about his son all the time. Even Katie Hill, yes that Katie Hill, is sticking up for him. He never publicly used him as a political prop, until he snapped at being called racist and brought him up.

It really says something about 2020 that this is the least noteworthy story of the month.

Meanwhile, the shitposting continues.
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This is fucking beautiful :story:
 
No. Clearly, we must burn down racist technology with fire! Down with Google! Down with Twitter! Down with Facebook!

Ok, I know that's a little bit :optimistic: . I'd love to see Silicon Valley up in flames though so those censorious fucks in social media look in horror with the thoughts "Oh gods, we helped create this."
Agreed. Air quality would be awful around here for a while but it’s for the greater good
 
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I find it kinda hard to believe he managed to conceal all public knowledge of having an adopted son for 7 years, if that is truly the situation. There's keeping your kids out of the spotlight (plenty of politicians do), but does any politician flat out deny having them? Gaetz is a public figure and an increasingly controversial one, so at least one media outlet in FL should've caught on before now.

Without looking it up, how many kids does Mitch McConnell have, and what are their ethnicity?
 
I'm beginning to think Trump might be a bit of a miserable faggot. all the shit that is going on and he's pissing and moaning about that faggot john bolton and LAW AND ORDER x 100...


I know a ton of this shit is because he's in office,but what fucking good is the guy?
He's monitoring the situation.
 
No empire lasts forever. We just do our best to make sure that it's stable and prosperous for as long as possible.
Of course they don´t, empires rise and fall but people remain. The people is what gives empires their strength and their uniqueness. Unless you forcibly change that makeup by migration and propaganda. Tell me do you think its worth sacrificing your entire people just to not be called a racist? To forever by divided and ruled by a class that never cared about you? (J´s, rich people or whites what ever floats your boat.)
 
That's a weird one, but apparently people who know him personally say he talks about his son all the time. Even Katie Hill, yes that Katie Hill, is sticking up for him. He never publicly used him as a political prop, until he snapped at being called racist and brought him up.

It really says something about 2020 that this is the least noteworthy story of the month.

Meanwhile, the shitposting continues.
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inb4 it gets DMCA'd and yanked off twitter by whatever leftist cumstain holds the copyright to that performance of the song...
 
You sure that's a parody account? Because at this point I'm sure there are people out there who actually think fucking Wakanda is an existing state.
I'm pretty sure it is, given how that account reacted to some of my parody account's tweets.

Wait, what do you mean Wakanda isn't a real country? Are you telling me there aren't actually advanced niggers with space metal and superior technology, yet who still dress in tribal garb and grunt to communicate, all the while using their kin as meat shields to maintain an isolationist policy?

That simply doesn't sound very inclusive at all, and since niggers are the bestest more diverse and equal peoples ever, I'm gonna tell my mommy that you're working for Hydra.
 
Tucker is on tonight with the ratings and comments enabled, which surprises me given what he talks about. However I feel like he could have made this more longer and more informative by bringing up Booker T. Washington's point on race hustlers as well as talking about income inequality, death of the middle class and corporate America is fucking you harder than ever while they are rootless cosmopolitans. So much potential to go full Punished Tucker like he was last week on BLM.

Tucker talking ritual humiliation! Wow. Good to hear that that is now out in the mainstream.

chang occupied humilitation.jpg

“Humiliation with a big H denies the social world of normalized encounter. In fact, it humiliates by virtue of this denial. It tells the victims that all social norms are suspended in dealings with them because they are not human.” – William Ian Miller, “Humiliation and Other Essays on Honor, Social Discomfort, and Violence”
 
"Wright, who was planning to launch a line of bobbleheads, shirts and No. 4 jerseys with the phrase he is well known for, said he was most upset that there was no discussion about it."

Ahaha so Black man was all set to cash in on his phrase when the white man cancelled it and fucked up his business plans. See? The white man always trying to keep the black man from making money!



Posting just for fun, but still the best comment about that photo:

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I think we can all agree upon that it's surely not AOC who gets penetrated in that relationship, huh. :story:
 
I'm pretty sure it is, given how that account reacted to some of my parody account's tweets.

Wait, what do you mean Wakanda isn't a real country? Are you telling me there aren't actually advanced niggers with space metal and superior technology, yet who still dress in tribal garb and grunt to communicate, all the while using their kin as meat shields to maintain an isolationist policy?

That simply doesn't sound very inclusive at all, and since niggers are the bestest more diverse and equal peoples ever, I'm gonna tell my mommy that you're working for Hydra.

I'm not working for Hydra, I am Hydra! Hail Hydra! Also your mommy is an Hydra sleeper agent!
 
‘Almost nothing’ about response to George Floyd’s death surprises University of Michigan fellow studying racial politics of police violence
ANN ARBOR, MI — Trayvon Martin was killed on Feb. 26, 2012, in Sanford, Florida. The incident caused an uproar in communities across the nation and became a turning point for many people regarding race relations in the United States.

It was also a turning point for Shea Streeter, who is now a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Michigan studying racial politics of police violence in the U.S.

“That murder, for me, was really eye-opening,” Streeter said. “Something about Trayvon Martin specifically really hit home because at the time, my younger brothers were right about the same age as Trayvon and looked very much like him.”

In late May, George Floyd was killed when a white police officer kneeled on his neck for nearly nine minutes. For the most part, Streeter said she’s not surprised about what she’s seen in the news and how the public has reacted to Floyd’s death.

The coronavirus pandemic is one reason why Floyd’s death struck people, Streeter said. The general news cycle slowed down and people were thinking more about the pandemic and not much else, she said. When Floyd was killed, Streeter said people were paying attention in a way they maybe wouldn’t otherwise.

When this incident occurred, the public was “primed” to think about racial violence and injustice, Streeter said, due to other recent incidents, such as the shooting death of Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia in February and a racist confrontation in New York’s Central Park where a white woman called the police on a black man for simply asking her to put a leash on her dog.

The video of Floyd forced people to pay attention, Streeter said.

“Even though we’ve had these high profile cases in the past, even though we’ve had these videos, this one really stood out in a way that made people who had been on the fence in the past or willing to believe the police accounts in the past — there was no ambiguity. There was no ‘Oh, maybe he didn’t fear for his life.’ All of that was stripped away,” Streeter said.

Streeter grew up in California, Indiana, Arizona, North Carolina, Kentucky and Idaho in a mixed-race household. Her father is black and her mother is white, and they lived in mostly rural, conservative communities like Post Falls, Idaho and Fort Thomas, Kentucky that were predominantly white.

As a kid, race was something that was both in the foreground and background for her and her family, and “people would always remind you of your race even, if it wasn’t something that I didn’t necessarily always think about growing up.”

After graduating from a conservative boarding school in northern Idaho in 2007, Streeter attended the University of Notre Dame to get her undergraduate degree in anthropology. She then received her doctorate in political science from Stanford University in 2019.

Streeter was always interested in how the public responds to any sort of bodily or psychological harm that government employees inflict on civilians, including killings, torture, rubber bullets or even threats of surveillance, she said. Most of her research began outside the U.S., but that was about when Michael Brown was killed by a white police officer in 2014 in Ferguson, Missouri, sparking riots.

Everything Streeter had been thinking she wanted to study outside the country was happening right here at home.

“Seeing how the police were responding to protests at the time, becoming more aware of the prevalence of the frequency with which police officers were killing civilians in the United States, that really opened my eyes and made me interested in studying that in the United States,” Streeter said.

Streeter and her team of researchers have gone through every case identified by The Guardian’s database of people killed by police officers in the U.S. in 2015-16. They look to identify the circumstances of the death and figure out why that person was killed, but also look to find any specific information about protests that occurred afterward.

Last year, Streeter said she had a paper published in the Journal of Politics and said that police are also killing unarmed white people, but there isn’t much outcry or attention being paid to the victims.

“Obviously, the families of those individuals mourn their deaths and are grieved, but we’re not good at translating it into any sort of political mobilization or even just public expressions of anger or calls for justice,” Streeter said.

As Streeter thinks about what her future research might entail, she’s becoming more interested in how attitudes are changing in the country, as well as what has changed and what has stayed the same. For many of the surveys she has previously done, she wants to go back and see if people would respond the same way, especially considering some of the police brutality that has occurred against peaceful protesters.

“These protests have really pulled out into the open the way that police act really aggressively against peaceful protesters,” Streeter said. “There’s something about experiencing that for the first time, for many white folks who have only had positive interactions with police, and they’re out there being beaten with a baton or tear gas or had rubber bullets shot at them for the first time.

“That will change your worldview about the police entirely,” Streeter said.

Starting in the fall of 2021, Streeter will become an assistant professor of political science at UM.


Attached:
Lethal Force in Black and White: Assessing Racial Disparities in the Circumstances of Police Killings
African Americans are nearly three times as likely to be killed by police as whites. This paper examines whether this racial disparity is due in part to racial differences in the circumstances of police killings. To assess whether and how these circumstances predict the race of a decedent, I use machine learning techniques and a novel data set of police killings containing over 120 descriptors. I find that decedent characteristics, criminal activity, threat levels, police actions, and the setting of the lethal interaction are not predictive of race, indicating that the police—given contact—are killing blacks and whites under largely similar circumstances. The findings suggest that the racial disparity in the rate of lethal force is most likely driven by higher rates of police contact among African Americans rather than racial differences in the circumstances of the interaction and officer bias in the application of lethal force.
 

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