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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They'll boldly make these sorts of demands and not realize why people fucking hate them, the lack of self-awareness is amazing. Why should blacks get all of this preferential treatment? What makes them so deserving of free healthcare, but not other races? Why should they be the only ones exempt from paying rent on time? Why must everyone else be forced to undergo diversity training but blacks can be racist as fuck towards whites and other minorities? They really think they're entitled to more and more gibs at the expense of everyone else.
They were enslaved for 400 years and everyone else enslaved them for those 400 years.
I can't be the only one getting pissed off seeing white people fighting with other white people over a group of black people who hate us and want us to subsidize them forever.
I almost remarked on how I don't see many blacks in these crowds/mobs but I don't think I feel the same upset you do. I just think they're a bunch of retarded morons trying so hard to champion people who hate them and don't consider them any different than the store owners in those clips. They're just retarded.
As far as I can tell it's the same demographic that wants communism and is so myopic they're unable to comprehend how they would be on the lowest rung of the ladder, not in executive positions making decisions for "the party" or "the people".

They all could use a night in the projects to understand what our black brothers and sisters live through every day and night.
 
As far as I can tell it's the same demographic that wants communism and is so myopic they're unable to comprehend how they would be on the lowest rung of the ladder, not in executive positions making decisions for "the party" or "the people".

They'd be too dead to be anywhere on the ladder. Historically the Marxist ruling class kills these retards first because they know the initial agitators are violent scum who are only useful in the chaos.
 
They'll boldly make these sorts of demands and not realize why people fucking hate them, the lack of self-awareness is amazing. Why should blacks get all of this preferential treatment? What makes them so deserving of free healthcare, but not other races? Why should they be the only ones exempt from paying rent on time? Why must everyone else be forced to undergo diversity training but blacks can be racist as fuck towards whites and other minorities? They really think they're entitled to more and more gibs at the expense of everyone else.
How long is the module teaching about the first brother to run through a subway car yelling "loose squares"?
Truly a nubian innovator.
 

What is ‘kettling’? It’s a controversial tactic to contain crowds, and Chicago police are accused of using it during downtown protests.

After violent clashes between police and protesters in downtown Chicago over the weekend, it seemed everyone from lawmakers and civil rights advocates to activists were accusing officers of “kettling,” a controversial practice for controlling crowds.

The tactic usually involves lines of police officers corralling a group of people, who are either contained in a small area or are allowed to leave through an exit controlled by police. Some call it “trap and detain.” Others say it is dangerous and unconstitutional and should be outlawed.

Chicago police Superintendent David Brown denied his officers resorted to the practice as they struggled to control demonstrators during a protest Saturday night that injured at least 17 officers and led to at least two dozen arrests.

“I haven’t heard those allegations that there was kettling going on,” Brown said, a day after organizers specifically used the term to describe police tactics.

Berto Aguayo, 26, executive director for Increase the Peace, said he was at the protest and it was clear what officers were doing. “They were surrounding us and making the circle smaller and smaller and not letting — even though people wanted to leave the protest, they weren’t letting us go home.



Chicago police check bags and allow a few people out at a time after police cornered protesters on Lasalle Street in downtown Chicago on Aug. 15, 2020. (Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune)

“We get to Adams and LaSalle and we’re kettled in,” he said. “There’s no way out and people are having panic attacks because they want to go home.”

Protesters across the country have repeatedly accused police of using the tactic during the marches and demonstrations sparked by the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis at the end of May.

Basically, the tactic involves herding demonstrators into a confined space so they can’t leave. Officers can then make arrests or slowly break up the crowd. If there have been violent clashes, supporters of the tactic say, kettling helps police control a space and detain those causing the trouble.

But critics say the situation can become dangerous if police use force and there is no way for people to escape. “Kettling is potentially dangerous and raises serious constitutional concerns,” said Rebecca Glenberg with the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois.

“For example, during protests against the Iraq War in 2003, police trapped hundreds of protesters on a block of Chicago Avenue east of Michigan Avenue, then arrested them for failing to disperse, even though most of them had not heard the order and could not disperse anyway because they were trapped between police lines,” Glenberg said.



A protester argues with a Chicago police officer as police check bags and allow a few people out at a time after police cornered protesters on LaSalle Street in downtown Chicago on Saturday, Aug. 15, 2020. (Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune)

A federal court held that the arrests were unconstitutional, and the city of Chicago settled the case for $6.2 million.

A similar lawsuit was filed last fall in St. Louis on behalf of scores of protesters who said they were forced into a “kettle” during a downtown demonstration.

“It can certainly be just a horrifying experience,” said Noam Ostrander, a professor at DePaul University who has studied violence in Chicago. “In popular culture you could use a ‘Game of Thrones’ example. It is very much a war-type tactic, surrounding your enemy and pushing in.

“It really does create this pressure cooker,” he said. “You have a lot of people that get confined to a small space, you have people charging towards you, batons flying and ramming bikes into people and shields into people.”

Ostrander said the practice is “constitutionally questionable.”

“People are being detained without being told they’re being detained,” he said. “It does sweep up everybody indiscriminately and there’s a concern about violating the First Amendment.”

Kettling can also backfire, according to David Stovall, a professor of Black studies, criminology, law and justice at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

“I always see the strategy as problematic,” he said. “It’s based around the preemptive suppression of a violent threat. The belief is, oftentimes, that if you show force then people won’t respond as vehemently, and actually what we’ve seen is that that’s not the case.


“When law enforcement escalates, there’s a greater chance of escalation,” he said.

On Sunday, United Working Families, a frequent critic of Mayor Lori Lightfoot, posted an open letter to Brown and the mayor, insisting that kettling took place.

“We once again condemn Mayor Lightfoot and Superintendent Brown for their use of police force against these demonstrators Saturday night, and for the continued escalation of surveillance, violence and detention of protesters,” the letter said. “Mayor Lightfoot and Superintendent Brown stationed thousands of officers downtown, where they kettled, pepper-sprayed, and beat demonstrators.”

The Chicago Police Department declined to comment on the letter or expand on Brown’s denial earlier Monday.


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So they've condemned pepper spray, they've condemned tear gas, they've condemned rubber bullets, they've condemned individual arrests from unmarked vehicles and now they're condemning simply breaking up the crowds into smaller, more manageable blocks.

Notice that there's never an offer of what the people think should be a proper way to control a riot. They're just chipping away slowly at all these accepted tools of the police until it ends up like Portland with the police just sitting back, declaring a riot and letting people beat and rob each other in the streets.
 
20200821_201104.jpg
 
Oh this is rich coming from people who deliberately choose the most annoying sensory stimuli to bombard their victims every night. Say, lasers, strobes, squeaky toys, foul mouthed harpies on megaphones, Demetria Hester grunting fukdapohleeze, "WAKE THE FUCK UP" etc.



Think this through: in every election, the person who wins only has to get just over half the vote, roughly. That means around half of the people who bothered to vote voted for someone else. Unless you suggest that people just pack up and move whenever an election doesn't go their way, this is a ridiculous attitude to have towards residents who, whether you personally like them or not, are entitled to peaceful enjoyment of the properties they lawfully purchased and occupy.

Protesters in Portland have released another set of demands:
View attachment 1536137
View attachment 1536138View attachment 1536140View attachment 1536141View attachment 1536142

Blacks shouldn't have to pay rent on time. Blacks should get free healthcare that other people don't get. Blacks should get money to buy houses.

Why are Africans weighted the same as Native Americans, when they are just as foreign to the continent as Euros? Why African history and not say, Latin American history? They really do think they are that much more significant.

Black narcissism is out of control.

"Reserve MLK Blvd and Alberta for black owned businesses".

Literal, de jure segregation. White Democrats are marching out in droves, committing violence and burning down courthouses and the only way they will stop is if the government agrees to make sure the darkies have their own separate but equal space.
 
"Reserve MLK Blvd and Alberta for black owned businesses".

Literal, de jure segregation. White Democrats are marching out in droves, committing violence and burning down courthouses and the only way they will stop is if the government agrees to make sure the darkies have their own separate but equal space.
Every city I've been through with a MLKjr Blvd has been absolute shit. They can have it.
 

What is ‘kettling’? It’s a controversial tactic to contain crowds, and Chicago police are accused of using it during downtown protests.

After violent clashes between police and protesters in downtown Chicago over the weekend, it seemed everyone from lawmakers and civil rights advocates to activists were accusing officers of “kettling,” a controversial practice for controlling crowds.

The tactic usually involves lines of police officers corralling a group of people, who are either contained in a small area or are allowed to leave through an exit controlled by police. Some call it “trap and detain.” Others say it is dangerous and unconstitutional and should be outlawed.

Chicago police Superintendent David Brown denied his officers resorted to the practice as they struggled to control demonstrators during a protest Saturday night that injured at least 17 officers and led to at least two dozen arrests.

“I haven’t heard those allegations that there was kettling going on,” Brown said, a day after organizers specifically used the term to describe police tactics.

Berto Aguayo, 26, executive director for Increase the Peace, said he was at the protest and it was clear what officers were doing. “They were surrounding us and making the circle smaller and smaller and not letting — even though people wanted to leave the protest, they weren’t letting us go home.



Chicago police check bags and allow a few people out at a time after police cornered protesters on Lasalle Street in downtown Chicago on Aug. 15, 2020. (Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune)

“We get to Adams and LaSalle and we’re kettled in,” he said. “There’s no way out and people are having panic attacks because they want to go home.”

Protesters across the country have repeatedly accused police of using the tactic during the marches and demonstrations sparked by the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis at the end of May.

Basically, the tactic involves herding demonstrators into a confined space so they can’t leave. Officers can then make arrests or slowly break up the crowd. If there have been violent clashes, supporters of the tactic say, kettling helps police control a space and detain those causing the trouble.

But critics say the situation can become dangerous if police use force and there is no way for people to escape. “Kettling is potentially dangerous and raises serious constitutional concerns,” said Rebecca Glenberg with the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois.

“For example, during protests against the Iraq War in 2003, police trapped hundreds of protesters on a block of Chicago Avenue east of Michigan Avenue, then arrested them for failing to disperse, even though most of them had not heard the order and could not disperse anyway because they were trapped between police lines,” Glenberg said.



A protester argues with a Chicago police officer as police check bags and allow a few people out at a time after police cornered protesters on LaSalle Street in downtown Chicago on Saturday, Aug. 15, 2020. (Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune)

A federal court held that the arrests were unconstitutional, and the city of Chicago settled the case for $6.2 million.

A similar lawsuit was filed last fall in St. Louis on behalf of scores of protesters who said they were forced into a “kettle” during a downtown demonstration.

“It can certainly be just a horrifying experience,” said Noam Ostrander, a professor at DePaul University who has studied violence in Chicago. “In popular culture you could use a ‘Game of Thrones’ example. It is very much a war-type tactic, surrounding your enemy and pushing in.

“It really does create this pressure cooker,” he said. “You have a lot of people that get confined to a small space, you have people charging towards you, batons flying and ramming bikes into people and shields into people.”

Ostrander said the practice is “constitutionally questionable.”

“People are being detained without being told they’re being detained,” he said. “It does sweep up everybody indiscriminately and there’s a concern about violating the First Amendment.”

Kettling can also backfire, according to David Stovall, a professor of Black studies, criminology, law and justice at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

“I always see the strategy as problematic,” he said. “It’s based around the preemptive suppression of a violent threat. The belief is, oftentimes, that if you show force then people won’t respond as vehemently, and actually what we’ve seen is that that’s not the case.


“When law enforcement escalates, there’s a greater chance of escalation,” he said.

On Sunday, United Working Families, a frequent critic of Mayor Lori Lightfoot, posted an open letter to Brown and the mayor, insisting that kettling took place.

“We once again condemn Mayor Lightfoot and Superintendent Brown for their use of police force against these demonstrators Saturday night, and for the continued escalation of surveillance, violence and detention of protesters,” the letter said. “Mayor Lightfoot and Superintendent Brown stationed thousands of officers downtown, where they kettled, pepper-sprayed, and beat demonstrators.”

The Chicago Police Department declined to comment on the letter or expand on Brown’s denial earlier Monday.


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So they've condemned pepper spray, they've condemned tear gas, they've condemned rubber bullets, they've condemned individual arrests from unmarked vehicles and now they're condemning simply breaking up the crowds into smaller, more manageable blocks.

Notice that there's never an offer of what the people think should be a proper way to control a riot. They're just chipping away slowly at all these accepted tools of the police until it ends up like Portland with the police just sitting back, declaring a riot and letting people beat and rob each other in the streets.
This seems like the kind of thing that’s only dangerous and traumatic if the people inside the police line are acting like a mob of violent morons.
 

What is ‘kettling’? It’s a controversial tactic to contain crowds, and Chicago police are accused of using it during downtown protests.

After violent clashes between police and protesters in downtown Chicago over the weekend, it seemed everyone from lawmakers and civil rights advocates to activists were accusing officers of “kettling,” a controversial practice for controlling crowds.

The tactic usually involves lines of police officers corralling a group of people, who are either contained in a small area or are allowed to leave through an exit controlled by police. Some call it “trap and detain.” Others say it is dangerous and unconstitutional and should be outlawed.

Chicago police Superintendent David Brown denied his officers resorted to the practice as they struggled to control demonstrators during a protest Saturday night that injured at least 17 officers and led to at least two dozen arrests.

“I haven’t heard those allegations that there was kettling going on,” Brown said, a day after organizers specifically used the term to describe police tactics.

Berto Aguayo, 26, executive director for Increase the Peace, said he was at the protest and it was clear what officers were doing. “They were surrounding us and making the circle smaller and smaller and not letting — even though people wanted to leave the protest, they weren’t letting us go home.



Chicago police check bags and allow a few people out at a time after police cornered protesters on Lasalle Street in downtown Chicago on Aug. 15, 2020. (Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune)

“We get to Adams and LaSalle and we’re kettled in,” he said. “There’s no way out and people are having panic attacks because they want to go home.”

Protesters across the country have repeatedly accused police of using the tactic during the marches and demonstrations sparked by the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis at the end of May.

Basically, the tactic involves herding demonstrators into a confined space so they can’t leave. Officers can then make arrests or slowly break up the crowd. If there have been violent clashes, supporters of the tactic say, kettling helps police control a space and detain those causing the trouble.

But critics say the situation can become dangerous if police use force and there is no way for people to escape. “Kettling is potentially dangerous and raises serious constitutional concerns,” said Rebecca Glenberg with the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois.

“For example, during protests against the Iraq War in 2003, police trapped hundreds of protesters on a block of Chicago Avenue east of Michigan Avenue, then arrested them for failing to disperse, even though most of them had not heard the order and could not disperse anyway because they were trapped between police lines,” Glenberg said.



A protester argues with a Chicago police officer as police check bags and allow a few people out at a time after police cornered protesters on LaSalle Street in downtown Chicago on Saturday, Aug. 15, 2020. (Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune)

A federal court held that the arrests were unconstitutional, and the city of Chicago settled the case for $6.2 million.

A similar lawsuit was filed last fall in St. Louis on behalf of scores of protesters who said they were forced into a “kettle” during a downtown demonstration.

“It can certainly be just a horrifying experience,” said Noam Ostrander, a professor at DePaul University who has studied violence in Chicago. “In popular culture you could use a ‘Game of Thrones’ example. It is very much a war-type tactic, surrounding your enemy and pushing in.

“It really does create this pressure cooker,” he said. “You have a lot of people that get confined to a small space, you have people charging towards you, batons flying and ramming bikes into people and shields into people.”

Ostrander said the practice is “constitutionally questionable.”

“People are being detained without being told they’re being detained,” he said. “It does sweep up everybody indiscriminately and there’s a concern about violating the First Amendment.”

Kettling can also backfire, according to David Stovall, a professor of Black studies, criminology, law and justice at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

“I always see the strategy as problematic,” he said. “It’s based around the preemptive suppression of a violent threat. The belief is, oftentimes, that if you show force then people won’t respond as vehemently, and actually what we’ve seen is that that’s not the case.


“When law enforcement escalates, there’s a greater chance of escalation,” he said.

On Sunday, United Working Families, a frequent critic of Mayor Lori Lightfoot, posted an open letter to Brown and the mayor, insisting that kettling took place.

“We once again condemn Mayor Lightfoot and Superintendent Brown for their use of police force against these demonstrators Saturday night, and for the continued escalation of surveillance, violence and detention of protesters,” the letter said. “Mayor Lightfoot and Superintendent Brown stationed thousands of officers downtown, where they kettled, pepper-sprayed, and beat demonstrators.”

The Chicago Police Department declined to comment on the letter or expand on Brown’s denial earlier Monday.


-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

So they've condemned pepper spray, they've condemned tear gas, they've condemned rubber bullets, they've condemned individual arrests from unmarked vehicles and now they're condemning simply breaking up the crowds into smaller, more manageable blocks.

Notice that there's never an offer of what the people think should be a proper way to control a riot. They're just chipping away slowly at all these accepted tools of the police until it ends up like Portland with the police just sitting back, declaring a riot and letting people beat and rob each other in the streets.
This seems like the kind of thing that’s only dangerous and traumatic if the people inside the police line are acting like a mob of violent morons.

But the poor rioters are having panic attacks!!!!!! :stress:

Kettling is a technique that has been used for decades and if it was unconstitutional, the ACLU would have gone after it back in the Vietnam War days, but they did not. That tells you it is not about the law, it is about removing any tactics for the police to stop crowds.
 
The other night there were some more trannies attacked by some BLM joggers. It was posted here I remember but I don't know on which page. Turns out at least one of the victims is friends with Blaire White. Video below with White discussing it along with some of the footage, timestamped:

20200821_080310.jpg

That's a fucking lizard person
 
“In popular culture you could use a ‘Game of Thrones’ example. It is very much a war-type tactic, surrounding your enemy and pushing in.
They just can't help themselves. THERE IS AN ADVANCED WAR TACTIC PRACTICED BY THE DOTHRAKI IN WHICH THEY SEPERATE THEIR ENEMIES INTO MANAGEABLE GROUPS TO BE CONTAINED AND DISPATCHED! Bravo to whatever Chicago police chief watched Game of Thrones and thought to bring to pioneering war tactic to their police force.
 
It's fucking insane how they want specifically to make a road named after MLK, a man who sought for the end of racial division, into a road segregated for blacks only. Replace black with shit like "coloreds" and the mask completely slips off.
 
When I pushed on this and asked why there are so many videos of the "protesters" doing crazy things they said none of that are real protesters, it's agitators and people like me who want them to look bad. I was pretty blown away by this because one of those friends has always hated cops and is more/less ancap, yet they're a weak little bitch who can barely lift 50lbs and would be eaten up in the very world they think they want to live in.
A lot of people just seem to be creating their own story to justify whatever their views may be. Obviously no one thinks they're doing that but I'll be the first to say I'm pretty biased against all black bloc people still on the streets atm and and am predisposed to wishing they got their comeuppance even if it's someone who has been a sweetheart all summer.

just go with the advice someone else posted a while back and tell them nazi stands for national-socialist and watch the wires shortcircuit. if they can still reply pretty much any gaggle can be easily dismantled or made fun of.
 
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