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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A weepy whiner quits the Kenosha newspaper. This turd has a Gofundme, over $20.000 so far. Lots of idiots with money to piss away, I guess.


Kenosha News journalist quits: 'At the core of my decision was one person, Jacob Blake'
Rory Linnane, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel 3 hrs ago


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Daniel Thompson, who said he was the only full-time Black journalist at The Kenosha News, resigned Saturday after objecting to a headline he called "grossly negligent" about a rally for the family of police shooting victim Jacob Blake.
a man wearing glasses and smiling at the camera: Daniel Thompson resigned from his job as a digital editor for The Kenosha News.
© Daniel Thompson

Daniel Thompson resigned from his job as a digital editor for The Kenosha News.
He joins a wave of journalists of color across the country who have publicly shared stories in recent months about challenges in newsrooms led predominantly by white people. Like Thompson, many protested headlines, prompting public apologies from the Philadephia Inquirer and The New York Times.

At the Saturday event, Jacob Blake Sr. spoke about visiting his son in the hospital, a retired reverend sang songs about unity, and thousands marched behind the Blake family calling for social justice.

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The large-font headline that topped the Kenosha News website for several hours quoted an unnamed participant: "Kenosha speaker: ‘If you kill one of us, it’s time for us to kill one of yours.’”

Thompson, who had attended the event, said he felt it was dangerous to headline the quote, which didn't represent the event or the messages from the family and other speakers.

The top editor at the news organization, Bob Heisse, confirmed Thompson’s resignation but did not answer questions about the dispute or why he ultimately changed the headline.

“Nothing was wrong,” Heisse said. “I just felt after a while that I would just change the headline.”

Heisse also declined to answer questions about diversity at the Kenosha News. Many news organizations recently started sharing information about diversity as part of commitments to make newsrooms reflect the communities they serve.

“It’s crucial for news organizations and news leaders to be transparent about their diversity numbers,” said LaSharah Bunting, journalism director for the Knight Foundation. “You can’t solve a problem if you're not willing to admit the extent of the problem.”

‘I can’t stand for that’

Thompson, who was a digital editor, said working for the Kenosha News had long been his dream job. After being initially rejected for a job there, he carried a Kenosha News editor’s business card in his wallet for five years before he returned and was hired in 2017.

a man reading a book: Daniel Thompson, right, reads The Journal Times with his father, who was a columnist for the Racine newspaper.
© Submitted Daniel Thompson, right, reads The Journal Times with his father, who was a columnist for the Racine newspaper.
The day of Saturday’s rally for Blake’s family, Thompson was on vacation but attended the event. It was a beautiful day, he said.

“I am a biracial person, and all my life I have been dealing with that,” Thompson said. “To me why the event was so hopeful is because I saw people of different races, colors, religions. I’d been waiting a long time to see what it would look like if everybody came together, and I did.”

Thompson went home, reclined on his couch, and opened Facebook. He saw the Kenosha News headline and was immediately concerned, as were other Facebook users.

"How much damage can a headline like that do in hours in a city where two people were already gunned down because of high tensions?" Thompson said.

It wasn't the first time Thompson saw a problem with something published by his newspaper, or his former employers. But this time felt different.

"Honestly, there are so many moments from my career and life, where I have not said something, that haunt me," he said. "At the core of my decision was one person: Jacob Blake. In that moment I could not, one more time, not say anything. So I didn’t. I didn’t stop myself."

He texted Heisse his concerns. Thompson sent the Journal Sentinel screenshots of the conversation, and Heisse did not dispute them.

“I need to calm down,” Thompson wrote. “But I wanted you to know immediately.”

Heisse replied: “Yes you should calm down. That is a public threat and it is an exact quote. At a rally that was to that point totally on message.”

“Then I quit,” Thompson wrote. “I was there the whole time. I can’t stand for that.” (Buh-bye! 🖕 - JS)

Heisse told Thompson to send him his resignation letter.

In an interview, Heisse defended the headline, noting the quote was accurate. He said the story was a "sidebar" to another story about the rally, though it ran in the News' primary featured position online.

'The courage to leap'

When Thompson quit, he didn't have a plan.

"When I quit my job to do what I thought was right, I did it with the full chance of free-falling for however long," he said. "Then you know what happened? My community, that I have given my time to, caught me."

a group of people standing in front of a crowd: Daniel Thompson, former digital editor for The Kenosha News, covers local protests.
© Jordan Pauley Daniel Thompson, former digital editor for The Kenosha News, covers local protests.

Thompson set up a GoFundMe page to support himself financially, setting a goal of $5,000 to help him through a couple of months of bills while he explores establishing a new media platform. The page had raised $20,000 as of Tuesday.

"I had faith in my community and they proved me right," Thompson said. "Sometimes even though it’s scary to do the right thing, you’ll find somebody will catch you. You just have to have the courage to leap." (Dude, leap out of Kenosha. Believe you are now radioactive there with most employers. - JS)

Since quitting, Thompson said he has heard from journalists across the country who can relate to the position he was in and are proud of him for speaking up.

“What happened at The Kenosha News is not an isolated case,” he said. “This is happening in newsrooms everywhere.”
Bunting, from the Knight Foundation, said the challenges facing journalists of color aren’t new.

“What you’re seeing is journalists of color feel more empowered to speak up and tell their truth, a truth that’s happened for decades,” she said. (Aha! THEIR truth, which may or may not be the same as the actual truth. - JS)

Bunting said journalists of color have long taken on the unsung work of flagging problematic coverage and structural racism within newsrooms.

"For many Black journalists including myself, it is an important part of our work, but news organizations and news leaders have to acknowledge that it is extra work, an extra burden being put on their journalists of color," Bunting said.
"There’s this desire to give our best to the reader, and certainly in the situation with the Kenosha paper it appears (he) was doing just that."

Bunting said it's crucial for news leaders to examine their own newsrooms and make material changes.

"For many years, you have journalists of color serving on diversity committees, telling people what needs to be done, and those suggestions have largely been ignored," Bunting said. "With the more public airing of these difficulties, that opens the door for real systemic change." (Please...how many blacks can even afford a subscription to a newspaper?- JS)


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So did he learn to code?
 
Thompson is clearly not aware that the "Black Community" HATES bi-racial, light-skins just as much as every other race. Especially as that typically means they had all the perks of both demographics and almost none of the flaws.

We could wonder if there's similar cases to Thompson?

So did he learn to code?

I guess so and he might also did learn to meme.
 
It's a funny thing I've noticed. Those that scream that taxation is theft, never stop to think about where the money for welfare programs comes from. The ones that want to be crowdsourced through GoFundMe would shut down SSI, food stamps, Section 8 housing etc without even a hint of irony. It's almost like they're a bunch of idiots that should sit down and shut up.
 
There's another interesting article from roughly the same time about Albania. Food lines would cause people to stand there for NINE or more hours. And often by the time they reached the "Fully Automated Luxury Gay Space Communism" food port, there was: Fuck. and All. Riots often broke out.

I love that story about Boris Yeltsin visiting a supermarket in Texas with full shelves, and on the plane back realized communism was shit. You can find a ton of Iron curtain hostages who had never seen a banana or a coconut in person, and the minute they were allowed to cross the borders into Western Europe (or fly directly to the U.S.) and they saw grocery stores that had them and it was a quasi-religious experience.

But, no. "Fight capitalism" and "power to the people" or some other dumb shit.
 
Thompson is clearly not aware that the "Black Community" HATES bi-racial, light-skins just as much as every other race. Especially as that typically means they had all the perks of both demographics and almost none of the flaws.

Come on. It's not like biracial booksmart people get looked down on and called "one of 'dem smart niggas" for enjoying reading and math and being in the advanced classes at school by his black peers that don't value school or intelligence. It's not like Carlton from Fresh Prince of Bel-Air was actually representative of a lot of the challenges actual intelligent black men face, especially from the biracial community that can't seem to fit into any of the class social groups entirely.

Not that I would know that personally or anything.

 
Come on. It's not like biracial booksmart people get looked down on and called "one of 'dem smart niggas" for enjoying reading and math and being in the advanced classes at school by his black peers that don't value school or intelligence. It's not like Carlton from Fresh Prince of Bel-Air was actually representative of a lot of the challenges actual intelligent black men face, especially from the biracial community that can't seem to fit into any of the class social groups entirely.

Not that I would know that personally or anything.

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Knowing how to read and how to count past ten without taking your shoes off is "acting white." Black children who want to learn to be something other than athletes, rappers, or petty criminals get branded and ostracized as race traitors by their peers. Not just in high school and middle school, this shit starts in kindergarten.
 
This makes me MATI at them even thinking that there's a chance removing any of those is okay. They not only have historical value but symbolic value.
Everyone should make sure to watch Mr.Smith goes to Washington at least once, message is still relevant today and Jimmy Stewart is great like always.
Nope, can't have that, gotta tear down that memorial and ban the movie. They highlight some problematic apologia for white supremacy.
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Can't be saying stuff like that while we're trying to re-open the rifts from the Civil War and guilt trip people a hundred years removed from culpability.
 
I love that story about Boris Yeltsin visiting a supermarket in Texas with full shelves, and on the plane back realized communism was shit. You can find a ton of Iron curtain hostages who had never seen a banana or a coconut in person, and the minute they were allowed to cross the borders into Western Europe (or fly directly to the U.S.) and they saw grocery stores that had them and it was a quasi-religious experience.

But, no. "Fight capitalism" and "power to the people" or some other dumb shit.
Hell, Bernie yelled at a cloud because there's too much variety in deodorant. They'll never learn.
 
Knowing how to read and how to count past ten without taking your shoes off is "acting white." Black children who want to learn to be something other than athletes, rappers, or petty criminals get branded and ostracized as race traitors by their peers. Not just in high school and middle school, this shit starts in kindergarten.
It's not just a black thing, it's a trash thing. Spend any time in Kentucky and you'll hear some adult tearing into their kid about how they shouldn't act "better than their raising." Personally I would want a kid to do better than I have if they're able, but certain classes think it's disrespectful. How they came to that conclusion is usually a mystery only until you meet their parents.
 
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Ah yes, lyrics from the great lawyer Biggie Smalls are the key to winning a legal argument about self-defense. Just imagine these people thinking “totally dunked on Drumpf” by using lyrics from a rapper who got shot to death in an argument about the law. :story:
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Some one needs to quote the Philosopher Jagger to the left "You can't always get what you want"
 
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