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 veteran once said to me:

It is better to get shot than be stabbed. A gunshot wound is clean, swift, and unexpected. A stab wound is nasty, agonizing, and it doesn't help that you can expect the fear of getting stabbed, adding much to the pain. Worst of all, there's a good chance of getting a disease from a knife wound.
 
Protective Custody could have been an option, but as you said the 1mil is most likely only for "appearance" to prevent the insurrectionists from acting out more.
Protective custody requires a lot of paperwork and would amount to the same thing. Only really need it if there is a serious risk of the accused being killed in prison. And given I truly believe Kyle is.,... possibly not even in a cell most of his days. I doubt that risk is high.

He wouldn't be the first person I have seen taken in by law enforcement and who spends his days out of the jail cell but within the police precinct, and only spends his bed times in the cell. Now, I am open to being wrong impart or whole but.... well. The silence says a lot. You had the DA throw the book at him and the prosecutor getting a 1 million bail and yet... despite having multiple lawyers ravenously eager to defend him, not even one has said something about that? Not one has protested their innocent client being in jail? Not one PEEP from his lawyers who could make ALL the political hay they could possibly want out of him actually being in jail normally?

That silence says a lot.
 
Gotta love how BLM have spent the entire year hyping up instances of 'police brutality', spreading awareness and so on, yet almost every. single. instance. the police action is totally justified?
When its a case like Blake or the Wendy's Drive Thru? They still riot, even when the criminals' actions are indefensible.
Even cases like Floyd and Breonna, where the edited initial story appears sympathetic, we later get the full context and realise the world is a better place without them.

I'm sorry if this is giving off MOTI vibes, or even if I'm late to this realization, but its really absurd how white people would get lethal force in all these cases too, and likely far earlier into the confrontations. Because white people generally co-operate with the police, if they happen upon an unco-operative white person there isn't a lot of tolerance there. Whereas black people are trained by their sub-culture to be stand-offish and police certainly factor this in when doing their jobs. This is baked into the interactions, whereas the only white people who would shout and swear at police and take a fraction of an hour to garner the most basic info out of are either tweakers or communists
BLM organisers know deep down their real grievance is any police getting in the way of any black person for any reason. That's the only real criteria, and before body cams were normalised they had the ambiguity to paint the likes of Mike Brown and Trayvon Martin as saintly angels. Now? The depraved lunacy is laid bare for all to see-- which is probably why they've (seemingly) nonsensically began advocating body cams be banned.

If the discrimination isn't borne out statistically, and you can't even produce a decent case anecdotally (literal feels over reals) then your movement's a sham.
I concur with whoever said earlier that activists in the vein of BLM are the single biggest recruiter for white nationalism. Instead of confronting the shit home life, gang culture, lack of respect for education, etc etc. Instead of turning inward to improve, black leaders blame all their problems on white people, all the time, no matter what. It leads to the obvious side effect of some white people rejecting the guilt-trip and concluding this race of people are physically incapable of self-improvement. That's not white people proposing so on TV, thats Shaun King and assorted fat women with megaphones saying its unfair that blacks have to put up with the same kind of policing that everybody else does. Going inb4 Gangs & Drugs before every conversation means you're saying those things are instinsic to being black-- which you don't want to do if the goal is winning over soccer moms

You bring up a good point (among many) that a lot of people forget: up until about 5 years ago, BLM and other assorted shitlib types were demanding bodycams for cops, because, in their fantasy bubble world, all these police shootings were being done by racist white cops against po' innocent blacks who literally dindu nuffin. In their programmed minds, they literally believed that white cops just go around shooting innocent blacks for fun and target practice on a daily basis...because systemic racism!

So the cops ended up with bodycams.

And, unsurprisingly, in 99 out of 100 cases, the bodycams ended up showing that these sweet innocent blacks were in fact feral nogs who were violently non-compliant, resisting arrest, and often ended up attacking the cops, and thus deserved to be put down. And, yes Virginia, the world is clearly a better place WITHOUT George Floyd, Jacob Blake, and the rest of the lot of the BLM "martyrs."

....so of course, NOW, they are claiming "bodycams be racist" and want them abolished.

They've got a Narrative to uphold and can't have their bubble burst.
 
A veteran once said to me:

It is better to get shot than be stabbed. A gunshot wound is clean, swift, and unexpected. A stab wound is nasty, agonizing, and it doesn't help that you can expect the fear of getting stabbed, adding much to the pain. Worst of all, there's a good chance of getting a disease from a knife wound.
Sounds like you talked to a retard.


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Protective custody requires a lot of paperwork and would amount to the same thing. Only really need it if there is a serious risk of the accused being killed in prison. And given I truly believe Kyle is.,... possibly not even in a cell most of his days. I doubt that risk is high.

He wouldn't be the first person I have seen taken in by law enforcement and who spends his days out of the jail cell but within the police precinct, and only spends his bed times in the cell. Now, I am open to being wrong impart or whole but.... well. The silence says a lot. You had the DA throw the book at him and the prosecutor getting a 1 million bail and yet... despite having multiple lawyers ravenously eager to defend him, not even one has said something about that? Not one has protested their innocent client being in jail? Not one PEEP from his lawyers who could make ALL the political hay they could possibly want out of him actually being in jail normally?

That silence says a lot.
Doubt it. Just takes one antifa to see him.
 
A veteran once said to me:

It is better to get shot than be stabbed. A gunshot wound is clean, swift, and unexpected. A stab wound is nasty, agonizing, and it doesn't help that you can expect the fear of getting stabbed, adding much to the pain. Worst of all, there's a good chance of getting a disease from a knife wound.

I'm pretty sure gunshot wounds are messier and more likely to be fatal.

A third of patients with gunshot wounds (33.0 percent) died compared with 7.7 percent of patients with stab wounds.

https://www.pennmedicine.org/news/news-releases/2014/january/survival-rates-similar-for-gun
 
Unfortunately cities, with their building codes, are more difficult to burn than overgrown wilderness.

The fires are pretty much all in unimproved areas way out in the country. There will be no gutter-punk troon antifa bbq.
Not really, the fire south to PDX seems to be creeping north right now the "Get ready to evac" line is about where Interstate 205 is, which is 2 to 5 or 6 miles from the city's boundaries (roughly where the small squarish street grids end) from what I can tell referencing the fire map, and google maps.
pdxfire.png

There is also a small fire to the north of PDX


Only really need it if there is a serious risk of the accused being killed in prison.
No, protective custody isn't just for prison inmates, authorities can put people awaiting trail and non-criminals (aka some one not accused of a crime) in to protective custody too, if they believe there is a threat to their safety/life.

But I was agreeing with you that it seems the bond amount was for appearances mostly.
 
Doubt it. Just takes one antifa to see him.
They'll only be in the jail areas (Kyle would be kept separate), processing areas, and front areas. Precincts have a lot of other areas and he'd be expected to remain there because he WOULD still be in policy custody. Gym, offices, etc. Hell, given the fact he was in the cadets, they might have just put him to work. He might even kinda enjoy it.
 
They'll only be in the jail areas (Kyle would be kept separate), processing areas, and front areas. Precincts have a lot of other areas and he'd be expected to remain there because he WOULD still be in policy custody. Gym, offices, etc. Hell, given the fact he was in the cadets, they might have just put him to work. He might even kinda enjoy it.
You meant the precinct station. I assumed the general precinct are of the city. Yes, this sounds about right. Not in a cell. Hope so.
 
A veteran once said to me:

It is better to get shot than be stabbed. A gunshot wound is clean, swift, and unexpected. A stab wound is nasty, agonizing, and it doesn't help that you can expect the fear of getting stabbed, adding much to the pain. Worst of all, there's a good chance of getting a disease from a knife wound.
Sounds like you talked to a retard.


View attachment 1595454
I'm pretty sure gunshot wounds are messier and more likely to be fatal.



https://www.pennmedicine.org/news/news-releases/2014/january/survival-rates-similar-for-gun
It all depends on what you're getting shot or stabbed by.
 
Not really, the fire south to PDX seems to be creeping north right now the "Get ready to evac" line is about where Interstate 205 is, which is 2 to 5 or 6 miles from the city's boundaries (roughly where the small squarish street grids end) from what I can tell referencing the fire map, and google maps.
View attachment 1595457
There is also a small fire to the north of PDX
Uh-huh. So the fire is burning in the timbered/farm areas well outside of Portland.

Things have changed since the Great Chicago Fire. Highly developed areas are made out of inflammable materials. They include lots of natural fire breaks. They have lots of dedicated specialized resources.

That isn't so out in the country. Which is what is burning. The slopes of Mt Hood.

Also, the prevailing winds come out of the west. Fires will move to the east. Not to the Northwest.
 
This is why some trainers have now moved to pelvic shots. If you shatter the pelvis, they can't stand or walk no matter how doped up they are.

This is of course if center mass shots are not working.
Holy fuck, Kenosha Kyle showing the "case in point" of this with the "Shoot Me Nigga" guy. Love it. Just shoot Antifa in the dick.
 
You meant the precinct station. I assumed the general precinct are of the city. Yes, this sounds about right. Not in a cell. Hope so.
Aye, local precinct jail is usually sufficient for someone awaiting trial. Usually they get offloaded to the general jail, but... again, the silence of his lawyers says a lot. "You put a 17 year old kid in with the general jail populace" is a line they could HARP on for massive political gain and absolutely no negatives.

Nah, no harping means they a\re likely keeping him at the precinct station and just keeping him out of sight while shit blows over.
 
Yet another idiot with an "op-ed" saying BLM is an overall positive. Incredible.



The Drowned-Out Voices for Racial Justice
Political exploitation of pain and fear has diverted our attention from the goals of the Black Lives Matter movement. Public officials need to work to bring us back to the more important issues.

JABARI SIMAMA, GOVERNMENT AND EDUCATION COLUMNIST | SEPTEMBER 14, 2020 | OPINION

Several months ago, it seemed as if we were nearing a period of national reckoning on race. Polling showed that a majority of Americans, regardless of political affiliation, supported many of the goals of the Black Lives Matter movement, particularly around reforming policing. Since then, however, the voices for justice and social change have been drowned out by louder and angrier calls for law and order appealing to the racial fears of some Americans. Public officials have an important role in leveraging the resources of their governments to address the underlying causes of this tension and bring their communities together.

Accomplishing these won't be easy. Millions of Americans are hurting from the coronavirus pandemic, which has taken nearly 194,000 lives while disproportionately impacting Black and Latino communities. At the same time, we've seen more high-profile instances of police violence against African Americans, including the shooting in Kenosha, Wis., of 29-year-old Jacob Blake in the presence of three of his young children, leaving him paralyzed.

Adding to the pain and losses has been violence that has erupted at some of the racial-justice demonstrations, often in the provocative presence of armed militia-type counterprotesters. A week after a 17-year-old from Antioch, Ill., was charged with the murders in Kenosha of two BLM protesters, an antifa supporter in Lacey, Wash., was killed by law enforcement officers who were attempting to arrest him for the killing in Portland, Ore., of a man affiliated with a right-wing group.


Those incidents of deadly violence, however, obscure the reality that the BLM protests across the nation have been overwhelmingly peaceful and multiracial (those killed and implicated in the Kenosha and Portland shootings were white). Local officials have done a reasonably good job of trying to protect life and property, but the number of guns on the streets, along with President Trump's insistence on condemning the violence on only one side while refusing to show empathy for the families of the deceased and injured, have only made things worse.


Will this exploitation for political purposes of the pain and fear our nation is experiencing work? Some find a glimpse of hope in post-convention polling that shows little change in attitudes among Democratic and Republican voters about their parties' nominees, particularly on who is viewed more favorably for "keeping Americans safe from harm."
But it is too early to tell whether we will be able to get back to where we were in the weeks after the killing of George Floyd, when it seemed as if we might be on the precipice of discussing long-needed improvements to race relations. Businesses and organizations were hiring diversity firms to help them develop equity programs, and books on inclusion and antiracism were flying off the shelves. Today much of this has slowed down. The prospects of making progress, or even prioritizing the need to address systemic racism, seem much farther away. Instead, much of the national conversation is being dominated by efforts to whip up fear that the suburbs are going to be overrun by low-income Black and brown citizens.

There also as been too much unproductive debate by the far extremes of both the left and the right on whether to completely defund the police. While some on the right have taken to bearing arms as a show of support for the police, a number of high-profile Black mayors and progressive public officials have felt the need to push back on calls to eliminate all police funding. Newark, N.J., Mayor Ras Baraka, for example, has described the idea of abolishing the police department as a "bourgeois, liberal" approach that draws attention away from more sensible reforms. New York City Councilman Robert Cornegy Jr. has called the movement to defund police "political gentrification."

The politicization of law enforcement is dangerous in and of itself, but public officials have the ability to bring us back to more important issues. In addition to working on transforming policing and advancing racial justice, there must be a renewed emphasis on better delivering services in the fields of job training, economic development, affordable housing, public health and education. Given the havoc that the pandemic has wreaked on many state and local budgets, funding for these initiatives will have to come from public officials' willingness to be creative.

A good place to start in the search for funding is with some questions: Have the hundreds of millions of dollars that states and local governments have forfeited in tax breaks to attract businesses created jobs and stimulated the economy as advocates promised they would? Do we need to hold on to so much governmental real estate when the coronavirus has shown us that many public services can be delivered efficiently online? Should we keep investing in the militarization of our police departments when the public is crying out for more community oriented policing and justice?


Finally, public officials need to do a better job bringing other community leaders to the table to help. The clergy must speak out more about the moral implications of generational poverty and institutionalized racism. Business leaders should do the same, while using their powerful voices, wealth and acumen to help state and local officials figure out the best solutions to solving budgetary issues and how best to govern in a crisis. And the media must do a better job of providing background and context for today's crises.

Our nation owes a debt of gratitude to the Black Lives Matter movement for bringing front and center the historic problem of police brutality. BLM is more than a slogan to many Americans. It is a mandate for major policy changes at all levels of government and in every facet of society. Public officials must heed this call and play a key role. (No fucking way, turd. - JS)


 
It all depends on what you're getting shot or stabbed by.
Yup, would you rather:
A. get shot by a .380, .32 or other common handgun round?
or
B. get stabbed/slashed by a tweeker with a 8" kitchen knife?

Almost anyone that's seen the difference in knife vs. bullet wounds would I think rather take the bullet.
 
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