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by wl
1958 days ago
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I posted a status update the morning after a major riot happened in my neighborhood that consisted of a short summary of what happened, a statement that I was ok, and essentially "fuck the rioters." I could name names of friends who, in response, insisted on "people > property", "fuck the racist capitalist system", "rioting is language of the unheard", "looting is reparations," and "don't tell black people how to protest." I'm sure you can find examples of this on twitter and reddit if you look—it was unavoidable for a time. Since I'm not willing to out my friends or comb through old social media, have an example from local media instead: https://www.wbez.org/stories/winning-has-come-through-revolt... Also, an image macro posted to my wall, representative of the kinds of stuff I was seeing at the time: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EnCI4_9W4AAAxDf.jpg |
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How many of those friends are elected or appointed public officials?
And what political power/social clout does Ariel Atkins[0] have? Especially given that over 100 arrests were made and as the mayor of Chicago said[0]:
"This is not legitimate First Amendment-protected speech. … This was straight-up felony, criminal conduct"
So some of your friends and an "activist" made incendiary comments.
No one with any real power or media reach condoned or encouraged violence during the BLM protests. Not one.
If a bunch of randos mouthing off is a huge problem, how much of a problem do you consider the statements encouraging violence by some folks with real power and media reach[1][2][3][4]?
[0] https://www.wbez.org/stories/winning-has-come-through-revolt...
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nz-zWeqtVo8&feature=youtu.be
[2] https://www.forbes.com/sites/andrewsolender/2021/01/02/gop-r...
[3] https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/news/die-for-something-arizo...
[4] https://thehill.com/opinion/civil-rights/461498-why-are-we-t...