Post#171 » by MrSparkle » Thu Aug 27, 2020 3:50 am
I'm just gonna put my 2c. Glad I didn't grow up in the country my folks came from. Immigrants from poorer countries understand this. I'm 1st gen.:
Don't mix the idea of protest too much with the fantasy that comic books and movies deliver. Prolonged, intense chaos and economic disruption, you prolong it, eventually the scale tips and everyone loses besides the rich guys. Those 300 NBA players are fine walking away from the game. The message they send, if it's a statement, that's powerful. If it's understood as "quit what you're doing and protest" - which it literally defaults to for the average 15-30yo young person... Then you are getting into a message that may promote generational catastrophe. These guys with the hundreds of millions of dollars can retire fine without playing another game. But for the rest of people... It doesn't take 2 years to recover. You're talking about probably making the rest of your life harder, and your kids.'
If you think the US economy is invincible, think again. It's getting closer and closer to the brink. I'm liberal. But the conservative voice that says you can't continue in a state of economy stagnation and one multi-billion dollar step back after another - there's truth in it. Dollars seem to grow on computer algorithms these days, but everything has a finite breakpoint, even a computer.
I'm with Shaq and Charles on this. Protest today. Proud to support. But you must ask "what's next." IMO "cancel the season" is not a rational course of action. That's not b-ball fan in me but it's the rationalist. It has been 3 months since George Floyd, and we still do not have ONE concise political message or course of action. I am seeing black friends and colleagues on Facebook with QAnon conspiracies and pro-Trump crap. To not be able to unite them on this front, it is a gigantic problem. We Literally have the most racially insensitive administration since perhaps before the Civlil Rights act was passed, and I have COUNTLESS black FB friends somehow posting things that support it.
I'm just speaking for the average confused fool out there - you need to make sense of this message. Anger is justified. Anger and confusion are NOT courses of action. Voting and uniting ARE a course of action. It's pretty disorienting hearing that it's not.
Yes, racism is real and major. It is systemic. But don't resort to the tactic that less prosperous, more suppressed world countries need to resort to- with violent protests. You look throughout the course of history - Arab Springs, Venezuela. PROLONGED major protests and chaotic revolutions, they are followed by years if not decades of political and economic suppression. No one wins but the country where it's NOT happening.
And I don't think this is like the Civil Rights era protests, because:
(A) There was no pandemic.
(B) The rest of the IMF economy was very stable compared to today.
(C) The president wasn't a dangerous and irrational sociopath.
(D) MLK made it VERY CLEAR what his goals were. End segregation. He won a Nobel peace prize. Made one of the greatest if not the greatest documented speech of all-time, Period.
If the NBAP has a course of action that sets a clear plan to address police brutality by taking the season(s) off, then I'm all ears and supportive, but my fear is that it is too esoteric a concept (unlike segregation) to tackle with a loose, unorganized movement spear-headed by angry (and rightfully so) protestors.
If they have a piece of legislation to propose that essentially standardizes a form of police training, then that is interesting, but you must understand that every state and every city is a completely different police department. If you want to entirely de-fund the police, de-weaponize the police, while a large chunk of the population holds onto its long-rifle 2nd amendment, then I'm just gonna say that is NOT going to work. This country has an entanglement of problems kind of created by the "my freedoms" Americans with no concept of legal borders for what makes safe sense. It's at the point of paradox.
Like... Police needs reform. But what about the economic reform of the black community? Is the proposed solution to basically create corporate chaos? To tie it back to the beginning- I'm asking , what are our short-term goals? Cause I can say, short of replacing or defunding police, CPD for example has taken major changes in the last 2 years. Still ways to go, but they do also deal with a lot of unstable individuals and crime. Like, you can't go in with an acoustic guitar and incense and resolve a domestic violence case with armed individuals.
Or is the long-term goal to create so much instability to create a self-reflection? I genuinely have not seen 1 answer to this question yet. But I don't know - maybe for small-town America, towns like Kenosha getting flipped upside down , it maybe has an effect. I've long thought that 99% of America is basically sleeping through all of society's problems.
Just thinking out loud here.