As an Australian, it's a fascinating subject.
I'm a conservative voter in Australia and I would generally vote republican if I could (my wife is from New York and we spend a lot of time in the US).
As far as the kneeling thing goes I just don't understand why so many white Americans are up in arms about doing it during the anthem. I understand the pride in the anthem but surely people see this isn't a protest about the flag/anthem etc...it's about people supposedly being branded 'equal' under that flag as Americans- who are supposed to be treated equally are honestly aren't being treated equally.
My wife's family is staunchly republican and most of them are in the 'boycott the NFL!' camp.
There arguments basically revolve around:
1) It's fine to protest, but to kneel during the anthem is the most disrespectful thing you can do and you look like spoiled brats.
2) more black men kill other black men than anyone else, so go back into your communities and do more social work and spread awareness in your communities before disrespecting the flag and anthem that gave you the opportunity to play football for millions of dollars and help your families.
What are people's general arguments against these typical right wing statements/points of view?
My natural instinct is that it's some kind of ingrained racism and the kneeling makes people uncomfortable- they don't even realize they're being racist in a sense.
To me as an outsider it's obvious.
As a black man in the USA you have way less chance of realizing the American dream unless you're an athlete.
How do people not see this in 2017?
Would love some advice or to be pointed in the right direction of news/stats/facts that help spread awareness about inequalities in US society.
I've seen
http://inequality.stanford.edu/publications/20-facts-about-us-inequality-everyone-should-know and would love more stuff like this or to learn more solid arguments from actual Americans.
Just baffles me that the great USA that was built on the heels of free speech and spreading awareness about what's supposed to be right- especially the white/centrist/right wing part of the nation just absolutely will not accept/acknowledge the systemic racism in the US without arguing ..'but black people are their own worst enemy' etc..
There was a discussion about this on Celticsblog recently and this was an argument put forth by a well known poster over there (who is openly republican)..
eg:
According to that data, out of all violent crimes in which someone was charged, black Americans were charged with 62 percent of robberies, 57 percent of murders and 45 percent of assaults in the country's 75 biggest counties — despite the fact that black Americans made up just 15 percent of the population in those places.
You talk about friends and relatives. Dwayne Wade's cousin got murdered while pushing her baby stroller, but not by a cop. Dion Waiters brother was murdered. Not by a cop. DeAndre Bembry's brother was murdered. Not by a cop. Reggie Bullick's sister was murdered. Not by a cop. Rookie Dorian Finley-Smith's brother was murdered. Not by a cop. Michael Jordan's father was murdered. Not by a cop. Bryce DeJean-Jones died by gunshot. Lorenzo Wright was murdered. Bison Dele was murdered. It's much worse in the NFL, both in terms of victims and perpetrators.For perspective:
"In recent decades, African-Americans were six times as likely as whites to be homicide victims, according to Justice Department statistics. The carnage is staggering: 2,491 African-Americans were homicide victims in 2013, the most recent year for which FBI statistics are available. An estimated 93 percent of those murders were committed by other African-Americans. The 2013 toll alone is equal to 72 percent of the 3,446 lynchings documented by Tuskegee University researchers between 1882 and 1968. The comparison to nearly a century of deadly racist terror only underscores the alarming scope of the problem."
are there reasons that officers might be more on edge around African American males than the average citizen? Does it make sense to treat the populations that are statistically most lethal in a different way? What's being done about the underlying level of crime, particularly violent crime?Let's have a real dialogue in this country. Blacks commit the majority of violent crimes, and yet they're not the majority of victims of lethal police action. That doesn't scream racism to me.
Shouldn't the dialogue be aimed at fixing problems? So, how do we reduce the epidemic of violent crime? Is it more police? Education? Investment? More leadership from within targeted communities?
Because that's not the dialogue we're having. There's no doubt that several of the police shootings should have resulted in convictions. But, realistically, we're talking about maybe a couple dozen cases per year, probably less (where the killing was completely unjustified). That number of innocents is murdered in a low-crime month in Chicago alone.To me those numbers SCREAM at the inequality in the USA. Black communities are 'left to be' in a sense by the rest of the USA.
If you're a black male who's dropped out of high school there is a 35% chance you'll be in prison by the time you're 25 years old.
Isn't that what these guys are kneeling for too?
One day Marcus Smart will be defensive player of the year, mark my words.