TheDiesel36 wrote:He is a terrible commentator that I mute when I can.. But what wrong with what he said? I guess you have to be an American leftist to see the racism there..
The problem is that the phrase is generally used AGAINST Black Live Matters, essentially trying to make BLM people seem like the racist ones by saying that everyone is equal, when everyone isn't quite equal. BLM also implicitly means BLM TOO and these people act like that's not what it means by saying that all lives matters. BLM means All Lives Matter,
The USA are such a mess... I've argued with "right wingers" on this (sorry, it's mostly them) and it's going to be hard to make half the country change their mind with this looting and violence going on right now. They'll also start showing you graphs on how many black people kill black people vs how many white people kill black people and tell you that black people only think BLM when it's a white person doing the killing. It's not a great point because black on black crime can be attributed to social and economical factors, but it's something that they'll never accept. So... this debate will always go nowhere.
I don't want to start a big debate, but ...
I personally think that the problem is more poor vs rich than black vs white, and that being poor is actually what makes you more likely to be killed by the police (a rich black man is less likely to be killed by the police than a poor white man)... but some people at the top must be really happy that the debate is always about black vs white, when there's probably a bigger common denominator.
-"“when adjusting for crime, we find no systematic evidence of anti-Black disparities in fatal shootings, fatal shootings of unarmed citizens, or fatal shootings involving misidentification of harmless objects”"
-"What matters is that they fit a stereotype of a poor person, who looks more like a potential criminal."
-"Black citizens are about two times more likely to be killed by police than White citizens (Total OR(B/W) = 2.29). This matches the odds ratio of being Black among poor people (.20/.08 = 2.5)."
https://replicationindex.com/2019/09/27/poverty-explain-racial-biases-in-police-shootings/
Black people in the USA are poorer on average. Being poorer leads to more crime or looking more like a criminal, which leads to being involved with the police more, which leads to more death by bad policing. I'm pretty sure we would find that places with better wealth distribution are less violent societies and have less police killings.























