Metsfanmax wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Seriously Mets... what are you 10? Can you really be that naive?
In both the cases of Eric Garner and Michael Brown, very few people are actually focusing on the criminal records of these individuals. (I mean, even Bill O'Reilly has come out against what happened to Eric Garner, and Garner had a much longer criminal record than Brown did.) There are very few people who are focusing on that criminal history, and it is mainly white supremacists and other individuals who weren't going to be won over anyway, who are using arguments such as this. You're literally imagining into existence a problem that doesn't exist, simply because it could.
No. Does the media care? Do the police care? Does the general public care? The media, police, and general public are all groups that protestors are trying to win over. Picking someone who committed a crime (whether alleged or not) is a bad idea.
Is it a bad idea? Who are the people really talking about Michael Brown and the robbery? Are they people that could have been won over, but weren't because of it? I doubt it. What Officer Wilson did wasn't because of the robbery, and so bringing it up is just a way to besmirch Michael Brown in an irrelevant manner. And if people were doing it, that'd be important. But they're not, because there's much more important issues to focus on in this case.
Metsfanmax wrote:thegreekdog wrote:is the person I now have to support to make sure civil rights violations are noticed.
You don't have to "support" him. You just have to support the notion that selling untaxed cigarettes does not warrant a death sentence administered by a police officer on the street.
Incorrect and naive. I do have to support him. Because right now the fight against police brutality and the fight for civil rights is all about Ferguson. So if I fight police brutality and fight for civil rights, I'm immediately invalidated by a large percentage of my target audience because of the support for this particular individual.
No, you missed the point. I didn't say that you can ignore what happened in Ferguson. I said that what has happened in Ferguson is
not about Michael Brown. It is a symbol for the countless times that a police officer killed an unarmed black person, and this happens much more than it happens to white people. What happened to Michael Brown is unfortunate, and undeserved, whether or not he was a "criminal," and the same is true for all of the other victims. This movement isn't about saying that Michael Brown is a saint -- it is saying that black lives matter, and if you take someone's life, you should see a day in court for it.
I seriously couldn't be more upset about this situation. It's well documented on CC that I'm a proponent of the maximum restrictions available on police and the maximum civil rights attainable. The best way to win people over is to show the police brutality and civil rights violations that happen to non-violent criminals or non-criminals. I mean non-criminals alone should provide adequate support.
Your view on this is simplistic and absurd, because it ignores the realities of what it is to be a black person in this country. Something like 1/3 of black people are either in prison, on parole or on probation in this country. That is precisely because of our lingering history of racism. So of course when this happens, there's a good chance it's going to happen to a "criminal."
That is the problem itself. But again, it doesn't matter because the people who need to be won over are the people on the fence and who know about racism in this country but aren't talking about it, not the Fox News types who will defend white privilege regardless of circumstance.
My view is realistic, not absurd. It may be simplistic, but that happens to be a benefit in this particular circumstance. I'll come to that in a second, but wanted to dispose of your more ridiculous arguments.
While I appreciate that Michael Brown is part of the conversation, the conversation, storyline, and titles remain about Ferguson Missouri. Everything is "Ferguson." As a quick example, Profootballtalk.com has a story about a "die-in" at the Eagles-Seahawks game because of, not Eric Garner, but Ferguson. Profootballtalk is read by people who probably don't watch CNN and have no idea who Eric Garner is. And those are the people that are going to help with this problem (see below).
If you believe that no one is taking up the cause of "criminals are bad people to have as martyrs" I point you to the following (which I found after a quick Google search and the first link listed):
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the ... never-was/Washington Post wrote:We've written before about why the Garner case hasn't split the country along racial and party lines like Ferguson has. Basically, the political and racial disagreement in Ferguson was all about the still-unclear sequence of events that preceded the death of unarmed black teenager Michael Brown; it actually had little to do with politics, per se. In the Garner case, there is a video, leading to less debate about the particulars of precisely what happened.
What the Post does not note is that a large percentage of eyewitnesses in Ferguson said that Brown attacked the police officer. While I think attacking a police officer, while unarmed, is not grounds for execution, there are many people who do think it's grounds for self-defense.
Eric Garner is a much better poster child for police brutality and the racism rampant in police departments.
And you should care who the poster child is. Right now, the only people who care about civil liberties are forward thinking white Americans, black Americans, and libertarians. Those people are marginalized by everyone else (either separately or together). Forward thinking white Americans are "too liberal." Black Americans "only care about the race of the individuals involved." Libertarians "are whackjobs who only want to smoke pot." So the people we have to convince aren't forward thinking liberals, black Americans, and libertarians. The people we need to convince are the mainstream Democrats (the teachers, the workers) and mainstream Republicans (the Rockefeller Republicans). We're never going to convince hardcore conservatives.
So I wish the media and the protestors would stop referring to Ferguson. Start referring to something else, whether that is Eric Garner or not.
P.S. - The title of this thread contains the word "Ferguson." It does not contain the word "Garner." So before you come in here at me with a holier-than-thou attitude, keep that in mind (in addition to keeping in mind that I'm one of those crazy libertarians who actually thinks the Constitution should protect people from the police).