zekko
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2009
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I understand the philosophy behind a violent approach, but I much admire Martin Luther King. I can't say Malcom X has influenced me at all, although I'm sure I would not be his target audience. But I firmly believe Martin Luther King was a great man, and we sorely miss leadership like his today.What about Malcom X? Malcom X says Martin Luther King Jr was too soft and a more violent approach was necessary.
I read earlier you were from Canada, I wasn't aware you lived in Canada. It's probably much easier to imagine abolishing or defunding police in Canada, the US is full of very violent people.
I don't dispute your second statement, although I don't believe that police are killing black people in an unusual rate compared to whites, the statistics don't support that. Blacks make up 13% of the population, but account for over half the violent crime. Blacks account for a little less than a third of people killed by police. So the number falls in between where you might expect it to. Obviously more encounters lead to a more chances for things to go wrong. And I haven't seen firm numbers on this, but I would be willing to bet that blacks are far more likely to resist arrest. You are far less likely to be killed by a policeman if you are cooperative, so that's all a factor. Given all that, no sane person would expect only 13% of police fatalities to be black. I have heard police are more hesitant to use lethal force against minorities, because of the potential fallout - I know I would be.“I don’t see color” is a racist statement. Whether you choose to admit or not, society treats black people differently than white people. That is fact.
Whatever, none of that means there isn't racism. If you could reduce the crime rate in dense urban areas, that would probably save more lives than anything. Which is why many are calling for putting more money into the communities. LeBron James is giving money to pay for education, a worthy cause.
Regarding "I don't see color" being racist. I would see being colorblind as being a worthy goal, I would like to see people as individuals based on their merit, not on the color of their skin. Martin Luther King said something to this effect in one of his famous speeches, but I don't remember the exact quote. That was a goal of some of the civil rights movements when I was growing up. I don't see that so much anymore, people want to be calling more attention to someone's skin color, not less. Which I do not agree with.
It's not. But BLM was founded by Marxists, and many current members have an aggressive Marxist agenda. These are the people behind defacing national monuments and toppling statues IMO, because they want to remove democracy and its symbols. Since you've claimed that right wing militants are behind the violence, I take that to mean you disapprove of the violence and destruction, for which I applaud you. Finding ways to reduce police killings is good, but I cannot support the more radical elements.How is opposing state violence against black people a Marxist dream?