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Nov 3, 2015 01:48:42   #
Trooper745 wrote:
Perfectly good sidewalks on both sides of the road, and the stupid racist bitch is purposely walking in the road. Police stop to caution her that walking in the road wearing headphones is dangerous, and she starts her racist rant. I wonder where the white policemen might get the idea that blacks are all stupid racist assholes.


I sometimes wish people would have the chance to be the other person that they have to guts to talk about, it would change the tone and the conversation.

It is very apparent that you have never walked in a affluent neighborhood because not all of them have sidewalks on both sides of the street. Some don't have sidewalks on either side and believe it or not people in those neighborhoods do walk or jog in the street. Now I really hope someone does not make a stupid or racist statement about all white people based on your comments because they would be stupid and an asshole. That's a title that only you should have since you obviously worked hard to earn it.
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Oct 30, 2015 18:16:34   #
bmac32 wrote:
So, I'm driving to my office to turn in my weekly paperwork. A headlight is out. I see a Tucson Police Department squad vehicle turn around and follow me. I'm already preparing for the stop.

The lights go on and I pull over. The officer asks me how I'm doing, and then asks if I have any weapons.

"Yes, sir. I'm a concealed carry permit holder and my weapon is located on my right hip. My wallet is in my back-right pocket."

The officer explains for his safety and mine, he needs to disarm me for the stop. I understand, and I unlock the vehicle. I explain that I'm running a 7TS ALS holster but from the angle, the second officer can't unholster it. Lead officer asks me to step out, and I do so slowly. Officer relieves me of my Glock and compliments the X300U I'm running on it. He also sees my military ID and I tell him I'm with the National Guard.

Lead officer points out my registration card is out of date but he knows my registration is up to date. He goes back to run my license. I know he's got me on at least two infractions. I'm thinking of how to pay them.

Officers return with my Glock in an evidence back, locked and cleared. "Because you were cool with us and didn't give us grief, I'm just going to leave it at a verbal warning. Get that headlight fixed as soon as possible."

I smile. "Thank you, sir."

I'm a black man wearing a hoodie and strapped. According to certain social movements, I shouldn't be alive right now because the police are allegedly out to kill minorities.

Maybe...just maybe...that notion is bunk.

Maybe if you treat police officers with respect, they will do the same to you.

Police officers are people, too. By far and large, most are good people and they're not out to get you.

I'd like to thank those two officers and TPD in general for another professional contact.

We talk so much about the bad apples who shouldn't be wearing a badge. I'd like to spread the word about an example of men who earned their badges and exemplify what that badge stands for.

&#8234;#&#8206;BlueLivesMatter&#8236; &#8234;#&#8206;AllLivesMatter&#8236;

[EDIT: In my rush to post, I accidentally omitted that my wallet was in the back-right pocket, near my firearm. This was the primary motivation for temporary disarmament. The post has been modified to reflect that.

Again, I'd like to thank the TPD and their officers for their consistent professionalism, courtesy, and the good work that they do, both in this particular contact and every day.]
So, I'm driving to my office to turn in my weekly ... (show quote)



First, Thank you for your service and thank you for your post. In these times we need to hear more stories that make police officers human that also makes black people human. We also need to respect each other, and I mean real respect that we as a nation seem to be lacking for some reason.
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Oct 24, 2015 10:51:16   #
CarolSeer2016 wrote:
I believe he does. In his twisted mind, if anyone doesn't like him, it's not because of his character, or lack thereof, or his policies, but their dislike of him is because of his skin color. So now if he is beginning to perceive a general dislike of his policies, it is because America is racist, not because the American people do not favor his Socialist redistributionist policies.




So are you saying it can't be both? Because racism does exist in this country just because you do see it doe not mean it has been eradicated.
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Oct 21, 2015 14:39:14   #
KHH1 wrote:
*Fortunately, all of the Major Cities Went to Obama...meaning the "hicks still hide out in the sticks"

How Texas Teaches History

By ELLEN BRESLER ROCKMOREOCT. 21, 2015

A TEXAS high school student and his mother recently called attention to a curious line in a geography textbook: a description of the Atlantic slave trade as bringing “millions of workers” to plantations in the American South. McGraw-Hill Education, the publisher of the textbook, has since acknowledged that the term “workers” was a misnomer.

The company’s chief executive also promised to revise the textbook so that its digital version as well as its next edition would more accurately describe the forced migration and enslavement of Africans. In the meantime, the company is also offering to send stickers to cover the passage.

But it will take more than that to fix the way slavery is taught in Texas textbooks. In 2010, the Texas Board of Education approved a social studies curriculum that promotes capitalism and Republican political philosophies. The curriculum guidelines prompted many concerns, including that new textbooks would downplay slavery as the cause of the Civil War.

This fall, five million public school students in Texas began using the textbooks based on the new guidelines. And some of these books distort history not through word choices but through a tool we often think of as apolitical: grammar.

Every weekday, get thought-provoking commentary from Op-Ed columnists, The Times editorial board and contributing writers from around the world.

In September, Bobby Finger of the website Jezebel obtained and published some excerpts from the new books, showing much of what is objectionable about their content. The books play down the horror of slavery and even seem to claim that it had an upside. This upside took the form of a distinctive African-American culture, in which family was central, Christianity provided “hope,” folk tales expressed “joy” and community dances were important social events.

But it is not only the substance of the passages that is a problem. It is also their form. The writers’ decisions about how to construct sentences, about what the subject of the sentence will be, about whether the verb will be active or passive, shape the message that slavery was not all that bad.

I teach freshman writing at Dartmouth College. My colleagues and I consistently try to convey to our students the importance of clear writing. Among the guiding principles of clear writing are these: Whenever possible, use human subjects, not abstract nouns; use active verbs, not passive. We don’t want our students to write, “Torture was used,” because that sentence obscures who was torturing whom.

In the excerpts published by Jezebel, the Texas textbooks employ all the principles of good, strong, clear writing when talking about the “upside” of slavery. But when writing about the brutality of slavery, the writers use all the tricks of obfuscation. You can see all this at play in the following passage from a textbook, published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, called Texas United States History:

Some slaves reported that their masters treated them kindly. To protect their investment, some slaveholders provided adequate food and clothing for their slaves. However, severe treatment was very common. Whippings, brandings, and even worse torture were all part of American slavery.

Notice how in the first two sentences, the “slavery wasn’t that bad” sentences, the main subject of each clause is a person: slaves, masters, slaveholders. What those people, especially the slave owners, are doing is clear: They are treating their slaves kindly; they are providing adequate food and clothing. But after those two sentences there is a change, not just in the writers’ outlook on slavery but also in their sentence construction. There are no people in the last two sentences, only nouns. Yes, there is severe treatment, whippings, brandings and torture. And yes, those are all bad things. But where are the slave owners who were actually doing the whipping and branding and torturing? And where are the slaves who were whipped, branded and tortured? They are nowhere to be found in the sentence.

In another passage, slave owners and their institutionalized cruelty are similarly absent: “Families were often broken apart when a family member was sold to another owner.”

Note the use of the passive voice in the verbs “were broken apart” and “was sold.” If the sentence had been written according to the principles of good draftsmanship, it would have looked like this: Slave owners often broke slave families apart by selling a family member to another owner. A bit more powerful, no? Through grammatical manipulation, the textbook authors obscure the role of slave owners in the institution of slavery.

It may appear at first glance that the authors do a better job of focusing on the actions of slaves. After all, there are many sentences in which “slaves” are the subjects, the main characters in their own narrative. But what are the verbs in those sentences? Are the slaves suffering? No, in the sentences that feature slaves as the subject, as the main actors in the sentence, the slaves are contributing their agricultural knowledge to the growing Southern economy; they are singing songs and telling folk tales; they are expressing themselves through art and dance.

There are no sentences, in these excerpts, anyway, in which slaves are doing what slaves actually did: toiling relentlessly, without remuneration or reprieve, constantly subject to confinement, corporal punishment and death.

The textbook publishers were put in a difficult position. They had to teach history to Texas’ children without challenging conservative political views that are at odds with history. In doing so, they made many grammatical choices. Though we don’t always recognize it, grammatical choices can be moral choices, and these publishers made the wrong ones.
*Fortunately, all of the Major Cities Went to Obam... (show quote)



The Texas school board I believe is more to blame for the structure of the text than the publishers. After all the school board won't buy a book that will portray history in a light other than the way Texans want it portrayed. It might cause some one to think or worse think differently than the way they were told to think.
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Oct 16, 2015 20:39:17   #
VladimirPee wrote:
There is some truth to what you say however I think the number is higher where it creates that problem. My daughters college is in a typical college town with bars, fast food etc. Most of the kids who work do so on campus or in one of the better restaurants. But if they raised min wage to 10 or 11 dollars they would surely replace the poor minorities who support their family working at Taco Bell. Why wouldn't want a cute CoEd behind the counter that is educated?


I don't think so just using your statement that the working college kids work at the college or the better restaurants. People tend to not work for long at a place they feel is beneath their skill level unless that is the only place that will meet their main goal.
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Oct 16, 2015 20:03:07   #
MatthewlovesAyn wrote:


As you may guess, many of my arguments to your bereft philosophy will follow the same course, so I am only going to pick on one more of your pet peeves. Minimum wage. It's one of the worst, thieving, racist, policies ever foisted on the American people. It was conceived to keep less qualified, yet eager to work blacks from joining the construction trades in New Jersey. It's still racist because it keeps employers from hiring promising yet unskilled blacks at a wage where they can make the employer money. An employer is NOT there to provide jobs. He's there to make money. I hire people. If I have to pay an unskilled black youth $8.00 an hour, or I have the choice of paying some bright young college kid the same amount, which do you think I should do? Now if I could get that black kid for $4.00 (which is what he is worth to me) I just might do it. The left makes it sound like the whole middle class is scraping by on minimum wage. It's a lie. It's about 4% of the work force. The very same portion of the work force that's probably not worth minimum wage. Sorry.
br br As you may guess, many of my arguments to ... (show quote)



Why do you just use unskilled black people in your post there are unskilled people in every group?
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Jun 25, 2015 15:34:13   #
Peaver Bogart wrote:
:thumbdown: :thumbdown: :thumbdown: Bullshit!!!!! The justice system should have never been brought into it. It was a clear cut case of self defense. That's what a jury of his peers determined. If you ever get your head out of your ass, you'll see things more clearly.


I feel they're still unanswered questions on if it was self defense or not, so at this point only God knows if he is guilty of murder or not.
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Jun 22, 2015 11:53:57   #
CarolSeer2016 wrote:
I believe he does. In his twisted mind, if anyone doesn't like him, it's not because of his character, or lack thereof, or his policies, but their dislike of him is because of his skin color. So now if he is beginning to perceive a general dislike of his policies, it is because America is racist, not because the American people do not favor his Socialist redistributionist policies.


So is it your view that racism does not exist anymore?
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Mar 25, 2015 01:15:51   #
Don G. Dinsdale wrote:
‘Without Fear of Retaliation,’ George Zimmerman Unloads on ‘Barack Hussein Obama’


Mar. 24, 2015 - Oliver Darcy


The former neighborhood watchman acquitted in the 2012 shooting death of unarmed black minor Trayvon Martin lashed out at President Barack Obama in a new video posted online late Monday.


“I feel that now is the perfect time to speak my mind without fear of retaliation by the president, the attorney general, the federal government et cetera,” George Zimmerman, 31, said before laying into Obama in the 13-minute interview conducted by his lawyer Howard Iken.


The 31-year-old pointed at Obama when asked to name an official or government agency who brought the “highest level of unfairness” to his situation.


“By far, the president of the United States, Barack Hussein Obama,” Zimmerman said. “He had the most authority and in that sense I would hold him in the highest regard believing that he would hold that position and do his absolute hardest to not inflame racial tensions in America.”


“Unfortunately after even after Jay Carney, his press secretary stated in the White House briefing that the White House will not interject in a local law enforcement matter and at most a state criminal matter, President Obama held his Rose Garden speech stating if I had a son he would look like Trayvon,” he continued. “To me that was clearly a dereliction of duty pitting Americans against each other solely based on race.”


“He took what should have been a clear-cut self-defense matter and still to this day on the anniversary of incident he held a ceremony at the White House inviting the Martin-Fulton family and stating that they should take the day to reflect upon the fact that all children’s lives matter,” Zimmerman added. “Unfortunately for the president I’m also my parent’s child and my life matters as well. And for him to make incendiary comments as he did and direct the Department of Justice to pursue a baseless prosecution he by far overstretched, overreached, even broke the law in certain aspects to where you have an innocent American being prosecuted by the federal government which should never happen.”


Zimmerman said that he felt “throughout the process” Obama should have not interjected himself into a local law enforcement incident.


“Instead of rushing to judgment, making racially charged comments and pitting American against American. I believe that he should of taken the higher road given his position and said, been an example, been a leader as the president should be and say lets not rush to judgment,” the 31-year-old said.


In the interview posted on his lawyer’s website, Zimmerman said that he feels no guilt for the way things turned out.


“[W]ith me as a Christian I believe that God does everything for a purpose, and he had his plans and for me to second guess them would be hypocritical and almost blasphemous,” he said, adding that if he “had a fraction of the thought that I could have done something differently, acted differently so that both of us who survived then I would have heavier weight on my shoulders.”


The interview was published on a page on Ikea’s website titled, “An Interview With George Zimmerman.”
‘Without Fear of Retaliation,’ George Zimmerman Un... (show quote)




I find it hard believe that someone can take another persons life and not have any guilt unless it was on purpose, but only God knows his heart and mind.
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Mar 21, 2015 10:49:21   #
jwoodhorse wrote:
I have spent my life trying to avoid the ignorance of hate and to keep my family safe from it. It is easy to see the manifestation of the sickness in a person when you're not mired in the cesspool ideology these people are trying to project onto innocent people. The brain washing you speak of, the hate you accuse innocent people of, is what YOU were raised on.
I went for coffee at the Boathouse as usual to watch the sun set yesterday and had to drive through a group of young men playing soccer in the road. I was smiling and waving as I slowed to walk speed to at least show some courtesy, as I do with any pedestrian. One young man kicked the ball out to in front of my truck, making me stop. It was then I noticed the bullshit look on this young man's face. The others just stood there staring.
The smile left my face and my hand dropped to my .45 holstered at the side of my seat. Been a hunter all my life
Stupid ass almost stuck his head in a lion's mouth. I may be old and crippled but I will never bow to a punk like that.
The ignorance taught to this young man, by his family , almost got his ass shot.
Every man is deserving of respect,..Everyman gets that, one.
Keep stirring the pot,,,,Dumbass.
I have spent my life trying to avoid the ignorance... (show quote)


:thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup:
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Mar 20, 2015 00:27:21   #
moldyoldy wrote:
Yes, your brain has been washed, there is not one thing left in there except your hate.


Who said I have hatred for anybody?
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Mar 17, 2015 08:56:22   #
Liberty Tree wrote:
If it is not appropiate then why to many Blacks use it themselves?


The black youth use a variation of the word "Nigga" they don't actually say "Nigger" which is offensive and if you listen you will here other groups use the term amongst themselves as well.
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Mar 17, 2015 08:19:44   #
Mollypitcher1 wrote:
Nope. Different words for different folks doesn't fly. PC accomplishes nothing and only furthers the divide. The INTENT of the word is what counts. If no harm is meant, no harm is done. If harm or derogatory meaning is intended, what's the difference between WOP and YOU DUMB A&& Bitch!

One of my very closest friends was a Cherokee who used to call me "white eyes" and I called him "Redskin" or worse,(usually worse) and it was all in fun. I loved him like a brother and still cherish the Eagle Feather he gave me from his Grandfather's bonnet. When I travel,I carry it with me. He was killed in an accident many years ago, but I still think of him often. Silly words had no meaning as they were all in fun. I suppose if someone heard one of our exchanges, they would have thought we hated each other. But it was none of their business, either way. This is America, NOT Russia. I consider PC as just another attempt at mind control.
Nope. Different words for different folks doesn't ... (show quote)



:thumbup: :thumbup:
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Mar 17, 2015 07:51:48   #
Immediately, Marxist blacks and whites who carry the torch for them would sue the police for racism ,failure to protect the black community and sue for violation of the 14th amendment, which was for the sole benefit of the Negro people,---hat cops are not providing equal protection of the law. The reason for this BS as pure Marxism. American minorities are the richest in the world. Yet, Marxist never get enough. Marxists have legislated your actions your actions in all levels of life. They have been pounding your mind with accusations of racism in order to make the people feel guilty for the plight of blacks. It has worked and in a continuum. The proof is supported by the "no response from authorities to riots in Ferguson, Detroit, LA, etc. " Whites don't riot when a black cop kills an unarmed white kid (Utah last year.) Whites are brainwashed into GUILT for the plight of black people.

Asians are a minority. Yet, they excel; they assimilate. Blacks won the right to integrate White schools in 1957. Yet, 50% don't graduate high school; they don't assimilate; they congregate in self made ghetto. Whites are not the problem, Black cops white cops, it doesn't matter to blacks. They hate Black (Uncle Toms) cops; they hate white cops. A large number of Negros are uneducated & very racist. They easily manipulated by Marxists handlers ,Dumocraps.[/quote]

There is brainwashing going on but the message is different than what you state. The message is for you to not see certain groups of people as people, then you won't say a word when the action taken against that groups is foul. It is a tactic used all the time for war. Asians are a minority and while they are doing better than they would be in there home country many would not feel they doing as good as white people are doing. and most Asians are also segregated. As for Black people they're not in self made ghettos, for years that was the only place they were allowed to live and it continues to be the only places they can afford to live. As for the hate of police, only criminals hate the police. Most black people don't hate the police of any ethnic group it's just they don't trust the police, it's not like there is a history of fair or just treatment by the police.
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Mar 13, 2015 08:48:58   #
Kachina wrote:
I am so sick and tired of blacks screaming racism every time one of their darling hoodlums get caught breaking a law. They want a different law system for themselves than for rest of society. They get stopped by police because they are usually doing something wrong. I have the utmost respect for our law enforcement, my son is one of them. Can you imagine what it must be like getting called to one of these neighborhoods and have to second guess every step you take. If I Arrest, will there be backlash, if I shoot, will their be a root or will I lose my job, if I don't do anything, will I or someone else get killed. And they have all this running through their heads in a matter of seconds. They hesitate too long and they are dead. I really think we should just stop sending whites to these neighborhoods. Recruit more black cops and let them woTo in black majority neighborhoods. That is the only solution.
I am so sick and tired of blacks screaming racism ... (show quote)



How nice of you to label an entire group of people the same.
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