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I couldn't log into Red Dead 2 for 2 hours today in honor of George Floyd.

Posted on 6/5/20 at 4:21 am
Posted by Ham Solo
Member since Apr 2015
7725 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 4:21 am
Am I on crazy pills?

I can't play a video game because a pornhub criminal got murdered by a shitty, possibly racist cop.

Back in my day this was considered business as usual.

Carry on.
Posted by tduecen
Member since Nov 2006
161244 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 4:23 am to
NBA2K did the same and then gave users black shirts/hoodies that read BLM or I Can't Breathe....
Posted by Tunasntigers92
The Boot
Member since Sep 2014
23658 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 4:24 am to
Communists are attempting to overthrow the republic,you didn't miss much
Posted by geauxnavybeatbama
Member since Jul 2013
25134 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 4:25 am to
I hope you’re lying...

Kindle gave me a suggestion page of how not to be racist today.
Posted by gthog61
Irving, TX
Member since Nov 2009
71001 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 4:26 am to
As far as the media/pop culture is concerned, this is what Maoist China was like.

You will be force fed what you must think in every outlet

wonder how long after a dem is elected they start pushing everybody wearing the same outfit to avoid "fashion shaming"
Posted by Ham Solo
Member since Apr 2015
7725 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 4:27 am to
I'm building a spaceship to get off of this planet.

I've got one extra seat. Submit your essays for why you deserve it. Deadline is June 15th. I'm out of here.

Don't bring politics into my video games. That was my safe space.
Posted by Tunasntigers92
The Boot
Member since Sep 2014
23658 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 4:29 am to
What planet are you landing on???
Posted by Ham Solo
Member since Apr 2015
7725 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 4:30 am to
quote:

What planet are you landing on???


Uranus, obviously.
Posted by pioneerbasketball
Team Bunchie
Member since Oct 2005
132189 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 4:45 am to
A letter to fellow white folks… because black people really don’t need to hear from a white guy on this topic, especially not right now.

I can breathe.

And in my 40 years on this earth, I’ve never had to fear that an encounter with the police might change that. That is privilege.

As people all over America protest following the murder of George Floyd, it’s important that we understand something—we as white Americans are all products of racism in one form or another, products of white supremacy that is older than our country’s independence.

Yes, you. Me. Every single one of us.

No, I’m not calling you racist, but there’s no denying that your privileged stems in part from four centuries of racism, particularly in the form of oppressing, exploiting and killing black people. And far too often, those centuries of racism allow for that oppression, exploitation and killing goes unchecked by the government and legal system that should serve every individual in this country.

And no, I’m not blaming you personally for the death of Floyd or for the history of systemic racism that has gotten us to where we are today. I’m not asking you to apologize for being white. I am asking you to recognize your white privilege so we can better empathize with the struggles of black people and understand how much different their experiences are in a country that for centuries legally classified them as less than human.

Odds are good you don’t have direct ties to slaveholders, but that doesn’t mean your privilege wasn’t built on racism. Maybe your grandpa went to college or got a great home loan on the G.I. Bill that helped him build wealth through home ownership. Go ahead and google how accessible the G.I. Bill was to blacks after World War II.

Did your ancestors get denied home loans or college admission or job opportunities or medical treatment, or were they told what neighborhood they could live in, or were they denied the right to vote and potentially change some of those racist policies at the poll, all due to the color of their skin? Nope. All of that adds up, bit by bit, not just to the difference in quality of lives for those people who came generations before us, but in the generational wealth that has blesses so many white families and that has been unavailable to so many black families.

We all learned the way-too-abbreviated version of black history in school: slavery (bad!), emancipation (yay!), Jim Crow and other forms of legal discrimination long after the 13th Amendment purported to free black people (maybe if you had a good history teacher), Martin Luther King Jr gives a speech about having a dream, something vague about Malcolm X (but he’s a little radical for us white kids so let’s move along, shall we class?) King assassinated, Civil Right Act of 1968 passes, all is well.

So, um, yeah, we missed a lot in there. Even if we skip over for now everything that isn’t taught prior to 1968—how many of y’all knew about Black Wall Street and the Tulsa Race Massacre before you saw something about it on Instagram or Twitter this week? Or about how convict leasing kept a form of slavery alive in practice, if not in name, well into the 20th century?—even if we skip over all of that, pretending that institutional racism ended with the Civil Rights Acts passed in the 1960s is laughably disingenuous.

From Nixon to Reagan to Bush to Clinton to Bush again, our country spent most of four decades criminalizing blackness in a misguided effort to look tough on crime. A war on drugs, for-profit prisons and discrimination in the legal system—from policing, to prosecutors deciding who gets charged and with what crimes, to jury manipulation, to biased sentencing—the US managed to increase its prison population from about 35,000 in 1970 to just over 2 million 2000, and did so in large part by locking up blacks at an alarming rate. And let’s be clear here, blacks don’t make up a hugely disproportionate percentage of the U.S. prison population because they are inherently bad or are more dangerous than the rest of us, it’s because the system has been rigged against them for as long as black bodies have been stolen from Africa.

White privilege means that when I get pulled over, my first thought is, “shite, is my insurance going to go up now?” While a black man wonders, “Will I survive this encounter with the police?”

Which brings us back to George Floyd and the cops—yes, plural—who killed him in Minneapolis last week and everything that has transpired since. When you see a man get his life slowly choked out of him by a police officer for nearly 9 minutes—an officer who knows he’s on camera and is still unfazed—it’s impossible not to be sad and outraged. Now try to imagine you’re black and watching a scene like that unfold, again, knowing that you or a loved one could be next, and feeling hopeless because centuries of racism tell you that this is just going to happen again and again and again.

And before I get accused of being anti-cop, I promise you I’m not. I’m anti-bad cop, and there’s way too many of them, which is why substantial reform is needed. If you’re a law enforcement officer who strives to protect and serve, to make your community a better place, or if you’re the loved one of a such a police officer, then you should be as outraged as anyone right now, because men like Derek Chauvin are sullying your reputation by association. This isn’t about demonizing the police; it’s about condemning a broken system that allows too many bad cops to keep their jobs and often times avoid punishment killing black people they deem to be threatening.

And no, this is not just a few bad apples; it’s a bushel of them sprung from a tree that has been rotting from the inside due to the cancer of racism, a cancer that still plagues this country 400 years after we began stealing Africans, and 157 years since slavery was abolished.

Real change is needed, not just in policing and the legal system, but in how all of us, white folks in particular, educate ourselves about racism and how it shapes the history that got us to scenes like the one that unfolded in Minneapolis last week when a white cop so no problem casually taking the life of a black man who was accused of passing a counterfeit $20.
Black people are hurting right now. They’re angry. They’re sad. They’re scared.

From William Lloyd Garrison to Frederick Douglas to Harriet Tubman to Ida B. Wells to W.E.B Du Bois to Medgar Evers to Rosa Parks to Malcolm X to Martin Luther King Jr. to James Baldwin to Stokley Carmichael to John Lewis to Tommy Smith and John Carlos to Angela Davis to Colin Kaepernick, black people have been telling this country for centuries that it has a huge problem with race, and not nearly enough people have been listening.
Posted by pioneerbasketball
Team Bunchie
Member since Oct 2005
132189 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 4:59 am to
So let’s try to listen more, to educate ourselves better, and to find ways to not just be non-racists, but to be proudly anti-racist. If you have a voice, use it. If you have the financial means, donate to causes that fight racism. If you feel called to do so, take to the streets and exercise your first amendment rights. Contact local officials if you see something going on that needs to be changed through legislation. Sign a petition. And for god’s sake, please vote.

Also, don’t say “all lives matter” as a response to Black Lives Matter, it’s trolling at best and more often than not being used racist trope that belittles the struggles of an oppressed people. And unless you have a medical condition affecting your eyesight, don’t say “I don’t see color.” You need to see color and recognize that your black friends and colleagues had different life experiences than you because of the color of their skin. We all see color, it’s whether or not we let it affect how we treat people who look different than us. And if you’re mad about looting and rioting, yes that’s not good, but consider that A. a lot of the people taking part have nothing to do with the actual protest taking place, and B. if you’re that worked up about somebody looting a Target, I hope you brought that level of same energy and outrage when you saw Floyd get killed. Oh, and one more, when the topic is racism leading to the extrajudicial killings of blacks, don’t say “what about black-on-black crime?” Seriously, stop doing that. First of all, that’s not the issue at hand right now, secondly, there are plenty of amazing people in the black community working on that, and thirdly, if you, suddenly-concerned-about-black-on-black-crime-in-Chicago white person, really care about that topic, maybe consider learning more about how centuries of systemic racism contributed to blacks being in situations where violent crime rates might be higher because of underlying issues like poverty, poor education and lack of opportunity for upward mobility that, again, were caused in no small part by racist policies.

While it shouldn’t have taken yet another black man dying at the hands, or in this case, the knee of a cop to get us here, it feels like we might be at a tipping point as a nation. And if everything that has happening in recent months, from Breonna Taylor to Ahmaud Arbery to George Floyd, to a president who sympathizes with white supremacists but uses thinly-veiled slurs when it comes to black protestors, has been enough to shift your opinions or to just cause you to reach a breaking point where you can no longer remain silent, then hang onto this feeling and continue advocate for and an ally to a black community that is long overdue for some serious change.

All of this might make some people uncomfortable or even upset with me, but this topic is too important to stay silent. This is no longer about politics, about left vs. right or red states and blue states, it’s about right vs. wrong. It’s about being on the right side of history so you don’t have to someday explain to your grandkids why you enabled a tyrant who calls for military force against his own citizens who are trying to exercise their right to peacefully protest, who calls neo-Nazis very fine people but who calls black NFL players “sons of bitches” for peacefully protesting during the national anthem, and who suggests that summary execution as an appropriate response to property damage.

And finally, say it loud and say it proud:

Black
Lives
Matter
Posted by Tunasntigers92
The Boot
Member since Sep 2014
23658 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 5:02 am to
Where did you copy and paste this from
Posted by Froman
Baton Rouge
Member since Jun 2007
36200 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 5:21 am to
quote:

Back in my day this was considered business as usual.


Wow, and we’re so surprised people are protesting.
Posted by Esquire
Chiraq
Member since Apr 2014
11568 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 5:45 am to
Wasn’t it just the online portion? RDR2 is a masterpiece. RDO sucks balls.
Posted by BayouBlitz
Member since Aug 2007
15838 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 5:59 am to
You poor baby. Couldn't play a video game for 2 whole hours.

My condolences.
Posted by gthog61
Irving, TX
Member since Nov 2009
71001 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 6:07 am to
quote:

You poor baby. Couldn't play a video game for 2 whole hours.

My condolences.




Oh look, a dumbshit who is short because points go right over his head
Posted by GoldenGuy
Member since Oct 2015
10851 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 6:19 am to
quote:

Pioneerbasketball’s copypasta


1. TL;DR
2. Not even on topic
3. Even the Italians know to put sauce on copypasta
4. Get your own thread. It’s literally free
Posted by pioneerbasketball
Team Bunchie
Member since Oct 2005
132189 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 6:46 pm to
Your white privilege is showing
Posted by Flats
Member since Jul 2019
21665 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 6:49 pm to
quote:

Your white privilege is showing


Your figgotry is showing.
Posted by TerryDawg03
The Deep South
Member since Dec 2012
15631 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 6:52 pm to
I’m starting to understand why my grandfather was so grumpy.
Posted by pioneerbasketball
Team Bunchie
Member since Oct 2005
132189 posts
Posted on 6/5/20 at 8:58 pm to
quote:

Your figgotry is showing.

Doesn't agree with my point of view so you resort to name calling
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