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re: There is no hope for ever solving this issue.

Posted on 5/31/20 at 5:19 pm to
Posted by ABearsFanNMS
Formerly of tLandmass now in Texas
Member since Oct 2014
17483 posts
Posted on 5/31/20 at 5:19 pm to
quote:

Exactly...Probably because they share the same views.

Dems would say the same about other dems


Not true. Some of my conversation topics:

1) That abortion should not be on the GOP platform
2) That a flat tax would be the fairest system
3) The stricter training should be required for LEOs
4) That the Evangelical Right has too much pull within the GOP

I found middle ground on all topics whereas you have fanatical responses from Dems.
Posted by 4Ghost
Member since Sep 2016
8519 posts
Posted on 5/31/20 at 6:02 pm to
You want to solve ALOT of your bad Cops maintaining their jobs????

Do away with their, UNIONS!
Posted by 6R12
Louisiana
Member since Feb 2005
8684 posts
Posted on 5/31/20 at 6:03 pm to
quote:

I just wonder if whites and blacks are too incompatible to live together on a large scale.




I thought that's what the early 1900's were about? The old people always used to say that.
Posted by aujhw1
Member since May 2020
43 posts
Posted on 5/31/20 at 11:54 pm to
quote:

I don’t disagree, but why does perpetuating their victim status always seem to be the default solution? Or even the only solution? Because victimhood is exactly the opposite of empowerment. Victims by definition are helpless, oppressed, prisoners of circumstance. They’re being told that they have no responsibility for the situation they’re in — thus no personal agency — and the only way things will get better is if someone else changes the situation for then. (This is obviously true no matter what color a person’s skin may be.) You can respect people’s feelings/experiences and also encourage forward progress and personal growth.

At some point we all have to come to the realization that people who are constantly bombarded with this type of messaging will reach a point where they aren’t angry, desperate, and disillusioned because of what may have happened to them in the past and cannot be changed, but because they perceive that they have no control over their own futures either. Feeding that cycle of hopelessness is the biggest crime being committed against the black community these days, imo.


I think calling for change, voting, and protesting are ways to take responsibility to change things. The civil rights movement offered an example of that. We aren’t just talking about the past either. We are talking about injustices that happen today. There are just so many examples especially in the context of the criminal justice system.
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