He crosses my mind like constantly. I was radicalized by the Mike Brown wave of BLM but Tamir is the one that got to me especially. He was fucking 12, and got gunned down on broad daylight, and there was no justice.

I just. I cant get over it. I dont even think I should.

  • RavenFellBlade@startrek.website
    ·
    1 year ago

    He had it coming. He was a black male in broad daylight. Broad. Daylight. What did he think was going to happen? Should have known better.

    All of the /s, if it isn't obvious.

    I just want to know why it's so radical for us to expect people not to be flat-out murdered by police because of their skin color? You aren't "radicalized". You are in opposition to the true radicalization that has become accepted as the norm in the US.

    • Fuckass
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      deleted by creator

      • star_wraith [he/him]
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        white conservatives are silent

        It wasn’t always this way. Plenty of movies in the 70s for example show cops in a negative light. Usually it was just “asshole cops want to stop the white boys from having fun” a la Dukes of Hazzard, but still. I don’t think you could make a movie like “Rambo” in 2023, at least not without the pigs squealing about Brian Dennehy’s portrayal of them. I mean, even as a little kid in the late 80s, I don’t recall the levels of bootlicking by white people like we see today.

        So what happened? I think after US cities became slightly less segregated post Civil Rights era and you had marginally more racial diversity in the suburbs, white folks began to see the police as the enforcers of white supremacy. But this all really went into overdrive after Michael Brown. White folks perceived BLM as a direct attack on white supremacy, and had a dialectical response to it - supporting the pigs isn’t really about supporting the pigs. It’s more about taking a stand for white supremacy but laundering it through support for cops. Just my take.