Posted on 11/26/2014 7:25:01 AM PST by PROCON
Thank you, Ferguson: Thanks to you we learned that black mob violence is now a sickness -- not just a problem.
And no one is sicker than the reporters who ignore, condone, excuse, and even encourage it, as we learned from the latest riot.
For reporters, Mike Brown has always been a moving target: At first the Gentle Giant was cut down for no reason whatsoever. Reporters ate it up and black mob violence followed.
When that fairy tale evaporated, they replaced it -- with ease.
The day after the riot ,on "Morning Joe", I learned from a black reporter that because the district attorney of St. Louis took 25 minutes to explain the grand jury decision that was proof positive the cop should have gone to trial. And reason enough to riot.
Joe and Mika shook their heads more in sadness than anger.
(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
Yep. http://www.campusreform.org/?ID=6097
Not once did I consider our attackers to be bad people. I trust that they werent trying to hurt me. In fact, if they knew me, I bet theyd think I was okay, Oliver Friedfeld blames his misfortune on his privilege and the inequality gap.”
Here's where it gets weird... if - IF - cops weren't babysitting the black community half of them would lose their jobs. Maybe more.
Pull cops out and put them in area where 'people want to live peacefully' they wouldn't have anything to do. This is a symbiotic sickness... Like a dysfunctional couple..
Blacks are right on one thing - there are too many cops in their neighborhoods. (and I'm sick of paying for it with my taxes)... And cops are right when they say they go where the crime is... the black 'community'.
As long as we keep the incentives in place that reward horrible behavior we’ll always get more of them...
That's a very disturbing aspect of these protests. They were protests (around here anyway) that seemed geared toward cultivating a whole new generation of useful suburban idiots who think blacks are victimized in the US.
All due respect, Colin Flaherty, but it is not a sickness, it is a behavior. It is a chosen behavior, not an inborn one. And bad choices frequently have bad results.
Just look at Africa. You are so right.
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