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George Floyd/Black Lives Matter Protests


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I wonder how many of the anti protest squad are the same types that like to say things like "The French really know how to protest, we are all shitebags in this country".

Can tmake an omelette without breaking a few eggs. Big, bronze racist eggs.

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5 minutes ago, BukyOHare said:

I'm all for people protesting peacefully, no issue whatsoever to bring about changes in attitude to racism, climate change or anything else.

What cannot be condoned is the mob rule of vandalism, attacking the police with bikes or anything else which comes to hand or the toppling of statues and rolling them into the sea. I totally agree the statues have had their day but Its not up to mobs to take the law into their own hands. If this behaviour continues then where do we ultimately draw the line until somebody says enough is enough?

The death of George Floyd has crossed the Atlantic and gone from peaceful protests about changes in attitudes for the better to a much darker and sinister place on a more consistent basis, that cannot be good. Any law abiding citizen has to see that surely? 

Every single person will accept that there have been examples from history when breaking the law was justified.  This is just a subjective viewpoint dressed up as an objective one.

"I'm all for Mr Schindler's right to argue that we shouldn't kill all the Jews. But surely the correct action is to petition his local member of the Reichstag, not just take the law into his own hands? Any law abiding citizen has to see that."

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2 minutes ago, Gordon EF said:

Every single person will accept that there have been examples from history when breaking the law was justified.  This is just a subjective viewpoint dressed up as an objective one.

"I'm all for Mr Schindler's right to argue that we shouldn't kill all the Jews. But surely the correct action is to petition his local member of the Reichstag, not just take the law into his own hands? Any law abiding citizen has to see that."

Damned suffragettes, screwing up my each way nap! :angry:

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36 minutes ago, Dee Man said:

I have no idea myself and was genuinely interested as that seems absolutely shite and wholly unfair having to shell out thousands of pounds in the hope that your child is subjected to less racism than a public school. I'm not sure that going to a school where the families are generally better off than students at mainstream schools means the pupils are going to be more tolerant people with higher values. 

Anecdotally, kids today in general are far less tolerant of all forms of discrimination and bigotry IMO. 

This proves absolutely nothing but this is the first article that came up on ny Google search. 

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.independent.co.uk/voices/private-school-racism-black-students-state-exclusions-a9286021.html%3famp

 

I suppose one argument is that if you're paying money you have greater ability to demand certain things from the school.  

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1 hour ago, Theroadlesstravelled said:

Is desecrating graves of racists allowed on the high ground?

DCBE8571-CC81-4A37-B364-F1F65F3E89B2.thumb.png.0433ed3f7c82aef48c7d5ad44100bf0a.png

 

You come at the king, you best not miss.

downloadfile-1.thumb.png.5e1d35c3a9778aa9962195aa5f3aefd3.png

 

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3 minutes ago, AsimButtHitsASix said:

It means that, as far as I can see it, there have been peaceful protests and appeals to authority for the ruling classes to have a greater understanding (in this instance) of the societal racism that plagues the lives of black people in the world. Not that there aren't institutionalised racist attitudes in place against Asians, Indigenous Peoples and all the way down to Scottish people or Sicilians to differing degrees in different areas. In general, however, we have objective evidence that points to black people being on the shitty end of the stick more than other races and peoples throughout the world.

For five hundred years, half a millennium, the societies and laws that we govern ourselves on have directly attributed to the detriment of black people and it's only in our lifetimes that the final few of these laws have been eradicated. Of those laws how many were abolished with just peaceful protest? Did slavery in the US end with a handshake or civil war? Were Jim Crow laws repealed with pleasant gospel singing or mass protest?

Even if you want to bring it closer to home the Brixton Riots kicked off after years of abuse at the hands of police and it ended with the Scarman report that pointed to institutionalised racism in the Met. Protests and riots do not happen in a vacuum. They are what happens when people have ran out of other options from the Storming of the Bastille to a statue getting slung in the Avon. People have been pointing out these injustices for years and their voices are not heard or dismissed out of hand.

Gary Younge, Darcus Howe, Benjamin Zephaniah and Raymond Antrobus (and hundreds more) been writing books and articles, appearing on telly, petitioning parliament, performing across the country and consistently been models of the decorum and lawfulness that you speak of and have been asking that the UK government takes a look at its imperial past, looks to decolonise the laws and the make up of the country and full embrace and endorse the lives of its black population. None of this information has been heeded. When they have asked, as, for instance, Graham Campbell, to look at ways to educate people about the basis of where these statues and street names come from. How they could be used as a weapon to teach us. What additions could be made so as to not remind and ridicule black people about their status in the country and how their lived condition is incongruent with their legal one.

All of that was ignored and has been for decades if not centuries. Toppling one statue of one c**t has done more for their cause than their combined output. The folk throwing ropes around metal racists and dragging from their plinths may be standing on the shoulders of the giants who came before them and educated them for the need to take action but they're still the ones taking action and should be applauded.

If yer more worried about law abiding citizens than what is right then you're one of the fannies Martin Luther King wrote about from a Birmingham Prison.

I just thought calling you a shitehawk was a little less TL;DR

Why did we not witness the recent scenes from down South before George Floyd's death or pre covid lockdown? 

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3 minutes ago, BukyOHare said:

Why did we not witness the recent scenes from down South before George Floyd's death or pre covid lockdown? 

George Floyd's death was clearly the straw that broke the camel's back to some extent. But reasons behind these protests have obviously been building for some time.

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4 minutes ago, BukyOHare said:

Why did we not witness the recent scenes from down South before George Floyd's death or pre covid lockdown? 

Nothing like live video of a lynching to concentrate the mind.

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It means that, as far as I can see it, there have been peaceful protests and appeals to authority for the ruling classes to have a greater understanding (in this instance) of the societal racism that plagues the lives of black people in the world. Not that there aren't institutionalised racist attitudes in place against Asians, Indigenous Peoples and all the way down to Scottish people or Sicilians to differing degrees in different areas. In general, however, we have objective evidence that points to black people being on the shitty end of the stick more than other races and peoples throughout the world.

For five hundred years, half a millennium, the societies and laws that we govern ourselves on have directly attributed to the detriment of black people and it's only in our lifetimes that the final few of these laws have been eradicated. Of those laws how many were abolished with just peaceful protest? Did slavery in the US end with a handshake or civil war? Were Jim Crow laws repealed with pleasant gospel singing or mass protest?

Even if you want to bring it closer to home the Brixton Riots kicked off after years of abuse at the hands of police and it ended with the Scarman report that pointed to institutionalised racism in the Met. Protests and riots do not happen in a vacuum. They are what happens when people have ran out of other options from the Storming of the Bastille to a statue getting slung in the Avon. People have been pointing out these injustices for years and their voices are not heard or dismissed out of hand.

Gary Younge, Darcus Howe, Benjamin Zephaniah and Raymond Antrobus (and hundreds more) been writing books and articles, appearing on telly, petitioning parliament, performing across the country and consistently been models of the decorum and lawfulness that you speak of and have been asking that the UK government takes a look at its imperial past, looks to decolonise the laws and the make up of the country and full embrace and endorse the lives of its black population. None of this information has been heeded. When they have asked, as, for instance, Graham Campbell has, to look at ways to educate people about the basis of where these statues and street names come from. How they could be used as a weapon to teach us. What additions could be made so as to not remind and ridicule black people about their status in the country and how their lived condition is incongruent with their legal one. What changes have we made to accommodate these appeals? f**k all.

All of that was ignored and has been for decades if not centuries. Toppling one statue of one c**t has done more for their cause than their combined output. The folk throwing ropes around metal racists and dragging from their plinths may be standing on the shoulders of the giants who came before them and educated them for the need to take action but they're still the ones taking action and should be applauded.

If yer more worried about law abiding citizens than what is right then you're one of the fannies Martin Luther King wrote about from a Birmingham Prison.

I just thought calling you a shitehawk was a little less TL;DR
That's a fucking telt!
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2 hours ago, tongue_tied_danny said:

Here's some "football lads" protecting the Lady Godiva statue in Coventry. 

qHznAP6h.thumb.jpg.fc9628709e4d6f167c89a19dc3d20340.jpg

I'm not sure what she had to do with the slave trade but I'm sure these fellahs mean well.

Folk should 'tip off' these absolute goons that protesters will be targeting statues of cartoon characters and the like.

Seeing a bunch of scumbag morons acting like they're hard (and, worse, thinking that that's actually important) hanging flags on Frank Sidebottom and chanting pish would be amusing and would keep them away from causing any real trouble.

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6 minutes ago, DA Baracus said:

Folk should 'tip off' these absolute goons that protesters will be targeting statues of cartoon characters and the like.

Seeing a bunch of scumbag morons acting like they're hard (and, worse, thinking that that's actually important) hanging flags on Frank Sidebottom and chanting pish would be amusing and would keep them away from causing any real trouble.

They will also have a right to have their views heard as well. Peacefully of course. 😉

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1 hour ago, Dee Man said:

Pauline Hanson is of course the woman who declared that there were too many immigrants in Australia...so declared she was moving to London!

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Must have been difficult for those human traffickers when the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833 came into law. All those philanthropic acts must have cost a bob or two. Then the upkeep of all those stately homes full of nice stuff to distance themselves from the slavery connections as they took themselves into polite society.

Just as well the UK government agreed to pay £20 million (about 1.5 billion in today's money) compensation to slave owning families in the Caribbean, Africa and absentee slave owners in UK, then. Compensation ffs.

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46 minutes ago, The Skelpit Lug said:

Must have been difficult for those human traffickers when the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833 came into law. All those philanthropic acts must have cost a bob or two. Then the upkeep of all those stately homes full of nice stuff to distance themselves from the slavery connections as they took themselves into polite society.

Just as well the UK government agreed to pay £20 million (about 1.5 billion in today's money) compensation to slave owning families in the Caribbean, Africa and absentee slave owners in UK, then. Compensation ffs.

The slaves became 'apprentices' and had to work without pay for years then the planters set up a harsh penal system to provide them with loads of free prison labour. 

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