Than how do you explain Charlotte?
Black cop kills armed suspect, city still riots.
Things would change, city officials in Charlotte vowed three years ago, after a white police officer shot and killed a black man seeking help after he was injured in a car accident. There would be new training and community outreach designed to prevent encounters from escalating into police gunfire.
But change has been slow to come to Charlotte and across the nation, since Jonathan Ferrell died in 2013. Last week, a black police officer shot and killed another black man, Keith Lamont Scott, triggering massive, sometimes violent protests. Police officials acknowledged that the officer had recently been trained on ways to de-escalate tense encounters with citizens, but he had not yet received mandatory training aimed at rooting out racial, gender and religious bias.
Protesters who thronged the streets of downtown Charlotte for five straight nights after Scott’s shooting said the lack of progress is palpable. Charlotte police, they say, continue to single out minorities and ignite rather than reduce tensions.
“I am here because nothing has been fixed,” White said. “I am here because nothing has changed since they killed Jonathan Ferrell.”
The DOJ report was garbage. They had an agenda and all they could try and do was throw some crap together. It's no different than Mosley in Baltimore or Nifong in Durham. Mosley should be in jail.Okay, I won't argue with the DoJ. However, the police department has obviously worked on that and now likely knows the procedures on how all people should be treated. I'd expect that to be common knowledge, and protesting certainly won't help.
The police department's racism (unchanging) is what led to the protesting.
The protesting is the only reason the DoJ investigated.
The DoJ investigation is the only reason that a decent handful of people got fired, and that the city council agreed to let the DoJ reform the police department, through enacting bias-awareness training, an accountability system, changing municipal codes, etc.
Literally none of that would have happened without the protests.
From the ESPN article, two University Regents who, at the very least, contradict themselves pretty plainly.
These quotes are far more disgraceful and disrespectful than anything the three players did or said. And they're supposed to be the "educated adults.""They're taking advantage of their pretty privileged circumstances as athletes at the university and the scholarships they have," Daub said. "That's not to take away their free speech or their freedom to think and act, but not when they're in uniform."
Ugh.
http://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/17655037/two-regents-gov-pete-ricketts-criticize-nebraska-cornhuskers-kneeling
And even though I have endured hardships as a kid, and didn't grow up with the world in the palm of my hands, as a conscious being, I am able to recognize that there are people out there who are in a much worse position than I am. I find it very concerning how some of my fellow Americans cannot do the same when it comes to the issues we are talking about today.
...
I can say that with confidence, because even though I have done better, even though I am a college graduate, even though I am blessed and fortunate to play college football at the highest level and at one of the most prestigious schools in college football, even though I am a healthy being and even though I am fully conscious, I have still endured racism.
This^^^The DOJ report was garbage. They had an agenda and all they could try and do was throw some crap together. It's no different than Mosley in Baltimore or Nifong in Durham. Mosley should be in jail.The police department's racism (unchanging) is what led to the protesting.Okay, I won't argue with the DoJ. However, the police department has obviously worked on that and now likely knows the procedures on how all people should be treated. I'd expect that to be common knowledge, and protesting certainly won't help.
The protesting is the only reason the DoJ investigated.
The DoJ investigation is the only reason that a decent handful of people got fired, and that the city council agreed to let the DoJ reform the police department, through enacting bias-awareness training, an accountability system, changing municipal codes, etc.
Literally none of that would have happened without the protests.
The protesting has absolutely nothing to do with the DOJ report. People are still marching to "Hands up don't shoot" which was proven to be a false narrative by Holder and the rest of his law school professors.
Ahhhh, sarcasm. What I mean, is that without protests, the DoJ would have conducted the investigation, the appropriate action would have been taken, and that would have just turned into another bad event in American history. Basically, what I am saying is this: The protesting has gone too far. It is causing racist people to become more racist, protesters to become louder due to the increased racism, and overall chaos.Okay, I won't argue with the DoJ. However, the police department has obviously worked on that and now likely knows the procedures on how all people should be treated. I'd expect that to be common knowledge, and protesting certainly won't help.
The police department's racism (unchanging) is what led to the protesting.
The protesting is the only reason the DoJ investigated.
The DoJ investigation is the only reason that a decent handful of people got fired, and that the city council agreed to let the DoJ reform the police department, through enacting bias-awareness training, an accountability system, changing municipal codes, etc.
Literally none of that would have happened without the protests.
^^^^ This.We don't even know if these people are from Nebraska.
The empty can rattles the loudest.A few idiots say idiotic things, and suddenly the entire fan base (all that red at Ryan Field wasn't from Nebraska) is racist?