MarcATL
New member
Exactly, so you see the ignorance of your question.No, he is not bound by gravity or any other physical properties.
Exactly, so you see the ignorance of your question.No, he is not bound by gravity or any other physical properties.
You didn't address my question though.I believe the people they were trying to protect would have been and still will be best served by lobbying to change what is unjust within the system. Using economic boycotts has been successful.
Direct, aggressive confrontation gets people killed.
I do believe that some things are worth dying for but if less drastic means can be employed I believe they should.
We all can find reasons to feel abused. Where does that get us?
Most of the wonderful positive effects of Dr. Martin Luther King's non-violent movement has been undone, or so it seems to me.
Hatred destroys. By its very nature it cannot create.
I believe that MalcolmX came to see that there was a better way to achieve the goals of equality under the Law.
I have hope that more leaders will stop to see that violence will not bring us closer together.
Exactly, so you see the ignorance of your question.
No it wasn't. What is your source for that bogus information?
BTW, even if it were, it would have to be proven in a Court of law for it to be remotely illegal.
Where is there a suggestion of mankind's current understanding of time in any of the previous statements?I see no ignorance in it...
I do not believe that time has always been the constant that science tells us. Our ability to observe such a small slice of time and extrapolate it over supposed billions of years is nothing less than asinine and violates all measurement standards.
You are off the reservation.Round them up, arrest them, then put them to trial.
I would do the same for each and every other para-military group.. and it doesn't matter what color they are.
Another clear example of white privilege.Just funny how times change. Openly carrying was perfectly legal, and the Panthers weren't breaking the law. Yet they terrified the cookie cutter suburbs and led to anti-gun legislation.
Flash forward and you've got these Tea Party boobs walking around with carbines, playing dumb when people react to their macho posturing with fear.
Cute trick.
Uh, yeah. And keep in mind: The Panthers weren't breaking the law by open carrying.
The Oath Keepers walk the streets in camos bearing rifles. What else would you call that? And how do you think cops would react if a bunch of black guys in camos with guns showed up?
White Open-Carry vs. Black Open-Carry | |
Another clear example of white privilege.
Thank you for that.Just to further demonstrate this point:
White Open-Carry vs. Black Open-Carry
No crime committed, no suspected crime being committed, he's literally walking-while-black-while-openly-carrying.
Sums up the continued and enforced racial divide in this country, that too many people with personal ties to police officers refuse to acknowledge.
I love that after laying down in the street at gunpoint, he starts quoting statute at the officer holding him at gunpoint.
This is no longer the world of "take the officer's word for it," that too many people treat as the good ol' days.
Yep, absolutely. "Black guy legally carrying gun" has been a nightmare for some folks since Reconstruction.
Just funny how times change. Openly carrying was perfectly legal, and the Panthers weren't breaking the law. Yet they terrified the cookie cutter suburbs and led to anti-gun legislation.
Flash forward and you've got these Tea Party boobs walking around with carbines, playing dumb when people react to their macho posturing with fear.
Cute trick.
I don't understand, are you saying it was OK when the panthers did it but it's not OK now?
Did you mean the Open Carriers?
And neither are the Open Carriers.Uh, yeah. And keep in mind: The Panthers weren't breaking the law by open carrying.
As did the panthers.The Oath Keepers walk the streets in camos bearing rifles.
Open carry with a side of poor fashion sense? :idunno:What else would you call that?
The same as they would if white guys with guns and camo showed up?And how do you think cops would react if a bunch of black guys in camos with guns showed up?
You didn't address my question though.
Were the Black Panthers fermenting ill will?
Another question, were they doing anything illegal by walking around armed?
The same as they would if white guys with guns and camo showed up?
You mean Open Carry types.I'm saying it was considered unacceptable for the Panthers to do it but seems perfectly orthodox or "patriotic" for the Tea Party types to pull the same stunt.
What if they were both bloviating about the same thing?Put it this way: I consider the grievances of the Panthers to be slightly more tangible--and rooted in reality--than whatever it is the Tea Party's bloviating about.
OKIt's also worth pointing out the Panthers, big a bogeyman as the right made them out to be, never came close to achieving their goals, and posed much more of a PR menace than anything in actual reality.
And then there's the Oath KeepersCorrect. I guess I'm using open carry/Tea Party/ a little too interchangeably.
Then you're incredibly naive.
"Considered Unacceptable" by whom?
Some people didn't like the Panthers and Some don't like the Open Carriers, and some did like the Panthers and some do like the Open Carriers.
What if they were both bloviating about the same thing?
And then there's the Oath Keepers
I believe private businesses can ban fire arms.Anyone who doesn't expect to run into someone toting an AR while diaper shopping, I guess.
OKMy original point, lost in all this, was that white, conservative America reacted in hysterics to the Panthers, while largely supporting the recent open carriers. That strikes me as a bit hypocritical.
I think they might be, they're both sticking it to the man by displaying their arms.Ummmmmmm...not likely.
More gun sales, perhaps you're in the wrong business?Right, I already mentioned the handful doing nothing to help matters in Ferguson. Can't see a happy ending to that adventure.