Yet the very definition is about men and women having equal rights. Can't just fight for one side. Oh wait they don't anyway. Some individuals might, but the ones actually doing anything are indeed bat crazy feminazi's that the left is always protecting.
[quote="Kops"]As for All Lives Matter.
[quote]"If there's a subdivision and a house is on fire...the fire department wouldn't show up and put water on all the houses because all houses matter, they would show up and turn on their water on the house that was burning because that's the house that needs help the most."[/quote][/quote]
That makes little sense to compare, because the actual scenario would have all the houses on fire not just one. It's like saying only black people are seeing racial issues.
[quote="Kops"]Matter of fact is, racism is far from over. It's not just an American phenomenon either, seeing the rise of far-right neo-nazi parties in Europe in response to the refugee crisis.
[/quote]
Well your first source has an issue with correlation and causation. There is disparity in the places which are cited, but in no way does that prove racism. All it proves is that black people are more likely to be criminals or get in trouble. This is caused by 67% of blacks growing up in single parent homes and 72% being born out of wedlock. The families of blacks are deteriorating quickly, and that will play a huge role in what is going on today. Institutionalized racism is nonsense. The second source is solely based on call back rates and not hiring rates, and still isn't a large enough scale to suggest that it exists nationwide. As for the third source it's clear he has no idea what he is talking about since he contradicts his whole argument in the very beginning of his article. "I expected that police prejudice would be a major factor in accounting for the killings of African-Americans. But when I looked at the numbers, that’s not exactly what I found."
[quote="Kops"]Honestly though, even if you take race out of the equation you've still gotta admit there's an issue of excessive force amongst US policemen compared to other countries indicating a problem.
As for the interview I'll have a look at it later, however it's not surprising that there's differing views in the black community because groups aren't hiveminds.[/quote]
Is there an issue with excessive force? Based on those statistics you have a case.
lelizwes quote: show
Nonsense as I have already proven in the first post the Co-founder of the movement is inciting violence against whites and shows extreme racism. If the movements leadership is racist the movement in general is racist. That doesn't imply that individuals are racist, but the movement is tied to it's leadership which is racist.
[quote="Simbaholic"]This is one of the worst thought out topics I've read for a long time.
The first post is incredibly biased against BLM whilst providing absolutely nothing to compare it against. Reading that alone of course it's going to sound like some evil 'black supremacy' movement. Reads more like an ignorant one sided opinion piece than an actual discussion topic here.[/quote] So submit an argument? Or is that too difficult? And #factsareracist #factsareignorant. However I'll admit I suppose I should have just submitted the question and later posted the facts.