There were riots in the CRM, even the article you linked described it as "largely peaceful" in the first half of the 60s. I guess this time around we decided to skip all that nonsense and get straight to the looting and burning.It is just criminals dying, that's for sure. Ignore the part where there were WIDESPREAD urban riots during the CRM too.[DOUBLEPOST=1471370026,1471369850][/DOUBLEPOST]You know, the only reason I don't think BLM has the same chance of changing anything like the CRM did is BLM doesn't have a charismatic leader like MLK that can be martyred.
To be fair, not a God damn thing changed until the riots of the CRM either.There were riots in the CRM, even the article you linked described it as "largely peaceful" in the first half of the 60s. I guess this time around we decided to skip all that nonsense and get straight to the looting and burning.
Any surprise that a Birmingham paper would run that cartoon?
Man, I am impressed by how straight the lines of handwriting are. That's, like, a vanishing art.
So what you are saying is, you support violent protests and riots as a vehicle for political change? I must admit I find that somewhat surprising, given your vocation.To be fair, not a God damn thing changed until the riots of the CRM either.
I didn't say I supported anything.So what you are saying is, you support violent protests and riots as a vehicle for political change? I must admit I find that somewhat surprising, given your vocation.
But surely you see the cognitive dissonance here then.I didn't say I supported anything.
Except the point was specifically used as a rebuttal, which lends the tactic rhetorical legitimacy.[DOUBLEPOST=1471380988,1471380932][/DOUBLEPOST]There's a difference between acknowledging that things DIDN'T change until after the riots, and supporting riots as the preferred vehicle for change. No cognitive dissonance. The Salt March by itself didn't get the British to liberate India, either. Peaceful protests are easy to ignore or pay lip service to. That doesn't mean they aren't worth doing - it means that the other side should listen harder.
Texas is #28. People who don't live here might be surprised, but those of us who do, know that there's no bureaucrat as meddling and entrenched as a Texas bureaucrat.In Brighter news. From the Cato Institute, see how your state ranks in FREEDOM!
Ha. I'm not sure the Cato Institute and I agree on what "freedom" entails.In Brighter news. From the Cato Institute, see how your state ranks in FREEDOM!
The Colorado one is hilarious to me, it kind of baffled me, until I saw it was held aloft by personal freedoms. Then I also remembered the Vaccine compliance rate in Boulder schools. :/ FREEDOM!In Brighter news. From the Cato Institute, see how your state ranks in FREEDOM!
Except the point was specifically used as a rebuttal, which lends the tactic rhetorical legitimacy.[DOUBLEPOST=1471380988,1471380932][/DOUBLEPOST]
Texas is #28. People who don't live here might be surprised, but those of us who do, know that there's no bureaucrat as meddling and entrenched as a Texas bureaucrat.
If you were unemployed and the one thing keeping you from homelessness was government welfare, you'd agree.It's like I've said for years. Most americans have decided they'd rather have security and comfort, because the personal responsibility that comes with freedom is onerous, if not scary. Best to just be a kept pet.
That's by design. Liberal economic policy kills jobs so that liberal welfare policy can swoop in and save you so that you will be grateful and continue to vote for liberal policy and liberal politicians.If you were unemployed and the one thing keeping you from homelessness was government welfare, you'd agree.
Or you know, we could just kinda start moving in the direction of freedom a little bit, just so, for a change, I don't know, for example, we make it legal for Tesla to be able to sell cars without a dealership. (Which is currently illegal even in Texas)You're not truly free until you build your own home on your own land from trees you planted yourself and built your own roads so you can drive the car you built yourself to your own workplace while acting as your own police, fire department, hospital, electrician, garbageman, animal control, and plumber. Otherwise you're just suckling from the teat of Big Society.
You can reorder the list based on your priorities from their research.Ha. I'm not sure the Cato Institute and I agree on what "freedom" entails.
Yeah, I think we are. So, here's to another few decades of uncontested Democrat totalitarianism as the actual conservatives and the turbochristian science-phobics go their separate ways and fight each other as much or more than the one uberparty which will slowly skid the country into balkanization.Interesting... Senator Rob Portman is openly advertising as "standing against his own party" on jobs in Ohio in campaign ads. He's a Republican... which means he's ether a bold face liar like all politicians or the party fracture is hitting the Republicans at it's highest levels. Between this and Ailes jumping into the arms of Trump immediately after getting shitcanned from FoxNews, we may actually be seeing the death of the Republican Party.
*Affordable Care Act (I assume you mean).So did the American Care Act slip through in the middle of the night as well on the 54 times the GOP has unsuccessfully attempted to repeal it?
It's still usually a case of reversing their results. For instance, they rank Ohio high in "Educational Freedom" but that's only because we allow charter schools... schools which have increasingly come under scrutiny over the past few years in Ohio as they've failed to produce results and have manipulated the system (by dissolving, reforming, and reacquiring the same assets and locations) to avoid prosecution. Even ECOT, which I used to attend (it was garbage, I got passing grades in classes I did zero work for) and was once the shining example of functional online charter schools, has come under fire.You can reorder the list based on your priorities from their research.
Don't worry. If there is one thing the Democrats are good at, it's dropping the ball. We're going to eat ourselves alive over identity politics before too long and that's only if we don't become so laissez faire about who we let into the movement. We're already seeing the Left in Canada being devoured by white nationalists/neo-nazis. They only thing keeping the Dems together is their willingness to forge a compromise, even if it's against the interests of the party as a whole.Yeah, I think we are. So, here's to another few decades of uncontested Democrat totalitarianism as the actual conservatives and the turbochristian science-phobics go their separate ways and fight each other as much or more than the one uberparty which will slowly skid the country into balkanization.
Unfortunately, like Gas said, this could be where the Monkey Paw closes a finger, and the 2 party system is replaced with a one party system.I'm just sitting over here waiting for the whole concept of a 2 party system to implode.
*crickets*
Well, it will. But it will be replaced by a 1 party system.I'm just sitting over here waiting for the whole concept of a 2 party system to implode.
*crickets*
FREE COLORADO!Shush guys, I'm trying to make my own mental utopia here, where people aren't shoehorned into believing what other people tell them to believe.
SO MANY HIPPIESFREE COLORADO!
At least you avoided being in the "People's Collective."SO MANY HIPPIES