Tuesday, August 16, 2016

At Commentary, Deep Thinker Jonathan Tobin Sort of, Kind of, Condemns the Black Supremacist Milwaukee Riots, but the Marbles in His Mouth Make It Hard to Tell

 

AP Photo/Jeffrey Phelps
 

Re-posted by Nicholas Stix

The following paragraph is typical of why I never feel like I might be missing reading something important in Commentary.
The debate about police conduct has generated a necessary recognition that African-Americans face discrimination in ways their white compatriots do not experience. But, as statistics have begun to prove, the routine harassment that has been documented [Documented? Where?] doesn’t necessarily back up the Black Lives Matter claims about shootings or deaths.

Garbage. There is no “necessary recognition.” Blacks commit ten times or more as many crimes as whites, which brings greater law enforcement scrutiny down upon them. “Discrimination”? Prove it? Every time someone claims that blacks suffer some form of discrimination, I demand proof. These mooks virtually never come up with any.
 

A False Race Narrative In Milwaukee
Jonathan S. Tobin
Aug. 16, 2016
Commentary

Over the weekend, the latest incident of a police shooting of an African-American male in Milwaukee produced the usual results: accusations of racism against law enforcement and a riot. But as with a number of other previous incidents—most notoriously the one in Ferguson, Missouri that launched the Black Lives Matter movement—the circumstances in Milwaukee seem to point toward a conclusion that contradicts the narrative about the police we’ve been hearing from both the media and the administration in the last two years. [My understanding is that George Soros used George Zimmerman’s refusal to die at the hands of racist, black, would-be murderer Trayvon Martin as the pretext for founding Black Lives Matter.] In this case, the shooting victim had a stolen loaded gun on him as the body camera worn by the officer showed.

But, much like the mob that took to the streets of Milwaukee to riot, the facts of the case didn’t seem to matter much to the mainstream media’s coverage of the violence. As this piece in the New York Times illustrated, that 23-year-old Sylville K. Smith posed a credible threat to the policeman who shot him was a mere detail. It was certainly no bar to a discussion of Milwaukee’s reputation as a deeply segregated city where African-Americans have long alleged that police misconduct was tolerated. [What does the phrase “reputation as a deeply segregated city” mean?] Thus, even though what we know of the incident utterly contradicts negative assumptions about what the police did, the upshot of much of the coverage of Milwaukee seems to treat the violence in that city as understandable if not justified.

But if the facts are irrelevant and violence is to be tolerated for the sake of a demonstrably false Black Lives Matter narrative that insists that police are conducting a campaign of indiscriminate murders of black men, then perhaps it is time to ask who is really responsible for the riots like the one we’ve just witnessed in Milwaukee. Is it a history of prejudice or are individuals or groups whose goal is to attack the police regardless of the truth rather than the redress of justified grievances?

The debate about police conduct has generated a necessary recognition that African-Americans face discrimination in ways their white compatriots do not experience. But, as statistics have begun to prove, the routine harassment that has been documented [Documented? Where?] doesn’t necessarily back up the Black Lives Matter claims about shootings or deaths. That doesn’t justify police misconduct that stops short of murder. Yet we also have to recognize that the predominant narrative about cops conducting a racist murder spree is essentially [why the qualifier?] wrong. And it is that story of willful murder that has driven the discussion about police misconduct more than treatises about historic patterns of discrimination or segregation such as those we are hearing now about Milwaukee, now that it can no longer be reasonably alleged that the shooting that served as the spark for the recent riot was unjustified.

[Why can’t Tobin simply say that the “narrative” is a Big Lie?]

But amid the recriminations about what we are told is Milwaukee’s long and bad record on race relations, it must still be said that it is the police who remain in as least as much danger as their supposed habitual victims. The four cops who were injured in the Milwaukee riot must be added to the rising toll of violence against police that has been growing since Ferguson. It should be recalled that the Black Lives Matter narrative began with the “hands up, don’t shoot” mantra, which proved to be as much of a lie as the initial rumors about the Milwaukee shooting that led to the violence in the streets there.

[O.k.]

As sensible people have long understood one doesn’t have to be a police critic to understand that, like all government officials, cops can abuse the power they have been given. Nor must one be counted among the Black Lives Matter chorus that libels law enforcement officers to agree that this country still has a long way to go when it comes to race and that an essential element to dealing with the problem must start with smarter police work and a crackdown on discriminatory practices.

[“[To] agree that this country still has a long way to go when it comes to race…” That’s garbage that plays into the hands of the racist Left. How is police work dumb, beyond affirmative action hiring and policing?]

Yet even as all Americans of goodwill should acknowledge that truth, they must also come to grips with the incredibly destructive role being played in society by those who are manufacturing lies about cops that are leading to violence and destruction. The Black Lives Matter war on cops that has been validated [The war on cops wasn’t “validated” by Obama, it was founded by him.] by the Obama administration is hurting African-American communities that need police.

Those who have, either wittingly or unwittingly, incited riots or direct violence against police are driving dangerous wedges between law enforcement and minorities that threaten the safety of both groups. The people of Milwaukee do well to consider their history of race problems. [Why? Their “history” is a pack of black Big Lies. Tobin is only doing additional damage, by supporting black supremacists.] But it is the Black Lives Matter race baiters and their enablers in the media and the government who have exploited the situation that bear a heavy burden of responsibility for the unnecessary and entirely counter-productive violence they have helped foment.

6 comments:

  1. The neocon method in action. Tobin starts forward, stops, restates, starts again, backtracks, equivocates, but lacks the courage to take the facts to the conclusion shown by objective evidence.

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  2. jerry pdx
    One of the favorite arguments of blacks is to say they are harassed by cops every time they get behind the wheel of their cars. It happens "all the time". OK, well I get stopped by cops to and I'm white. I get stopped about once a year or so. When I say that to blacks they immediately say: But I get stopped every week, I just got stopped yesterday, I got stopped last week and twice the week before, man them cops just can't leave me alone.
    They'll all say something like that, what are you going to say to their anecdotal stories? Doesn't matter, whatever you tell them about being stopped by cops they'll have to top you. Guaranteed.

    Then let's bring up this whole BLM notion that cops are constantly drawing their guns and shooting unarmed black men while it almost never happens to whitey. It's actually not true. According to statistics we average 1200 police shootings that result in death per year, 300 of those shootings are blacks, the rest are whites or other races. That means that 25% of police shootings are blacks getting shot, since blacks are 13% of US Pop. they do have a 12% greater chance of getting shot by cop than whites do. OK, those numbers do seem to back up that you are more likely to be shot by cops if you're black but it's not exactly the genocide BLM rhetoric makes it sound and not as heavily skewed as they'd like us to believe.

    What's wrong with this picture? First off, it seems that most shootings involve some sort of traffic interaction so I'm going to base these estimates on that, we can assume a certain percentage might not involve a traffic stop but I think the percentages of shootings remains the same even if we eliminate the ones that aren't. If blacks are really getting stopped by cops so much more than whitey, I'm going to say at last 10 times as much, at minimum, if what they say is to be believed that is. That means that while they have 12% greater chance of being shot by cop they are being stopped and interacting with cops 10 times as much as the typical white. That means that cops are (roughly) 8 TIME LESS LIKELY to pull the trigger when dealing with blacks at traffic stops than with whites. That suggest that cops are being much more restrained dealing with blacks than whites. Even if we reduced that number by half, accounting for shootings that aren't traffic related, cops would still be 4 times less likely to pull the trigger if you're black.

    I actually made this point with a racist black I was arguing with, he insisted that cops were harassing him every time he got behind the wheel. His only response was to start calling me racist names. Typical.

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  3. [My understanding is that George Soros used George Zimmerman’s refusal to die at the hands of racist, black, would-be murderer Trayvon Martin as the pretext for founding Black Lives Matter.]


    My understanding is the same that of Nicholas. This Black Lies Matter all started with Treyvons and his attempt to beat a man to death for "looking at him".

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  4. "25% of police shootings are blacks getting shot, since blacks are 13% of US Pop. they do have a 12% greater chance of getting shot by cop than whites do."

    Don't try to use statistics around negroes and throw numbers like this at them. That is whitey man juju.

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  5. Not only do blacks get in a lot of trouble with cops but their response to the cop is often violent in the extreme and so unpredictable. They bring the bad on themselves.

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  6. [“[To] agree that this country still has a long way to go when it comes to race…”


    We do have a long way to go. When blacks stop raping whitey women and attacking the whitey elderly we will then know we have made progress. Until then?

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