We are speaking about Charlotte, NC, not Italy.
Okay I think you're being deliberately obtuse here if this is why you think my example wasn't relevant.
We are speaking about Charlotte, NC, not Italy.
I don't own the sheriff, although I did vote for him. Police probably do deal with language all the time, it's part of the human experience. I don't know what your personal history has been like but making assumptions about my experience based on your own experience is patently wrong.Cops of all colours are all but actively ordered to make racist assumptions every day. Something as seemingly innocuous as "we need to deal with the thugs in this town" is very implicitly racist, and the police deal with this kind of language all the time. It's practically impossible to avoid this as a police officer, even if you're the proud owner of one of these:
Violence spreads
Adama Traoré: French anti-racism protests defy police ban
Echoing US protests, people call for justice for Adama Traoré, who died in 2016 in police custody.www.bbc.com
Also, why am I watching Trump at rallies during a pandemic? Talking about the good old days when police brutality was widely accepted.
You made a smart-assed remark about me owning one. Just wanted to clarify I don't own anyone....What...?
No. The Traoré case is old but now resurfacing in today's (Tuesday) protests.
Jacob, you seem a smart individual and I really like you. But if you're looking for racial hatred toward you from me, it's not going to happen, no matter how many N-Word Passes I see.
It's wierd to say people don't form opinions on the basis of experiences.It may be your trove of academia overlapping with real life. In real life men, even cops, can hear and read all kinds of things without it affecting them personally.
if you're looking for racial hatred toward you from me, it's not going to happen, no matter how many N-Word Passes I see.
Jacob seems to believe that this statement closes the case. That people, including police officers, cannot act contrary to this statement. I believe they do not necessarily need to make racist assumptions based on what they read or hear. to make choices in their every day life.Cops of all colours are all but actively ordered to make racist assumptions every day. Something as seemingly innocuous as "we need to deal with the thugs in this town" is very implicitly racist, and the police deal with this kind of language all the time. It's practically impossible to avoid this as a police officer, even if you're the proud owner of one of these: