Tiny, has the world really changed in the deep south? A black Fedex driver in Mississippi got shot at by two white guys while on the job. Have you ever heard of a white Fedex driver being shot at by anyone while on the job.The bastards at MSNBC and Newsmax and most main stream media in between mislead and stoke moral outrage to sell more commercials. Don't believe everything they say.
Not much has changed in the deep south regarding general attitude towards black people. This is 2023. The Civil War ended in 1865. Two recent examples of overt racism are the white boaters attacking the black dock worker and the incident with the black Fedex driver being shot at for no reason by two white guys.
The only thing that's different is if you can run the football like Hershal Walker or Bo Jackson you can get a scholarship to play football in the South Eastern conference. When Joe Namath was the QB at the Univ of Alabama in the early 1960's that was not the case. Originally Posted by adav8s28
Those two examples aren't good Adav8s28. They're anecdotal for one thing. Yes, Ahmaud Arbery and the Fedex driver make the headlines, and they're travesties. However, in any give year, over twice as many whites are killed by blacks, as blacks are killed by whites:
https://ucr.fbi.gov/crime-in-the-u.s...ta-table-6.xls
https://ucr.fbi.gov/crime-in-the-u.s...ta-table-6.xls
https://ucr.fbi.gov/crime-in-the-u.s...ta-table-6.xls
As to Montgomery, Alabama, I thought the same as you do. However, Winn Dixie, videos, and accounts of the incident changed my mind. I believe the local prosecutor was correct in not charging anyone with a hate crime or a felony. However, when you look at all the evidence, the case for racially motivated assault is stronger for black on white than white on black. This is based on the following,
1. The white pontoon boaters were drunk assholes, who refused to move their boat, despite requests from the white captain of the Riverboat and others.
2. They attacked both the heavy set black co-captain and the young white dockworker who accompanied him. The cameras didn't clearly show the assault on the dockworker, who disappears to the right of the camera, but he was injured severely enough to go to the hospital.
3. The white pontoon boaters didn't really attack the black bystander from Michigan who intervened.
4. In the aftermath of the initial assault, blacks attacked a couple of whites who weren't involved in the original altercation, in addition to the guilty parties.
There's a lot more in Winn Dixie's thread in case you missed all that.
As to the rest of your post, I replied to D'Ninja in another thread earlier today, but had your thoughts in mind when I wrote the second part of it. So I'll repeat it here:
The situation is indeed more complicated. Why do cities in states like Louisiana, Alabama and Arkansas, run coincidentally or not by Democrats, dominant the list of the most violent places in America, in your link in your OP?
Look at the larger picture. The countries with the highest homicide rates in the world are in the Caribbean and certain Latin American countries. As you say, it's not a function of melanin though. Most countries in Africa have much lower homicide rates, with certain exceptions like South Africa. As do South American countries that had small indigenous populations.
What places with high homicide rates have in common is a history of exploitation and oppression. The Spaniards exploited the natives in the New World. They were little more than slaves. And the slave owners and slave traders did the same in the Caribbean and the American South. It was a brutal life for the oppressed.
The end of slavery in America was followed by 100 years of further oppression, with Jim Crow laws and the like.
And who was responsible for this? Who enabled it? Well, the Democratic Party. A Republican government ended slavery with the Civil War, and Republicans overwhelmingly voted for the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Now, in 2023, the racists in the Democratic Party are mostly dead and gone. My friend Adav8s28 argues they just joined the Republican Party, but he's wrong IMO. I think the problem now is what we have left over from history, not racism and exploitation in today's America like what we had in the past.
So how do we move forward? What's the long term solution? Well, McCain had a good point, look at poverty. Two things that would help,
1. Better schools that prepare people for the real world. Give kids the ability to become plumbers, mechanics, doctors and lawyers instead of gang members.
2. More help to poor kids and poor single mothers.
The Democrats could do more to promote "1", and the Republicans could to more to help with "2".
It would also be great if most poor kids had both parent involved in their lives when they were growing up. That would help them economically and developmentally. But how to accomplish that is way beyond my paygrade.
One other comment, about another topic you brought up, incarceration rates. DucButter linked to a video of a speaker who formerly was a Progressive who worked for George Soros. I'll link to it below. Anyway, the guy now calls himself a liberal instead, and he shares our view that incarceration rates are too high. However he believes progressives missed the boat, when they just started turning people out onto the street. His solutions are more emphasis on helping prisoners and others with mental health, and drug rehabilitation. And also instead of locking people up, using probation and the like more frequently. All good ideas IMHO. Originally Posted by Tiny