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- #281
Ok. I partially agree.Ok
.ok. Let me ask you this, and I mean it sincerely with no type of “gotcha” agenda...Is that all you have dumb ass, back to the drawing board.
It's more than what you got! And it's all that is ever needed to shoot big ol' holes in your bullshit ship..because it's the truth.
Black racists like you only care about when a white person does wrong to a black person, but care nothing about how the culture you defend destroys itself daily.
Where are you getting this material? Moron R Us. What culture do I defend exactly? Your assessment is asinine at best.
Do you think blacks in America, black communities, have a problem with violence (gun violence included)?
I think America as a whole has a problem with gun violence or the glorification of guns. If the drug problem was dealt with in many lower income BC it would also go along way in taking care of the gun problem. Drugs is how the FBI destroyed the BPP in the 60s and 70s. Think about it, why is it you can't go into any other neighborhood and buy drugs like you can in lower income BCs? Why is it that you don't see women on the streets in other neighborhoods like you can in lower income BCs? I'll tell you why, because the police are in those communities to contain crime and not stop it or prevent it.
I think we do have an issue with violence being glorified.
But I disagree regarding the cops.
If they go in and clean things up with a heavy presence they get accused of targeting those communities, discrimination, etc.
If they take a hand off approach they get accused of neglecting those communities or just trying to contain the problems to those communities.
It’s a no win situation.
No if they go in and UPHOLD the law and treat the citizens of color with the same respect that they treat white citizens then they would be welcomed in the community, but unfortunately history shows the have NEVER done that.
Upholding the law is the last thing you want police to do in black communities....
" Proposition 47, a referendum passed five years ago that critics say effectively gives shoplifters and addicts the green light to commit crimes as long as the merchandise they steal or the drugs they take are less than $950 in value. The decision to downgrade theft of property valued below the arbitrary figure from felony to misdemeanor, together with selective enforcement that focuses on more “serious” crimes, has resulted in thieves knowing they can brazenly shoplift and merchants knowing the police will not respond to their complaints, say critics. "
California's Prop 47 leads to rise in shoplifting, thefts, criminal activity across state
In a lighted garage on one of San Francisco's busiest streets, a young man in baggy trousers and messy brown hair pulled down his pants. He had been hiding two pairs of stolen jeans with the tags still on them. He handed them to another man waiting nearby, took some money, pulled up his pants...www.foxnews.com
I don't live in California, so I didn't vote on Prop 47, so you are wrong as hell.
"
In 2016, District Attorney Kim Foxx in Illinois outlined policy reforms that included declining to charge shoplifters with a felony unless they stole more than $1,000 worth of goods or had 10 prior felony convictions — a huge leap from the $300 threshold for felony theft convictions in previous years.
Do you have a link for this?
Two years later, Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner said he would handle retail theft cases under $500 as summary offenses, which are similar to traffic violations and often result in fines.
Link.
This year alone, district attorneys in Massachusetts and Missouri included theft policies among their lists of reforms. In Suffolk County, Massachusetts, District Attorney Rachael Rollins said she would decline to prosecute shoplifting and larceny, or theft of another person’s property, under $250. And Wesley Bell in St. Louis said he would issue a court summons, not an arrest warrant, for certain low-level felonies — including theft of items over $750."
Texas prosecutors want to keep low-level criminals out of overcrowded jails. Top Republicans and police aren't happy.
Dallas County District Attorney John Creuzot ignited a firestorm of controversy when he announced he wouldn't prosecute some low-level crimes, including certain theft offenses. But he's among many prosecutors turning their focus away from nonviolent offenses.www.texastribune.org
Well that means whites get off then, since they commit more shop lifting and theft than anyone else.
FBI — Table 43