See something, say something... unless...
Comments
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Instead of people being afraid to say something, my worry is how much is missed because people are distracting by their cell phones pretty much 95% of their day.0
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WaitPJPOWER said:Instead of people being afraid to say something, my worry is how much is smissed because people are distracting by their cell phones pretty much 95% of their day.
What?
Sorry I was liking a really cute cat video on facebook0 -
Exactly, lolBentleyspop said:
WaitPJPOWER said:Instead of people being afraid to say something, my worry is how much is smissed because people are distracting by their cell phones pretty much 95% of their day.
What?
Sorry I was liking a really cute cat video on facebook0 -
I would not have called the police for it but the BBQ incident they were doing something they weren't supposed to be doing. I have no problem with saying something if i see something. better to be safe than sorry...unless...
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yes, but would she have called the cops if it was a bunch of cardigan-wearing blonde people? who knows.pjhawks said:I would not have called the police for it but the BBQ incident they were doing something they weren't supposed to be doing. I have no problem with saying something if i see something. better to be safe than sorry...unless...Your boos mean nothing to me, for I have seen what makes you cheer0 -
obviously we will never know that but might be a good idea to be careful before labeling someone racist these days. not everyone who calls the police on black people are being racist. i think that is where the tone is moving to these days. we have to be careful not to go to far in either direction...calling too much or calling not at all.HughFreakingDillon said:
yes, but would she have called the cops if it was a bunch of cardigan-wearing blonde people? who knows.pjhawks said:I would not have called the police for it but the BBQ incident they were doing something they weren't supposed to be doing. I have no problem with saying something if i see something. better to be safe than sorry...unless...0 -
I agree with you...hence the "who knows".pjhawks said:
obviously we will never know that but might be a good idea to be careful before labeling someone racist these days. not everyone who calls the police on black people are being racist. i think that is where the tone is moving to these days. we have to be careful not to go to far in either direction...calling too much or calling not at all.HughFreakingDillon said:
yes, but would she have called the cops if it was a bunch of cardigan-wearing blonde people? who knows.pjhawks said:I would not have called the police for it but the BBQ incident they were doing something they weren't supposed to be doing. I have no problem with saying something if i see something. better to be safe than sorry...unless...Your boos mean nothing to me, for I have seen what makes you cheer0 -
The Yale story as well. White student calls the cops on a black woman who fell asleep in the common area of the dorm (in which she's a resident). Apparently this is the white student's second time calling the police on someone for, I don't know, "being while black."
https://www.cnn.com/2018/05/09/us/yale-student-napping-black-trnd/index.html
There are a lot of stories out there. It's either a trend or it's simply being covered more, but it's common for white people to get nervous and call the cops when black people are around.
And in this case, the cops spent a lot of time with her making sure she actually lived there. Her using the key to open the door did not convince them.
This is a reality being black in white-dominated places. Someone may call the cops. And if they do, the cops may take up a lot of your time (or worse).1995 Milwaukee 1998 Alpine, Alpine 2003 Albany, Boston, Boston, Boston 2004 Boston, Boston 2006 Hartford, St. Paul (Petty), St. Paul (Petty) 2011 Alpine, Alpine
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2024 Napa, Wrigley, Wrigley0 -
Hell, even if she isn't racist, she deserves to be publicly shamed just for calling the cops about anyone using charcoal instead of propane. That's ridiculous, and at the very least I hope people learn that you don't go calling the cops for stupid shit like that. Not unless you maybe live in Mayberry or something, where the cops literally have nothing better to do.pjhawks said:
obviously we will never know that but might be a good idea to be careful before labeling someone racist these days. not everyone who calls the police on black people are being racist. i think that is where the tone is moving to these days. we have to be careful not to go to far in either direction...calling too much or calling not at all.HughFreakingDillon said:
yes, but would she have called the cops if it was a bunch of cardigan-wearing blonde people? who knows.pjhawks said:I would not have called the police for it but the BBQ incident they were doing something they weren't supposed to be doing. I have no problem with saying something if i see something. better to be safe than sorry...unless...
With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata0 -
Somethings become suspicious after the fact. If I was working in my garage through the night repetitively, my neighbors would say it’s annoying, not suspicious. It’s natural to change meaning to something in hindsight so we don’t look like a dipstick.0
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but if I saw a husband and wife doing it together and getting deliveries at that time of night, darn tootin' I'd be wondering WTF is going on, regardless of skin colour.Go Beavers said:Somethings become suspicious after the fact. If I was working in my garage through the night repetitively, my neighbors would say it’s annoying, not suspicious. It’s natural to change meaning to something in hindsight so we don’t look like a dipstick.Your boos mean nothing to me, for I have seen what makes you cheer0 -
They may not be racist or openly biased in their views, but their unconscious bias is interfering with their decision making. It comes down to the totality of circumstances, which isn't being applied in these situations.pjhawks said:
obviously we will never know that but might be a good idea to be careful before labeling someone racist these days. not everyone who calls the police on black people are being racist. i think that is where the tone is moving to these days. we have to be careful not to go to far in either direction...calling too much or calling not at all.HughFreakingDillon said:
yes, but would she have called the cops if it was a bunch of cardigan-wearing blonde people? who knows.pjhawks said:I would not have called the police for it but the BBQ incident they were doing something they weren't supposed to be doing. I have no problem with saying something if i see something. better to be safe than sorry...unless...
It's a hopeless situation...0 -
Yes... and that is where common sense comes in, right? People need to develop the wisdom to understand what is actually suspicious behaviour vs. a non-white person doing something normal.HughFreakingDillon said:
but if I saw a husband and wife doing it together and getting deliveries at that time of night, darn tootin' I'd be wondering WTF is going on, regardless of skin colour.Go Beavers said:Somethings become suspicious after the fact. If I was working in my garage through the night repetitively, my neighbors would say it’s annoying, not suspicious. It’s natural to change meaning to something in hindsight so we don’t look like a dipstick.
Post edited by PJ_Soul onWith all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata0 -
we unfortunately are being programmed to live in a culture of fear, so it's very difficult to think objectively and critically when you think your (or others') lives might be in imminent danger.PJ_Soul said:
Yes... and that is where common sense comes in, right? People need to develop the wisdom to understand what is actually suspicious behaviour vs. a non-white person doing something normal.HughFreakingDillon said:
but if I saw a husband and wife doing it together and getting deliveries at that time of night, darn tootin' I'd be wondering WTF is going on, regardless of skin colour.Go Beavers said:Somethings become suspicious after the fact. If I was working in my garage through the night repetitively, my neighbors would say it’s annoying, not suspicious. It’s natural to change meaning to something in hindsight so we don’t look like a dipstick.
fear + personal biases = social chaosYour boos mean nothing to me, for I have seen what makes you cheer0 -
Right, but that would require a pattern to be developed. You may think it's a little weird the first night, but the continued activity is what would make it suspicious, especially if it was a change from the known behavior they had already established and you'd come to expect.HughFreakingDillon said:
but if I saw a husband and wife doing it together and getting deliveries at that time of night, darn tootin' I'd be wondering WTF is going on, regardless of skin colour.Go Beavers said:Somethings become suspicious after the fact. If I was working in my garage through the night repetitively, my neighbors would say it’s annoying, not suspicious. It’s natural to change meaning to something in hindsight so we don’t look like a dipstick.
That just makes me wonder what about these situations is making someone call the police on a first time instance? Is it a preconceived idea based on other incidents they've encountered or related to how that person looks. We've each got a threshold that tips us to call based on our life experiences, implicit fear, bias, etc. Someone who has been the victim of a robbery at night while on a walk may tend to be more over cautious about calling in or reporting people that remind them of their own incident, while I might not even think twice about it.It's a hopeless situation...0 -
In the very tony town next to mine, people call the cops when they see a black person just walking down the sidewalk. I see it in the town's police blotter all the time. It doesn't make national headlines, but perhaps it should.
I took one of my black friends who was visiting me to a bar there -- at the time, my town didn't have a single bar other than the bar at Uno's -- and they looked at him like he was the grim reaper.
Post edited by dankind onI SAW PEARL JAM0 -
And sometimes people will talk themselves into not responding, and then after the fact make up a reason for their passivity. What sounds better to the press, saying you just don’t get involved in other people’s business, or I didn’t want to be called a racist? I guess I’m saying I don’t always accept someone’s reason for not getting involved.HughFreakingDillon said:
but if I saw a husband and wife doing it together and getting deliveries at that time of night, darn tootin' I'd be wondering WTF is going on, regardless of skin colour.Go Beavers said:Somethings become suspicious after the fact. If I was working in my garage through the night repetitively, my neighbors would say it’s annoying, not suspicious. It’s natural to change meaning to something in hindsight so we don’t look like a dipstick.
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well of course I wouldn't think anything of it the first night, or maybe even a few nights.tbergs said:
Right, but that would require a pattern to be developed. You may think it's a little weird the first night, but the continued activity is what would make it suspicious, especially if it was a change from the known behavior they had already established and you'd come to expect.HughFreakingDillon said:
but if I saw a husband and wife doing it together and getting deliveries at that time of night, darn tootin' I'd be wondering WTF is going on, regardless of skin colour.Go Beavers said:Somethings become suspicious after the fact. If I was working in my garage through the night repetitively, my neighbors would say it’s annoying, not suspicious. It’s natural to change meaning to something in hindsight so we don’t look like a dipstick.
That just makes me wonder what about these situations is making someone call the police on a first time instance? Is it a preconceived idea based on other incidents they've encountered or related to how that person looks. We've each got a threshold that tips us to call based on our life experiences, implicit fear, bias, etc. Someone who has been the victim of a robbery at night while on a walk may tend to be more over cautious about calling in or reporting people that remind them of their own incident, while I might not even think twice about it.
fear. media-driven fear.Your boos mean nothing to me, for I have seen what makes you cheer0 -
no she does not. so breaking the rules is ok but calling the police on someone breaking the rules because they are black and you are white deserves public shaming? come on that's a stretch to me. Again in no way would I have called the police or even cared one bit in this situation but I don't think she should be publicly shamed either.PJ_Soul said:
Hell, even if she isn't racist, she deserves to be publicly shamed just for calling the cops about anyone using charcoal instead of propane. That's ridiculous, and at the very least I hope people learn that you don't go calling the cops for stupid shit like that. Not unless you maybe live in Mayberry or something, where the cops literally have nothing better to do.pjhawks said:
obviously we will never know that but might be a good idea to be careful before labeling someone racist these days. not everyone who calls the police on black people are being racist. i think that is where the tone is moving to these days. we have to be careful not to go to far in either direction...calling too much or calling not at all.HughFreakingDillon said:
yes, but would she have called the cops if it was a bunch of cardigan-wearing blonde people? who knows.pjhawks said:I would not have called the police for it but the BBQ incident they were doing something they weren't supposed to be doing. I have no problem with saying something if i see something. better to be safe than sorry...unless...0 -
Well, it was admittedly easy to say because I 100% believe it was about her being racist.pjhawks said:
no she does not. so breaking the rules is ok but calling the police on someone breaking the rules because they are black and you are white deserves public shaming? come on that's a stretch to me. Again in no way would I have called the police or even cared one bit in this situation but I don't think she should be publicly shamed either.PJ_Soul said:
Hell, even if she isn't racist, she deserves to be publicly shamed just for calling the cops about anyone using charcoal instead of propane. That's ridiculous, and at the very least I hope people learn that you don't go calling the cops for stupid shit like that. Not unless you maybe live in Mayberry or something, where the cops literally have nothing better to do.pjhawks said:
obviously we will never know that but might be a good idea to be careful before labeling someone racist these days. not everyone who calls the police on black people are being racist. i think that is where the tone is moving to these days. we have to be careful not to go to far in either direction...calling too much or calling not at all.HughFreakingDillon said:
yes, but would she have called the cops if it was a bunch of cardigan-wearing blonde people? who knows.pjhawks said:I would not have called the police for it but the BBQ incident they were doing something they weren't supposed to be doing. I have no problem with saying something if i see something. better to be safe than sorry...unless...
But still, yeah, I think only a complete busybody moron would call the cops for this in any case, and I have no problem with busybody morons doing stupid shit that negatively impacts other people being called out on it publicly.
With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata0
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