Showing posts with label fantastical thinking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fantastical thinking. Show all posts

Friday, July 10, 2020

Berkeley may be 1st U.S. city to propose eliminating police from traffic stops, enforcement Bwahaha, fantastical thinking on display

Berkeley may be 1st U.S. city to propose eliminating police from traffic stops, enforcement 

Saturday, June 13, 2020

A liberal gets run over by his side....now I get it police are the cause of crime, gotcha!



CNN Anchor Who Sounds Like She'd Never Seen 'Live PD' Infuriates Former Host
Source: Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP
"Live PD" is the latest victim of cancel culture. The show, which followed law enforcement officers on duty, was deemed problematic because, according to critics, it "glorified" police in the wake of the police killing of George Floyd and the racial and social unrest that has resulted from it. "Live PD" was cancelled just a day after the cancellation of the classic TV show "COPS." 
The former host of "Live PD," Dan Abrams, expressed some of his frustration on Fox News's "Bill Hemmer Reports" on Thursday. Abrams said he hoped his show would survive because it focused on transparency among police departments, exactly what today's protesters are demanding.
"Well, I am not certain exactly why" it was cancelled, Abrams told Hemmer. "It was obviously due to pressure to cancel the show based on the current environment that we are in."
"Now again, I had thought the show would survive, I had thought that we could both support the important protests and calls for change that are going on around this country and say that 'Live PD' and transparency amongst police officers and police departments can and should be a part of that," he added.
In addition to pressure to cancel "Live PD" in the midst of growing movements to defund or abolish the police, the A&E Network's decision also came on the heels of a controversy regarding a crew member who was with officers when a man named Javier Ambler died during an arrest after saying, "I can't breathe." His death was later ruled a homicide.
But Abrams stood by his program and his frustration was even more palpable in his interview with CNN anchor Brianna Keilar. In their interview, Keilar did everything she could to portray "Live PD" as a wicked entertainment show that preyed on Americans and didn't tell the complete stories of the arrests they featured.
"What does that mean 'doesn't tell the whole story?'" Abrams fumed. "What does that mean?"
Keilar insisted that the show omits information in each episode. 

Monday, June 8, 2020

So those with the guns win? The old will give their possessions to the thugs?

They know it's crap! It's all intended to bring on the revolutions...think drug cartel totalitarianism roaming the streets.


Wow! Minneapolis City Council President Says Calling the Police on Burglars “Comes from a Place of Privilege” (VIDEO)

Tuesday, June 2, 2020

The ex VP is as unmoored from reality as you think he is: Joe Biden: Cops should be retrained to shoot attackers in the leg

The left lives in a world of fantasy


File under: bad advice



During a meeting with black leaders, presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden suggested that one way for law enforcement to reduce potential fatalities would be to retrain police to shoot attackers in the leg.


He said what?

Former Vice President Joe Biden addressed a meeting of black community leaders Monday at Bethel AME Church in Wilmington, Delaware. He was there to discuss race relations and police brutality and to address the protests and riots that surged over the weekend following the May 25 death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police officers.
As he delivered his address, he offered what he thought would be a good way for the police to decrease the number of fatalities that occur on their watch: Tell cops to aim for the lower extremities.
Biden suggested that law enforcement retrain their officers that when an "unarmed attacker" is coming at them with a "knife or something" — which would make the attacker not "unarmed" — they should stop aiming for center mass.



He told the crowd that he saw "a lot of different things that can change" when it comes to police training, and he vowed that in his first 100 days as president, he would create an oversight board to examine how cops are trained.
One of his first suggested changes apparently would be "the idea that instead of standing there and teaching a cop when there's an unarmed person coming at him with a knife or something to shoot him in the leg instead of in the heart."

Isn't that a bad idea?

The advice to shoot a suspect in the leg rather than center mass has always been considered a bad idea, as National Review's Dan McLaughlin pointed out:
Firing a gun is always potentially deadly force. You shoot for center mass, to kill, or you don't shoot at all. If you're not prepared to kill someone, you should not even point a loaded gun at them, much less fire it. If you don't have grounds to shoot to kill, you don't have grounds to shoot.

There are all kinds of things that can go wrong by trying to shoot to wound, because most people are not expert marksmen, and even expert marksmen do not have the greatest of aim in chaotic circumstances. You can miss, and the person you're shooting at isn't stopped. You can miss, and hit and kill an innocent bystander. You can hit someone in an artery, and they bleed to death. You can be thinking “shoot to wound," but the second radio car responding to the scene rolls out thinking “firefight in progress" and opens both barrels.
This joins Biden's other controversial firearms advice.
In February 2013, he told Field & Stream that a shotgun is superior to an AR-15 for home defense because, "my shotgun will do better for you than your AR-15, because you want to keep someone away from your house, just fire the shotgun through the door."
And that same month, Biden said during a Facebook chat that he advised his wife to fire a couple rounds from a shotgun into the air from their house's porch if she ever felt her security was being threatened, an act that would possibly land Mrs. Biden in jail U.S. News & World Report said.
"I said, 'Jill, if there's ever a problem, just walk out on the balcony here, walk out and put that double-barrel shotgun and fire two blasts outside the house,'" Biden stated.

Friday, May 1, 2020

The obsessive compulsion of some on the left to see racism in everything is a mental illness











University of Virginia Athletics is under fire after unveiling its new logo, after some people say that the logo is racially insensitive.


Virginia Athletics partnered with Nike to conceive the new branding in an effort to appear "bolder and more powerful."

What are the details? 

The school's newspaper, The Cavalier Daily, said that new updates to the athletics department's logo design are viewed by some as racially insensitive.
The new design features saber handle grips that apparently "mimic the serpentine walls" on the school's grounds. The serpentine-type walls were originally constructed to "hide enslaved laborers from view," the outlet reports.
The logo will be used on all athletics uniforms and merchandise beginning with the school's 2020-21 season.
"Outlining each of the pavilion gardens framing the Lawn, these curved walls shielded the living quarters of slaves from view," the outlet writes. "While white students went to class, black slaves were concealed in pavilion basements."
One student told the Daily that it disregards the school's history behind the walls.



The student, sophomore Lauren Cochran, said that the walls "contribute" to the "historically non-inclusive environment" of the school.
"When U. Va. Athletics decided to incorporate the walls into their logo designs, I felt as if they were attempting to 'glorify' past University wrongdoings," Cochran said. "For many, this wall evokes stringent feelings of emotional distress and pain. As an African-American student who walks past these walls every day, I experience uncomfortable emotions relating to the history and justification of the walls."
Pointing to the new, controversial design, Cochran added, "There is nothing 'strong' about a wall that incites racist rhetoric."

One professor agrees

One teacher, Media Studies professor Meredith Clark, echoed Cochran's remarks.
"I came here the day after [late Charlottesville counterprotester] Heather Heyer was killed," Clark said, "so that summer I was here while all of that was unfolding. It was definitely a vivid reminder of where I was, and the history that people want to make a current reality. That's the feeling I have when I pass those walls."
Clark added that the campus's serpentine walls make her sad.
"Sadness that the experience of my ancestors is being enslaved on this university's grounds and building it and the university still not doing, in my view, enough to pay reparations to the ancestors or the descendants of those ancestors."
Clark added that the school — and Nike — both overlooked people who might have "emotional connections" to the school's athletics logo.
“I'm sure that a lot of people just don't find [this] something to be upset about, and it's not so upsetting that it will keep me from doing a good job or for enjoying what I do or being at U.Va.," Clark added. “I do think it is serious that we acknowledge our complex history … and that we do our best to do that while upholding the values that we claim to profess. That is, to me, essential to being both good and great."

Sunday, April 19, 2020

Dr. Sophie Lewis Marxist feminist proves the worthlessness of social science academia.



Feminist ‘scholar’ calls to ‘abolish’ the family amid pandemic: ‘Households are capitalism’s pressure cookers’