HUMMMMMM....I wonder who is killing all those black men.......
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  1. #1

    HUMMMMMM....I wonder who is killing all those black men.......

    Despite skewed media image, Black men are more likely to be victimized than other groups








    Thaddeus L. Johnson and Natasha N. Johnson
    ·4 min read








    Recently released FBI data confirms that Americans endured two public health crises last year: COVID-19 and deadly violence. Although the murder rate remains below the 1990s high, the number spiked in the United States spiked by nearly a third in 2020.
    Undoubtedly, an escalation of this magnitude is alarming. But simply focusing on this staggering tally doesn’t tell the whole story and gives the false impression that all Americans are equally affected by the surge in killings.
    While urban residents bore the brunt of the homicide increase, killings climbed in rural areas as well. Regardless of location, the harsh reality remains that Black families disproportionately experienced the trauma of losing loved ones to violence.
    The data pushes back against the popular portrayal of Black men as criminal perpetrator instead of victim. And unfortunately, from the looks of last year’s FBI homicide figures, the victimization race gap isn’t changing.
    The nearly 10,000 Black homicide victims last year (28% more than in 2019) prominently underpin the increase. In many major U.S. cities such as Los Angeles and Atlanta, this increase has been almost exclusively among victims of color since the pandemic's beginning.
    Society's biased response

    Unlike the murders of white citizens, Black homicide victims generally fail to elicit a massive police response or large-scale public outrage unless the killing is especially heinous or occurs in areas not generally associated with Black communities (no matter how misguided the association).
    WHAT THE STATS MEAN: COVID pandemic and isolation likely pushed spike | 2020 uptick in homicides doesn't mean criminal justice reforms aren't working
    Black victims remain underrepresented in U.S. news broadcasts, and as a consequence, they're rarely recognized socially as crime victims deserving of justice or empathy. Uneven news coverage also aggravates racial tensions between Black and white Americans by perpetuating a narrative of white victimization, which flies in the face of reality.
    Lawmakers have stayed true to their political party ideologies when approaching violent crime based on these flawed narratives. On one side, liberals tend to recognize the importance of race, but they regularly propose initiatives lacking genuine cultural responsiveness to the Black experience. On the other, conservatives raise arguments for larger police forces and “tough on crime” policies that ultimately burden Black households.
    Amid this ongoing political tug of war, very little recognition has been given to those most likely to be violently killed but also most likely to be depicted as predators – Black boys and men. Black males are criminally racialized as perpetual suspects, owing largely to their overrepresentation as offenders in popular and news media.
    COLUMN: I am a Haitian American. Brutality at border nothing new. My success is part of deception.
    News outlets in New York City, for example, reported on various crimes with Black people as suspects, including murders, at a clip far outpacing their arrest rates for these offenses, according to studies by Media Matters for America.
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data reveals that in 2019, Black males were about 21 times more likely to be killed than white women and nearly eight times more likely to be killed than white men. The gap in victimization is similar dating back to 1999.
    The current focus of academics and activists on racial equity for defendants and convicted offenders somewhat downplays similar racial disparities in the treatment of victims. And the fact that victims and offenders often share similar social characteristics implies that deeper issues are at play that cannot be fixed by “hot-spot” or “stop-and-frisk” policing tactics.
    Confronting systemic racism

    The broader issue of criminal violence has systemic roots. The lingering effects of discriminatory policies like redlining and mass incarceration restrict opportunities for people of color and have left many once-thriving Black neighborhoods begging for revitalization as blight and neighborhood distress limit residents’ ability to bridge the wealth gap.
    Policing indeed has a role in reducing violent crime, much of which should revolve around targeting those responsible for the bulk of the violence. However, violent crime will continue to haunt marginalized neighborhoods for generations to come as long as residents are isolated and desperate. Because persons in grim circumstances are at higher risk of resorting to crime and violence, the federal government must urgently invest in underserved communities to address root causes of crime like economic depravity, poorly resourced schools and community underinvestment.
    COLUMN: George Floyd dishonored by lack of bipartisan support, action from Biden on police reform
    Congress must seize its opportunity to finally get it right and help thwart the violence plaguing many Black Americans. After the recently failed police reform talks, lawmakers' response to violent crime might very well determine this Congress’ legacy.
    Fortunately, some government officials get it. Most notably, Sens. Chris Coons, D-Del., and Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., have recently pushed for $10 billion to revitalize these communities. The plan involves sending federal funds directly to groups working to revitalize economically challenged neighborhoods. This endeavor would include constructing health centers, job training facilities, commercial spaces and community gardens – all protective factors against violent crime.
    Also, initiatives that tackle racial inequities in homeownership through affordable housing, address community wealth, spark new economic activity and provide much-needed health care services should help reduce crime and break the cycle of poverty and social exclusion in underserved neighborhoods.
    POLICING THE USA: A look at race, justice, media
    Let’s be clear. We’re not suggesting handouts but simply asking our government to ensure everyone has a fair shake at the American dream.
    That's the best way to lower crime rates and stem the rate of Black male victimization.
    Thaddeus L. Johnson, a former police officer, is a senior fellow at the Council on Criminal Justice and teaches criminology at Georgia State University. His wife, Natasha N. Johnson, is a faculty member at Georgia State and director of the university master's program in criminal justice administration.

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  2. #2
    What total horsesh*t.


  3. #3
    It's a damn fact that 98% of black men murdered are killed by other black men. Of all the Races in the World, the black race are the only ones that blames another Race for their irresponsibility.....


  4. #4
    Marine Free Member m14ed's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mongoose View Post

    damn fact is
    98% of black men murdered

    are killed by other black men.

    Of all the Races in the World,
    the black race are the only ones that blames another Race
    for their irresponsibility.....
    80% of your problems,
    caused by 20% of your
    population???????

    WTF
    = abreviation for What The F***




  5. #5
    Ed, it's 13%.......however blacks make up 65% of all welfare, 60% of our prison population. Only 1 out of 4 black kids know who their Daddy is. Only 1 out of 3 black kids graduate High-school, there are more black teen pregnancies than all the other races in the World combined......who would have thought it.....


  6. #6
    Super Moderator Platinum Member USMC 2571's Avatar
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    And yet, Billy, certain elements in our society can find NOTHING else to talk about other than gender and race.


  7. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by bravosixactual View Post
    what total horsesh*t.
    amen!!!

    Si vis pacem, para bellum

  8. #8
    Super Moderator Platinum Member USMC 2571's Avatar
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    Someday we will once again care about Truth, with a capital T, rather than insisting that falsehood is truth and wrong is right. Manipulating facts doesn't change the facts themselves. I look forward to the day when people think for themselves instead of sitting like an infant in a high chair being fed by other people, and not knowing or not caring that it's untrue.


  9. #9
    One day, most cities will have black radical people running the Cities and Counties. That will work out great......just look at Detroit.....


  10. #10
    Billy, look around, that's already happened.


  11. #11
    Ask any big city homicide detective--white or black or hispanic--who's killing who and you'll get the right answer.

    The Leftists, liberals and BLM folks want everybody to believe that law-abiding white gun-owners are sneaking into the 'hood every night assassinating black people. They just can't admit the truth.


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    Marine Free Member m14ed's Avatar
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  13. #13
    I was 13 years old before I ever saw a black person in the flesh. I grew up in Odessa, Texas, which is an Oil Field town in West Texas. Blacks didn't then, nor do they now work in the Oilfield. The work is very hard, long hours, and dangerous. The very things most black men shy away from. Odessa had about 100,000 thousand people. We had black Schools, but, they were in their part of town and their activities was strictly among other black schools. I was in the 10th grade when LBJ instituted the Civil Rights Act or what ever it was called. Here's the kicker....the blacks didn't want to intermix with us any more than we did with them. But, we did and we got along just fine. We rocked along pretty well for many years, up until Obama came along. Obama shet canned all that and divided our Country once again.....a hundred times worse than it used to be. Under Obama the White blame game started along with anything or anyone else that that could be blamed for the irresponsibility of 90% of the black race. Whites were used as a justification for every damn fvck up they ever had or ever will have. Now Biden is pouring more gas on the Racist Fire. I am so damn sick of being blamed for every damn thing the blacks do wrong. They have made me one Racist old Marine. I know this, if this keeps going.....it's not going to be a "Happy Ending"


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