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RiceLad15 Offline
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Post: #21
RE: Violence at protests
(08-01-2020 01:10 PM)Hambone10 Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 11:52 AM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  Ham, when you say compare this to Portland, you do know that this instance was in Portland, right?

Clearly I meant the riots in Portland that were the topic of conversation for weeks. No, I didn't know where this happened because it didn't matter to my response.... I was responding to your 'praise' of the actions of these people.... now that I know, it actually makes if vastly worse. I'm not just talking about different reactions, but I'm talking about different reactions by the same (formal) groups.

Where were those people last time? Had they been there and done this back then, NONE of this happens.

One could easily argue that this proves the Feds actions worked. I don't believe that, but it's just as plausible to me as 'the Feds actions made things worse'.



Quote:But maybe this is why these threads get out of hand - I applauded the fact that members of the protest quickly aided this man who opposed their ideas and brought the stabber to justice, and look at the reactions from the conservative posters...

Because of the clear inconsistency in your position, Lad. You blamed the instigator and praised the reaction when it suits you; you've blamed the reaction and ignored the instigator when it doesn't..... and then accuse 'the other side' of partisanship when they focus on the clear inconsistency. Maybe it's simply because most of us expect law abiding citizens to work 'in favor of' the rule of law, and not in direct defiance of it? It's like applauding people who hold doors open today, and ignoring that they stood before them yesterday with guns.

I'm fairly aggressively supporting the peaceful goals of these groups... because I don't remotely see the solution as political. The police in liberal cities act exactly the same as people in conservative cities... criminals too. George Floyd was killed by a very liberal city/police force. I wholly reject the idea that 'enforcing laws' is a systemic act of racism... not that it never has... but that 'as a system' it cannot help it. Being black doesn't cause criminal acts. Being poor does.

I absolutely believe that when 'the people' act in a way that is supportive of the rule of law (as happened here) that we get better outcomes than we do when 'the people' act in a way that is not supportive, and when we act in a way that is a barrier to the rule of law (the Portland Riots), then we have chosen lawlessness over law. Had 'this' happened 'then', NONE of the things you are upset about, happen. NOT ONE of them. That's not a political belief, it's a demonstrable fact. It's also a fact that when you have numbers, you need less force. When you don't, you need more. Had the locals even just decried, much less identified the criminal actors, the feds likely have a very different reaction.

This becomes political because it was always intended to be political. For the people who are rioting, this isn't about solutions.

Had the locals decried criminal actors? You know they were actively engaging rioters using force before the Feds arrived, right?

The narrative Tanq has pushed that local officials seemed to sit back and do nothing is demonstrably false - they completely failed at containing the situation, but they did not sit back and do nothing as riots broke out. We’re right back to where we were a week ago where apparently people haven’t actually followed along with what has been occurring in Portland and what local officials have actually done.

This is why I previously argued that we should make sure we’re all set on the facts before we discuss the issue, because the issue of Portland officials not attempting to control riots is not actually an issue.

To the start of your comment - I’m not sure I see a consistency issue here, as it doesn’t really connect. I was praising the fact that good people existed in these protests, people who may have vehemently disagreed with this guy’s politics treated him, protected him, and brought the offender to the police. I guess if you want to show a similar thing the Feds did, where they acted against the narrative that they were responding with force towards protestors and I didn’t recognize it, I could see you calling it inconsistent. But it’s a real stretch to say that this is inconsistent, unless you’re taking such a wide view to be worthless.
08-01-2020 03:53 PM
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Owl 69/70/75 Offline
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Post: #22
RE: Violence at protests
(08-01-2020 03:53 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  I was praising the fact that good people existed in these protests, people who may have vehemently disagreed with this guy’s politics treated him, protected him, and brought the offender to the police.

Hmm. "Some good people on both sides."

A good thing that they rendered aid. Not quite as good as if he hadn't been attacked in the first place, but better than nothing.
08-01-2020 04:09 PM
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RiceLad15 Offline
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Post: #23
RE: Violence at protests
(08-01-2020 04:09 PM)Owl 69/70/75 Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 03:53 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  I was praising the fact that good people existed in these protests, people who may have vehemently disagreed with this guy’s politics treated him, protected him, and brought the offender to the police.

Hmm. "Some good people on both sides."

A good thing that they rendered aid. Not quite as good as if he hadn't been attacked in the first place, but better than nothing.

It was just ironic that a story posted by OO about how violent the protest was clearly showed that the protest that was violent was also caring and quick to act.

Agreed it would have been better if the guy was not stabbed in the first place.
08-01-2020 04:27 PM
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Owl 69/70/75 Offline
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Post: #24
RE: Violence at protests
(08-01-2020 04:27 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  It was just ironic that a story posted by OO about how violent the protest was clearly showed that the protest that was violent was also caring and quick to act.

And in your mind does that undo the violence?

Quote:Agreed it would have been better if the guy was not stabbed in the first place.

Kind of a half-assed statement, which is why I ask the question above.
08-01-2020 04:44 PM
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RiceLad15 Offline
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Post: #25
RE: Violence at protests
(08-01-2020 04:44 PM)Owl 69/70/75 Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 04:27 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  It was just ironic that a story posted by OO about how violent the protest was clearly showed that the protest that was violent was also caring and quick to act.

And in your mind does that undo the violence?

Quote:Agreed it would have been better if the guy was not stabbed in the first place.

Kind of a half-assed statement, which is why I ask the question above.

Read my first comment - “ That headline had me feeling down, but the article adds a few silver linings“
08-01-2020 05:42 PM
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OptimisticOwl Offline
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Post: #26
RE: Violence at protests
(08-01-2020 04:27 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  it would have been better if the guy was not stabbed in the first place.

It would have been better if the cop had not put his knee on Floyd's neck.
08-01-2020 05:42 PM
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georgewebb Offline
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Post: #27
RE: Violence at protests
(08-01-2020 03:43 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 01:00 PM)georgewebb Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 12:14 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  If you only offer commentary of the situation that notes the irony...

The irony is the most notable part of your post! The fact that you approve of the prosecution of assailants is not -- or should not -- be noteworthy.

You may have missed the point of my post then. The point was how quickly the guy was treated and protected by the protestors/rioters, even if the violence was done by someone who was partaking in the protest/riots.

If this was truly an unruly mob doling out violence towards police and conservatives, this guy would have been left for dead. But that didn’t happen, which seems to be noteworthy.

For Pete's sake, Lad: no one "missed" your point, which was as obvious as a sore thumb -- and it's very obviousness is exactly why (to your apparent disappointment) no one congratulated you for making it. Rather, we got your point and moved a few steps ahead of you. You haven't quite kept up.
08-01-2020 05:48 PM
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RiceLad15 Offline
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Post: #28
RE: Violence at protests
(08-01-2020 05:48 PM)georgewebb Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 03:43 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 01:00 PM)georgewebb Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 12:14 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  If you only offer commentary of the situation that notes the irony...

The irony is the most notable part of your post! The fact that you approve of the prosecution of assailants is not -- or should not -- be noteworthy.

You may have missed the point of my post then. The point was how quickly the guy was treated and protected by the protestors/rioters, even if the violence was done by someone who was partaking in the protest/riots.

If this was truly an unruly mob doling out violence towards police and conservatives, this guy would have been left for dead. But that didn’t happen, which seems to be noteworthy.

For Pete's sake, Lad: no one "missed" your point, which was as obvious as a sore thumb -- and it's very obviousness is exactly why (to your apparent disappointment) no one congratulated you for making it. Rather, we got your point and moved a few steps ahead of you. You haven't quite kept up.

Moving a few steps ahead is a great euphemism there.
08-01-2020 06:05 PM
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georgewebb Offline
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Post: #29
RE: Violence at protests
(08-01-2020 06:05 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 05:48 PM)georgewebb Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 03:43 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 01:00 PM)georgewebb Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 12:14 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  If you only offer commentary of the situation that notes the irony...

The irony is the most notable part of your post! The fact that you approve of the prosecution of assailants is not -- or should not -- be noteworthy.

You may have missed the point of my post then. The point was how quickly the guy was treated and protected by the protestors/rioters, even if the violence was done by someone who was partaking in the protest/riots.

If this was truly an unruly mob doling out violence towards police and conservatives, this guy would have been left for dead. But that didn’t happen, which seems to be noteworthy.

For Pete's sake, Lad: no one "missed" your point, which was as obvious as a sore thumb -- and it's very obviousness is exactly why (to your apparent disappointment) no one congratulated you for making it. Rather, we got your point and moved a few steps ahead of you. You haven't quite kept up.

Moving a few steps ahead is a great euphemism there.


Look, I'm sorry that you didn't keep up. But as long as we are classifying each other's expressions, "missed the point" was a hideous inaccuracy.
08-01-2020 06:35 PM
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Owl 69/70/75 Offline
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Post: #30
RE: Violence at protests
(08-01-2020 05:48 PM)georgewebb Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 03:43 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  You may have missed the point of my post then. The point was how quickly the guy was treated and protected by the protestors/rioters, even if the violence was done by someone who was partaking in the protest/riots.
If this was truly an unruly mob doling out violence towards police and conservatives, this guy would have been left for dead. But that didn’t happen, which seems to be noteworthy.
For Pete's sake, Lad: no one "missed" your point, which was as obvious as a sore thumb -- and it's very obviousness is exactly why (to your apparent disappointment) no one congratulated you for making it. Rather, we got your point and moved a few steps ahead of you. You haven't quite kept up.

Nobody missed your point. We considered it, decided it wasn't worth further attention, and moved on.
08-01-2020 06:43 PM
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Hambone10 Offline
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Post: #31
RE: Violence at protests
(08-01-2020 03:43 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  You may have missed the point of my post then. The point was how quickly the guy was treated and protected by the protestors/rioters, even if the violence was done by someone who was partaking in the protest/riots.

If this was truly an unruly mob doling out violence towards police and conservatives, this guy would have been left for dead. But that didn’t happen, which seems to be noteworthy.

I'd guess that this happens in about 80+% of police cases... probably more than 90%... where unruly actors are caught, treated and protected... and it is not only not really mentioned, but completely ignored as the focus solely remains on those relatively few times when they fail... and the blame isn't being places solely on those actors, but instead upon a whole group of people, MANY of whom are members of that minority group, and only a small percentage have ever had anyone die in custody.

All you're really arguing for as far as I am concerned is 'mob rule'. If police outnumbered rioters by the same percentage as these people outnumbered this guy, I suspect we would have a vastly more peaceful police force.... which is part of what I'm talking about.

Which only comes right back around to the idea that when the people seek to aid and support law enforcement, things work well... and when they don't... they sometimes REALLY don't. This goes from the guy who pulls over when the cops turn on their lights and cooperates vs the guy who runs and speeds and ditches and evades... to protesters (or even 'good guys with guns') who assist police vs those who

(08-01-2020 03:53 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  Had the locals decried criminal actors? You know they were actively engaging rioters using force before the Feds arrived, right?

I would really appreciate it if you would stop doing this. It's rude.

I said nothing about this but No, I have seen no evidence whatsoever that 'peaceful protestors' were 'actively engaging rioters using force before the Feds arrived.' . On the night of the riot, what Feds were there were obviously already there. The actions you keep pointing to happen in response to what happened that night, not in advance of it.

Let's be blunt here, Lad... If the people there were actively engaging in the same sort of actions you're applauding here... or even just 'naming names'... then the Feds actions never happen. The police rarely act aggressively towards cooperating witnesses. It seems obvious that nobody needs to randomly arrest people off the streets if the protestors have delivered the criminal to them and provided willing testimony against him.

Quote:The narrative Tanq has pushed that local officials seemed to sit back and do nothing is demonstrably false - they completely failed at containing the situation, but they did not sit back and do nothing as riots broke out. We’re right back to where we were a week ago where apparently people haven’t actually followed along with what has been occurring in Portland and what local officials have actually done.

This is why I previously argued that we should make sure we’re all set on the facts before we discuss the issue, because the issue of Portland officials not attempting to control riots is not actually an issue.
Actually, such things are NOT 'demonstrably false'... depending on how you define 'nothing'. I mean, even if they were completely ignoring the crimes (not interested in debating whether they were or not, just as an example) they weren't doing nothing. If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice.

I see the problem... You are speaking to Tanq and reading me through that lens. Different people, different comments, different opinions. Our opinions are distinct. I am not really speaking about local authorities. I'm talking about violent protesters and how things turn out differently when the peaceful protesters support, or not the actions of law enforcement.

Quote:To the start of your comment - I’m not sure I see a consistency issue here, as it doesn’t really connect. I was praising the fact that good people existed in these protests, people who may have vehemently disagreed with this guy’s politics treated him, protected him, and brought the offender to the police. I guess if you want to show a similar thing the Feds did, where they acted against the narrative that they were responding with force towards protestors and I didn’t recognize it, I could see you calling it inconsistent. But it’s a real stretch to say that this is inconsistent, unless you’re taking such a wide view to be worthless.
Once again, you take what I said and ignore it... and try to assign other beliefs to me.

I said numerous times... Had that which you are now praising happened on the first night, then all of the things that you're upset about regarding the Feds don't happen. The bad people are stopped from doing bad things, protected from reprisal and brought to the police... so that just as you said you wanted, the Feds can remain entirely defensive.

In BOTH cases, the actions of the people dictated the 'official' reaction. I'm not suggesting that they must always apprehend the bad actors... I am merely pointing out the disparity in the actions... and the disparity in the reactions. You seem to expect law enforcement to act the same, regardless.

The people have a responsibility in the rule of law... You want to applaud them when they do 'good' and that's fine... but you seem to hold them entirely without blame when they don't. You are not making the connection between the two.

As to 'good people among the rioters'.... who ever said there weren't? We seem perfectly capable of recognizing that 'a group' may act some way and it doesn't reflect the actions of every person in that group.
(This post was last modified: 08-02-2020 11:57 AM by Hambone10.)
08-02-2020 11:34 AM
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tanqtonic Offline
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Post: #32
RE: Violence at protests
(08-02-2020 11:34 AM)Hambone10 Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 03:43 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  You may have missed the point of my post then. The point was how quickly the guy was treated and protected by the protestors/rioters, even if the violence was done by someone who was partaking in the protest/riots.

If this was truly an unruly mob doling out violence towards police and conservatives, this guy would have been left for dead. But that didn’t happen, which seems to be noteworthy.

I'd guess that this happens in about 80+% of police cases... probably more than 90%... where unruly actors are caught, treated and protected... and it is not only not really mentioned, but completely ignored as the focus solely remains on those relatively few times when they fail... and the blame isn't being places solely on those actors, but instead upon a whole group of people, MANY of whom are members of that minority group, and only a small percentage have ever had anyone die in custody.

All you're really arguing for as far as I am concerned is 'mob rule'. If police outnumbered rioters by the same percentage as these people outnumbered this guy, I suspect we would have a vastly more peaceful police force.... which is part of what I'm talking about.

Which only comes right back around to the idea that when the people seek to aid and support law enforcement, things work well... and when they don't... they sometimes REALLY don't. This goes from the guy who pulls over when the cops turn on their lights and cooperates vs the guy who runs and speeds and ditches and evades... to protesters (or even 'good guys with guns') who assist police vs those who

(08-01-2020 03:53 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  Had the locals decried criminal actors? You know they were actively engaging rioters using force before the Feds arrived, right?

I would really appreciate it if you would stop doing this. It's rude.

I said nothing about this but No, I have seen no evidence whatsoever that 'peaceful protestors' were 'actively engaging rioters using force before the Feds arrived.' . On the night of the riot, what Feds were there were obviously already there. The actions you keep pointing to happen in response to what happened that night, not in advance of it.

Let's be blunt here, Lad... If the people there were actively engaging in the same sort of actions you're applauding here... or even just 'naming names'... then the Feds actions never happen. The police rarely act aggressively towards cooperating witnesses. It seems obvious that nobody needs to randomly arrest people off the streets if the protestors have delivered the criminal to them and provided willing testimony against him.

Quote:The narrative Tanq has pushed that local officials seemed to sit back and do nothing is demonstrably false - they completely failed at containing the situation, but they did not sit back and do nothing as riots broke out. We’re right back to where we were a week ago where apparently people haven’t actually followed along with what has been occurring in Portland and what local officials have actually done.

This is why I previously argued that we should make sure we’re all set on the facts before we discuss the issue, because the issue of Portland officials not attempting to control riots is not actually an issue.
Actually, such things are NOT 'demonstrably false'... depending on how you define 'nothing'. I mean, even if they were completely ignoring the crimes (not interested in debating whether they were or not, just as an example) they weren't doing nothing. If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice.

I see the problem... You are speaking to Tanq and reading me through that lens. Different people, different comments, different opinions. Our opinions are distinct. I am not really speaking about local authorities. I'm talking about violent protesters and how things turn out differently when the peaceful protesters support, or not the actions of law enforcement.

Quote:To the start of your comment - I’m not sure I see a consistency issue here, as it doesn’t really connect. I was praising the fact that good people existed in these protests, people who may have vehemently disagreed with this guy’s politics treated him, protected him, and brought the offender to the police. I guess if you want to show a similar thing the Feds did, where they acted against the narrative that they were responding with force towards protestors and I didn’t recognize it, I could see you calling it inconsistent. But it’s a real stretch to say that this is inconsistent, unless you’re taking such a wide view to be worthless.
Once again, you take what I said and ignore it... and try to assign other beliefs to me.

I said numerous times... Had that which you are now praising happened on the first night, then all of the things that you're upset about regarding the Feds don't happen. The bad people are stopped from doing bad things, protected from reprisal and brought to the police... so that just as you said you wanted, the Feds can remain entirely defensive.

In BOTH cases, the actions of the people dictated the 'official' reaction. I'm not suggesting that they must always apprehend the bad actors... I am merely pointing out the disparity in the actions... and the disparity in the reactions. You seem to expect law enforcement to act the same, regardless.

The people have a responsibility in the rule of law... You want to applaud them when they do 'good' and that's fine... but you seem to hold them entirely without blame when they don't. You are not making the connection between the two.

As to 'good people among the rioters'.... who ever said there weren't? We seem perfectly capable of recognizing that 'a group' may act some way and it doesn't reflect the actions of every person in that group.

lad has actually explicitly argued the opposite when it comes to Charlottesville, mind you.
08-02-2020 12:37 PM
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OptimisticOwl Offline
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Post: #33
RE: Violence at protests
(08-02-2020 12:37 PM)tanqtonic Wrote:  
(08-02-2020 11:34 AM)Hambone10 Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 03:43 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  You may have missed the point of my post then. The point was how quickly the guy was treated and protected by the protestors/rioters, even if the violence was done by someone who was partaking in the protest/riots.

If this was truly an unruly mob doling out violence towards police and conservatives, this guy would have been left for dead. But that didn’t happen, which seems to be noteworthy.

I'd guess that this happens in about 80+% of police cases... probably more than 90%... where unruly actors are caught, treated and protected... and it is not only not really mentioned, but completely ignored as the focus solely remains on those relatively few times when they fail... and the blame isn't being places solely on those actors, but instead upon a whole group of people, MANY of whom are members of that minority group, and only a small percentage have ever had anyone die in custody.

All you're really arguing for as far as I am concerned is 'mob rule'. If police outnumbered rioters by the same percentage as these people outnumbered this guy, I suspect we would have a vastly more peaceful police force.... which is part of what I'm talking about.

Which only comes right back around to the idea that when the people seek to aid and support law enforcement, things work well... and when they don't... they sometimes REALLY don't. This goes from the guy who pulls over when the cops turn on their lights and cooperates vs the guy who runs and speeds and ditches and evades... to protesters (or even 'good guys with guns') who assist police vs those who

(08-01-2020 03:53 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  Had the locals decried criminal actors? You know they were actively engaging rioters using force before the Feds arrived, right?

I would really appreciate it if you would stop doing this. It's rude.

I said nothing about this but No, I have seen no evidence whatsoever that 'peaceful protestors' were 'actively engaging rioters using force before the Feds arrived.' . On the night of the riot, what Feds were there were obviously already there. The actions you keep pointing to happen in response to what happened that night, not in advance of it.

Let's be blunt here, Lad... If the people there were actively engaging in the same sort of actions you're applauding here... or even just 'naming names'... then the Feds actions never happen. The police rarely act aggressively towards cooperating witnesses. It seems obvious that nobody needs to randomly arrest people off the streets if the protestors have delivered the criminal to them and provided willing testimony against him.

Quote:The narrative Tanq has pushed that local officials seemed to sit back and do nothing is demonstrably false - they completely failed at containing the situation, but they did not sit back and do nothing as riots broke out. We’re right back to where we were a week ago where apparently people haven’t actually followed along with what has been occurring in Portland and what local officials have actually done.

This is why I previously argued that we should make sure we’re all set on the facts before we discuss the issue, because the issue of Portland officials not attempting to control riots is not actually an issue.
Actually, such things are NOT 'demonstrably false'... depending on how you define 'nothing'. I mean, even if they were completely ignoring the crimes (not interested in debating whether they were or not, just as an example) they weren't doing nothing. If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice.

I see the problem... You are speaking to Tanq and reading me through that lens. Different people, different comments, different opinions. Our opinions are distinct. I am not really speaking about local authorities. I'm talking about violent protesters and how things turn out differently when the peaceful protesters support, or not the actions of law enforcement.

Quote:To the start of your comment - I’m not sure I see a consistency issue here, as it doesn’t really connect. I was praising the fact that good people existed in these protests, people who may have vehemently disagreed with this guy’s politics treated him, protected him, and brought the offender to the police. I guess if you want to show a similar thing the Feds did, where they acted against the narrative that they were responding with force towards protestors and I didn’t recognize it, I could see you calling it inconsistent. But it’s a real stretch to say that this is inconsistent, unless you’re taking such a wide view to be worthless.
Once again, you take what I said and ignore it... and try to assign other beliefs to me.

I said numerous times... Had that which you are now praising happened on the first night, then all of the things that you're upset about regarding the Feds don't happen. The bad people are stopped from doing bad things, protected from reprisal and brought to the police... so that just as you said you wanted, the Feds can remain entirely defensive.

In BOTH cases, the actions of the people dictated the 'official' reaction. I'm not suggesting that they must always apprehend the bad actors... I am merely pointing out the disparity in the actions... and the disparity in the reactions. You seem to expect law enforcement to act the same, regardless.

The people have a responsibility in the rule of law... You want to applaud them when they do 'good' and that's fine... but you seem to hold them entirely without blame when they don't. You are not making the connection between the two.

As to 'good people among the rioters'.... who ever said there weren't? We seem perfectly capable of recognizing that 'a group' may act some way and it doesn't reflect the actions of every person in that group.

lad has actually explicitly argued the opposite when it comes to Charlottesville, mind you.

No need to pick on Lad. He is not alone in this.

It is not just Lad, but every leftist. It is why the left and the MSM have made such a big deal of "good people on both sides" when it is very clear to them there are NO good people on the other side, ever. You are either with them or a racist. Period, end of story.

Seems to have been carried over to everybody who doesn't want to move or destroy Confederate statuary.

Or who wants to say All Lives Matter
(This post was last modified: 08-02-2020 03:42 PM by OptimisticOwl.)
08-02-2020 03:12 PM
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RiceLad15 Offline
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Post: #34
RE: Violence at protests
(08-02-2020 11:34 AM)Hambone10 Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 03:43 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  You may have missed the point of my post then. The point was how quickly the guy was treated and protected by the protestors/rioters, even if the violence was done by someone who was partaking in the protest/riots.

If this was truly an unruly mob doling out violence towards police and conservatives, this guy would have been left for dead. But that didn’t happen, which seems to be noteworthy.

I'd guess that this happens in about 80+% of police cases... probably more than 90%... where unruly actors are caught, treated and protected... and it is not only not really mentioned, but completely ignored as the focus solely remains on those relatively few times when they fail... and the blame isn't being places solely on those actors, but instead upon a whole group of people, MANY of whom are members of that minority group, and only a small percentage have ever had anyone die in custody.

All you're really arguing for as far as I am concerned is 'mob rule'. If police outnumbered rioters by the same percentage as these people outnumbered this guy, I suspect we would have a vastly more peaceful police force.... which is part of what I'm talking about.

Which only comes right back around to the idea that when the people seek to aid and support law enforcement, things work well... and when they don't... they sometimes REALLY don't. This goes from the guy who pulls over when the cops turn on their lights and cooperates vs the guy who runs and speeds and ditches and evades... to protesters (or even 'good guys with guns') who assist police vs those who

(08-01-2020 03:53 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  Had the locals decried criminal actors? You know they were actively engaging rioters using force before the Feds arrived, right?

I would really appreciate it if you would stop doing this. It's rude.

I said nothing about this but No, I have seen no evidence whatsoever that 'peaceful protestors' were 'actively engaging rioters using force before the Feds arrived.' . On the night of the riot, what Feds were there were obviously already there. The actions you keep pointing to happen in response to what happened that night, not in advance of it.

Let's be blunt here, Lad... If the people there were actively engaging in the same sort of actions you're applauding here... or even just 'naming names'... then the Feds actions never happen. The police rarely act aggressively towards cooperating witnesses. It seems obvious that nobody needs to randomly arrest people off the streets if the protestors have delivered the criminal to them and provided willing testimony against him.

Quote:The narrative Tanq has pushed that local officials seemed to sit back and do nothing is demonstrably false - they completely failed at containing the situation, but they did not sit back and do nothing as riots broke out. We’re right back to where we were a week ago where apparently people haven’t actually followed along with what has been occurring in Portland and what local officials have actually done.

This is why I previously argued that we should make sure we’re all set on the facts before we discuss the issue, because the issue of Portland officials not attempting to control riots is not actually an issue.
Actually, such things are NOT 'demonstrably false'... depending on how you define 'nothing'. I mean, even if they were completely ignoring the crimes (not interested in debating whether they were or not, just as an example) they weren't doing nothing. If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice.

I see the problem... You are speaking to Tanq and reading me through that lens. Different people, different comments, different opinions. Our opinions are distinct. I am not really speaking about local authorities. I'm talking about violent protesters and how things turn out differently when the peaceful protesters support, or not the actions of law enforcement.

Quote:To the start of your comment - I’m not sure I see a consistency issue here, as it doesn’t really connect. I was praising the fact that good people existed in these protests, people who may have vehemently disagreed with this guy’s politics treated him, protected him, and brought the offender to the police. I guess if you want to show a similar thing the Feds did, where they acted against the narrative that they were responding with force towards protestors and I didn’t recognize it, I could see you calling it inconsistent. But it’s a real stretch to say that this is inconsistent, unless you’re taking such a wide view to be worthless.
Once again, you take what I said and ignore it... and try to assign other beliefs to me.

I said numerous times... Had that which you are now praising happened on the first night, then all of the things that you're upset about regarding the Feds don't happen. The bad people are stopped from doing bad things, protected from reprisal and brought to the police... so that just as you said you wanted, the Feds can remain entirely defensive.

In BOTH cases, the actions of the people dictated the 'official' reaction. I'm not suggesting that they must always apprehend the bad actors... I am merely pointing out the disparity in the actions... and the disparity in the reactions. You seem to expect law enforcement to act the same, regardless.

The people have a responsibility in the rule of law... You want to applaud them when they do 'good' and that's fine... but you seem to hold them entirely without blame when they don't. You are not making the connection between the two.

As to 'good people among the rioters'.... who ever said there weren't? We seem perfectly capable of recognizing that 'a group' may act some way and it doesn't reflect the actions of every person in that group.

I think there are a number of misunderstandings between us - see bolded above and responses below.

1) The quoted text was me saying that Portland police were "actively engaging rioters using force before the Feds arrived" not that peaceful protesters were trying to stop the rioters. When you said "had the locals" I didn't realize you meant the protestors - you're right that my conversations with Tanq had made this a bit confusing, as I took "locals" to mean local officials, not protesters (it's rather ambiguous and a good example of the difficulties of this message board).

Someone mentioned it in your mod post that one of the issues we've been having is assuming people are coming from a negative place in their response, and this is a good example. I misunderstood what you said because it wasn't clear what "locals" referred to, so I'm sorry for the confusion, but it was honest and not rude.

2) I'm not ignoring what you said, I'm pointing out why I don't believe what I said was inconsistent. I agree that had protesters been able to internally manage rioters, the Feds never show up.

My initial comment was not focused on how good people stop bad people from doing bad things, and I've been explicit about what my point was about the actions of others being a silver lining.

3) You're assigning a position to me that I haven't taken. Are the rioters to blame for rioting? Yes. Are the Feds to blame to an increase in rioting? Yes. This isn't a binary choice where only one group can be blamed, and just because I have primarily focused my criticism on the response from the Feds doesn't mean others are without blame or fault.

Similar to my comment above, this is an issue with the difficulties of a message board - instead of assuming I hold people without blame, ask me whether or not I do. I'll try and do the same here (even if some posters get piqued when I ask clarifying questions...)

I simply wanted to point out to OO that his initial link about "Violence at protests" actually provided numerous examples of the opposite occurring.
08-03-2020 07:52 AM
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RiceLad15 Offline
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Post: #35
RE: Violence at protests
(08-02-2020 03:12 PM)OptimisticOwl Wrote:  
(08-02-2020 12:37 PM)tanqtonic Wrote:  
(08-02-2020 11:34 AM)Hambone10 Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 03:43 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  You may have missed the point of my post then. The point was how quickly the guy was treated and protected by the protestors/rioters, even if the violence was done by someone who was partaking in the protest/riots.

If this was truly an unruly mob doling out violence towards police and conservatives, this guy would have been left for dead. But that didn’t happen, which seems to be noteworthy.

I'd guess that this happens in about 80+% of police cases... probably more than 90%... where unruly actors are caught, treated and protected... and it is not only not really mentioned, but completely ignored as the focus solely remains on those relatively few times when they fail... and the blame isn't being places solely on those actors, but instead upon a whole group of people, MANY of whom are members of that minority group, and only a small percentage have ever had anyone die in custody.

All you're really arguing for as far as I am concerned is 'mob rule'. If police outnumbered rioters by the same percentage as these people outnumbered this guy, I suspect we would have a vastly more peaceful police force.... which is part of what I'm talking about.

Which only comes right back around to the idea that when the people seek to aid and support law enforcement, things work well... and when they don't... they sometimes REALLY don't. This goes from the guy who pulls over when the cops turn on their lights and cooperates vs the guy who runs and speeds and ditches and evades... to protesters (or even 'good guys with guns') who assist police vs those who

(08-01-2020 03:53 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  Had the locals decried criminal actors? You know they were actively engaging rioters using force before the Feds arrived, right?

I would really appreciate it if you would stop doing this. It's rude.

I said nothing about this but No, I have seen no evidence whatsoever that 'peaceful protestors' were 'actively engaging rioters using force before the Feds arrived.' . On the night of the riot, what Feds were there were obviously already there. The actions you keep pointing to happen in response to what happened that night, not in advance of it.

Let's be blunt here, Lad... If the people there were actively engaging in the same sort of actions you're applauding here... or even just 'naming names'... then the Feds actions never happen. The police rarely act aggressively towards cooperating witnesses. It seems obvious that nobody needs to randomly arrest people off the streets if the protestors have delivered the criminal to them and provided willing testimony against him.

Quote:The narrative Tanq has pushed that local officials seemed to sit back and do nothing is demonstrably false - they completely failed at containing the situation, but they did not sit back and do nothing as riots broke out. We’re right back to where we were a week ago where apparently people haven’t actually followed along with what has been occurring in Portland and what local officials have actually done.

This is why I previously argued that we should make sure we’re all set on the facts before we discuss the issue, because the issue of Portland officials not attempting to control riots is not actually an issue.
Actually, such things are NOT 'demonstrably false'... depending on how you define 'nothing'. I mean, even if they were completely ignoring the crimes (not interested in debating whether they were or not, just as an example) they weren't doing nothing. If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice.

I see the problem... You are speaking to Tanq and reading me through that lens. Different people, different comments, different opinions. Our opinions are distinct. I am not really speaking about local authorities. I'm talking about violent protesters and how things turn out differently when the peaceful protesters support, or not the actions of law enforcement.

Quote:To the start of your comment - I’m not sure I see a consistency issue here, as it doesn’t really connect. I was praising the fact that good people existed in these protests, people who may have vehemently disagreed with this guy’s politics treated him, protected him, and brought the offender to the police. I guess if you want to show a similar thing the Feds did, where they acted against the narrative that they were responding with force towards protestors and I didn’t recognize it, I could see you calling it inconsistent. But it’s a real stretch to say that this is inconsistent, unless you’re taking such a wide view to be worthless.
Once again, you take what I said and ignore it... and try to assign other beliefs to me.

I said numerous times... Had that which you are now praising happened on the first night, then all of the things that you're upset about regarding the Feds don't happen. The bad people are stopped from doing bad things, protected from reprisal and brought to the police... so that just as you said you wanted, the Feds can remain entirely defensive.

In BOTH cases, the actions of the people dictated the 'official' reaction. I'm not suggesting that they must always apprehend the bad actors... I am merely pointing out the disparity in the actions... and the disparity in the reactions. You seem to expect law enforcement to act the same, regardless.

The people have a responsibility in the rule of law... You want to applaud them when they do 'good' and that's fine... but you seem to hold them entirely without blame when they don't. You are not making the connection between the two.

As to 'good people among the rioters'.... who ever said there weren't? We seem perfectly capable of recognizing that 'a group' may act some way and it doesn't reflect the actions of every person in that group.

lad has actually explicitly argued the opposite when it comes to Charlottesville, mind you.

No need to pick on Lad. He is not alone in this.

It is not just Lad, but every leftist. It is why the left and the MSM have made such a big deal of "good people on both sides" when it is very clear to them there are NO good people on the other side, ever. You are either with them or a racist. Period, end of story.

Seems to have been carried over to everybody who doesn't want to move or destroy Confederate statuary.

Or who wants to say All Lives Matter

Let's be real, Charlottesville is NOT a great case study as we have debated numerous times. If there wasn't an overtly racist/white supremacist tiki torch rally the night before where people were literally chanting "The Jews Will Not Replace Us," or groups representing neo-Nazis/white supremacists weren't there en masse (Stormer Book Clubs, Nationalist Front, the KKK, Identity Evropa, etc.), there's be a better point.

If it simply was a large group of conservatives protesting the removal of a statue with maybe one of these fringe groups making noise, you'd have a much stronger case. There have been plenty of rallies like that (many without the fringe groups) that haven't been an issue. But the Charlottesville rally was organized by a white nationalist group for white nationalists.

May be best to move this to a separate thread since this discussion continues to show up time and time again.
08-03-2020 07:58 AM
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Owl 69/70/75 Offline
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Post: #36
RE: Violence at protests
(08-01-2020 03:53 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  The narrative Tanq has pushed that local officials seemed to sit back and do nothing is demonstrably false - they completely failed at containing the situation, but they did not sit back and do nothing as riots broke out.

And the difference between doing nothing and completely failing is?

Quote:I was praising the fact that good people existed in these protests, people who may have vehemently disagreed with this guy’s politics treated him, protected him, and brought the offender to the police.

"Some good people on both sides." Gotcha.
08-03-2020 08:04 AM
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RiceLad15 Offline
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Post: #37
RE: Violence at protests
(08-03-2020 08:04 AM)Owl 69/70/75 Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 03:53 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  The narrative Tanq has pushed that local officials seemed to sit back and do nothing is demonstrably false - they completely failed at containing the situation, but they did not sit back and do nothing as riots broke out.

And the difference between doing nothing and completely failing is?
One is a clear dereliction of responsibility (doing nothing) while the other isn't (trying but failing).

Portland police used crowd control tactics to try and disperse the crowd, and it didn't work. They didn't just step aside and let the rioters go to town. The Feds did the exact same thing and got the exact same results.

Quote:
Quote:I was praising the fact that good people existed in these protests, people who may have vehemently disagreed with this guy’s politics treated him, protected him, and brought the offender to the police.

"Some good people on both sides." Gotcha.

That wasn't really the main point, but sure, if you want to run with it, it works. I was more focusing on how protestors acted against the narrative OO was pushing - he started a post called "Violence at Protests" about a black conservative who was stabbed. Ironically, the same article pointed out how numerous protesters reacted in the exact opposite manner.
08-03-2020 08:10 AM
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Owl 69/70/75 Offline
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Post: #38
RE: Violence at protests
(08-03-2020 08:10 AM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  One is a clear dereliction of responsibility (doing nothing) while the other isn't (trying but failing).

I'd say that's distinction without a difference. Same result in the end, either way.
08-03-2020 08:36 AM
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RiceLad15 Offline
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Post: #39
RE: Violence at protests
(08-03-2020 08:36 AM)Owl 69/70/75 Wrote:  
(08-03-2020 08:10 AM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  One is a clear dereliction of responsibility (doing nothing) while the other isn't (trying but failing).

I'd say that's distinction without a difference. Same result in the end, either way.

Really? There's no difference between the Portland Police being completely absent from the scene of a riot and them spraying pepper spray and using other methods to try and control riots?
08-03-2020 09:01 AM
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Post: #40
RE: Violence at protests
(08-03-2020 07:52 AM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  
(08-02-2020 11:34 AM)Hambone10 Wrote:  
(08-01-2020 03:43 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  You may have missed the point of my post then. The point was how quickly the guy was treated and protected by the protestors/rioters, even if the violence was done by someone who was partaking in the protest/riots.

If this was truly an unruly mob doling out violence towards police and conservatives, this guy would have been left for dead. But that didn’t happen, which seems to be noteworthy.

I'd guess that this happens in about 80+% of police cases... probably more than 90%... where unruly actors are caught, treated and protected... and it is not only not really mentioned, but completely ignored as the focus solely remains on those relatively few times when they fail... and the blame isn't being places solely on those actors, but instead upon a whole group of people, MANY of whom are members of that minority group, and only a small percentage have ever had anyone die in custody.

All you're really arguing for as far as I am concerned is 'mob rule'. If police outnumbered rioters by the same percentage as these people outnumbered this guy, I suspect we would have a vastly more peaceful police force.... which is part of what I'm talking about.

Which only comes right back around to the idea that when the people seek to aid and support law enforcement, things work well... and when they don't... they sometimes REALLY don't. This goes from the guy who pulls over when the cops turn on their lights and cooperates vs the guy who runs and speeds and ditches and evades... to protesters (or even 'good guys with guns') who assist police vs those who

(08-01-2020 03:53 PM)RiceLad15 Wrote:  Had the locals decried criminal actors? You know they were actively engaging rioters using force before the Feds arrived, right?

I would really appreciate it if you would stop doing this. It's rude.

I said nothing about this but No, I have seen no evidence whatsoever that 'peaceful protestors' were 'actively engaging rioters using force before the Feds arrived.' . On the night of the riot, what Feds were there were obviously already there. The actions you keep pointing to happen in response to what happened that night, not in advance of it.

Let's be blunt here, Lad... If the people there were actively engaging in the same sort of actions you're applauding here... or even just 'naming names'... then the Feds actions never happen. The police rarely act aggressively towards cooperating witnesses. It seems obvious that nobody needs to randomly arrest people off the streets if the protestors have delivered the criminal to them and provided willing testimony against him.

Quote:The narrative Tanq has pushed that local officials seemed to sit back and do nothing is demonstrably false - they completely failed at containing the situation, but they did not sit back and do nothing as riots broke out. We’re right back to where we were a week ago where apparently people haven’t actually followed along with what has been occurring in Portland and what local officials have actually done.

This is why I previously argued that we should make sure we’re all set on the facts before we discuss the issue, because the issue of Portland officials not attempting to control riots is not actually an issue.
Actually, such things are NOT 'demonstrably false'... depending on how you define 'nothing'. I mean, even if they were completely ignoring the crimes (not interested in debating whether they were or not, just as an example) they weren't doing nothing. If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice.

I see the problem... You are speaking to Tanq and reading me through that lens. Different people, different comments, different opinions. Our opinions are distinct. I am not really speaking about local authorities. I'm talking about violent protesters and how things turn out differently when the peaceful protesters support, or not the actions of law enforcement.

Quote:To the start of your comment - I’m not sure I see a consistency issue here, as it doesn’t really connect. I was praising the fact that good people existed in these protests, people who may have vehemently disagreed with this guy’s politics treated him, protected him, and brought the offender to the police. I guess if you want to show a similar thing the Feds did, where they acted against the narrative that they were responding with force towards protestors and I didn’t recognize it, I could see you calling it inconsistent. But it’s a real stretch to say that this is inconsistent, unless you’re taking such a wide view to be worthless.
Once again, you take what I said and ignore it... and try to assign other beliefs to me.

I said numerous times... Had that which you are now praising happened on the first night, then all of the things that you're upset about regarding the Feds don't happen. The bad people are stopped from doing bad things, protected from reprisal and brought to the police... so that just as you said you wanted, the Feds can remain entirely defensive.

In BOTH cases, the actions of the people dictated the 'official' reaction. I'm not suggesting that they must always apprehend the bad actors... I am merely pointing out the disparity in the actions... and the disparity in the reactions. You seem to expect law enforcement to act the same, regardless.

The people have a responsibility in the rule of law... You want to applaud them when they do 'good' and that's fine... but you seem to hold them entirely without blame when they don't. You are not making the connection between the two.

As to 'good people among the rioters'.... who ever said there weren't? We seem perfectly capable of recognizing that 'a group' may act some way and it doesn't reflect the actions of every person in that group.

I think there are a number of misunderstandings between us - see bolded above and responses below.

1) The quoted text was me saying that Portland police were "actively engaging rioters using force before the Feds arrived" not that peaceful protesters were trying to stop the rioters. When you said "had the locals" I didn't realize you meant the protestors - you're right that my conversations with Tanq had made this a bit confusing, as I took "locals" to mean local officials, not protesters (it's rather ambiguous and a good example of the difficulties of this message board).

Someone mentioned it in your mod post that one of the issues we've been having is assuming people are coming from a negative place in their response, and this is a good example. I misunderstood what you said because it wasn't clear what "locals" referred to, so I'm sorry for the confusion, but it was honest and not rude.

2) I'm not ignoring what you said, I'm pointing out why I don't believe what I said was inconsistent. I agree that had protesters been able to internally manage rioters, the Feds never show up.

My initial comment was not focused on how good people stop bad people from doing bad things, and I've been explicit about what my point was about the actions of others being a silver lining.

3) You're assigning a position to me that I haven't taken. Are the rioters to blame for rioting? Yes. Are the Feds to blame to an increase in rioting? Yes. This isn't a binary choice where only one group can be blamed, and just because I have primarily focused my criticism on the response from the Feds doesn't mean others are without blame or fault.

Similar to my comment above, this is an issue with the difficulties of a message board - instead of assuming I hold people without blame, ask me whether or not I do. I'll try and do the same here (even if some posters get piqued when I ask clarifying questions...)

I simply wanted to point out to OO that his initial link about "Violence at protests" actually provided numerous examples of the opposite occurring.

So, for some unknown reason, you thought I posted the link without reading it?

Thanks for the heads up, but...

I don't edit like WashPo, NYT, and CNN to provide biased info. Good thing you don't take me as an unbiased news source like so many do of the MSM.

You seem to have missed the stuff in that article that is not so gushy about the protesters.
08-03-2020 09:49 AM
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