but black-on-black crime is also worth paying attention to — ToothyMaw
:point: examples of white-on-white violence & crime.Northern Ireland during "The Troubles".
The violent break-up of the former Yugoslavia.
The Italian, Irish & Jewish gangs in e.g. Chicago, New York, Boston & Philadelphia during (& after) the Prohibition Era.
Post-Civil War era gold rush claim-jumpers vs settlers vs ranchers vs railroads in violent disputes in the US "Wild West".
Majority white-owned opioid "pill mills" in majority white counties, small towns and suburbs/exurbs throughout the southeastern US since the 1990s.
If we are paying attention to systemic racism, do you respond what about breast cancer? Surely breast cancer is something worth paying attention to. And what about feminism generally and the plight of children in Eastern Europe? Bringing something unuseful up in an unrelated context because that unseful thing is important is a waste of time, i.e. a deflection. — Ennui Elucidator
I think you’d find it unlikely that serious people exclaim that black on black violence is always a deflection, but that the only time they hear certain people talk about it is in response to a conversation about (or action against) systemic racism. — Ennui Elucidator
Systemic racism is, IMO, wholly different – higher level – topic, and thus perpetuated by rhetorically rendering it invisible by talking about "black-on-black crime" as if that is an aberration devoid of wider socioeconomic structures and stressors. :brow: — 180 Proof
And if they don't "pick themselves up"? What is the solution? Lock them up? Do you know that the United States has the highest prison population the world? Do we really want to start a crusade locking people up?But this does not excuse Sandifer’s, and many other black boy’s and men’s, murderers; there is a reason we try to keep the courts almost totally colorblind; it is within the power of people of color who live in crime-ridden areas to pick themselves up and make something better for themselves than rampant violence. In fact, they are the only ones who can do it. This might be a greater expectation than we have for privileged white men who leverage their free speech to harm minorities - but I think it is reasonable. — ToothyMaw
This "not a deflection" reminds of when someone says "I'm not racist or prejudice, but ..." or "Some of my closest friends are black, but ..." I'm one of those blacks who is far more "concerned" with communities of color (out-groups) being exploited and discriminated against – ghettoed for centuries – by a white-controlled (in-group) socioeconomic structure that reinforces the social pathologies in said communities which is (re)producing internecine violence. I elaborate further in the link in my first post but you don't want to read all that, toothless, do you? Typical. :shade:If one is concerned with people of color being murdered, then black-on-black violence is relevant; far more black men die to other black men, for instance, than police officers. Insofar as systemic racism relates to people of color being murdered, black-on-black violence eclipses it and it is not a deflection to mention it. — ToothyMaw
crime is an act of individuals, not groups, so it would make more sense to look at individual circumstances rather than invent racial ones. — NOS4A2
I can’t help but cringe when someone brings up “black-on-black crime” for the same reasons I cringe when I hear about “white privilege”. Two racist assumptions occur the moment we consider such propositions: that human beings can be demarcated on grounds of race, and that this arbitrary demarcation has some bearing on individual behavior. — NOS4A2
From there it isn’t long before we’re talking about essences like “blackness” and “whiteness”, and other absurdities. But crime is an act of individuals, not groups, so it would make more sense to look at individual circumstances rather than invent racial ones. — NOS4A2
And if they don't "pick themselves up"? What is the solution? Lock them up? Do you know that the United States has the highest prison population the world? Do we really want to start a crusade locking people up? — Wheatley
This non-deflection reminds of when someone says "I'm not racist or prejudice, but ..." or "Some of my closest friends are black, but ..." I'm one of those blacks far more "concerned" about communities of color exploited and discriminated against – ghettoed for centuries – by a white-controlled socioeconomic structure that reinforces the social pathologies in said communities (re)producing internecine violence. I elaborate further in the link in my first post but you don't want to read all that, toothless, do you? Typical. :shade: — 180 Proof
If one is concerned with people of color being murdered, then black-on-black violence is relevant; — ToothyMaw
I wouldn't say it's a cultural issue, but more of a wealth and prosperity issue.I also, of course, do not believe that people of color are inherently more criminal. I think that it is largely a matter of culture, and that many of these cultural influences can be blamed almost solely on historical inequalities and institutional and personal racism. — ToothyMaw
I would add the lack of social cohesion and alienation, the feeling that the society is not made for you and never was intended for you, will make things more ugly very quickly.Under sufficient duress, any community will turn on itself and folks will prey on their own due to proximity and familiarity. Sociology / Criminology 101. In fact, most wars are civil wars just like most crimes consist of (petty) neighborhood crimes & domestic violence. — 180 Proof
a relative lack of police services in black communities. — Bitter Crank
This is painful, BC. — Ennui Elucidator
What is painful is that black communities are over-policed and under-policed at the same time. — Bitter Crank
Or heavily policing traffic offenses--both of which are revenue producers (not for the police, necessarily, but for the municipality). — Bitter Crank
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.