"Threaten to kick" > "neglected to say sorry." |
| On the issue of happiness (or perceived happiness) many men like foreign women because they say American women are unhappy and rude. |
She said she was going to kick the bike. He was hitting her repeatedly with his bike. If he didn't stop hitting her, she was going to kick the bike away from her. Would I have threatened to kick his bike? No. But I also would have said sorry to the person I kept HITTING with my bike. |
Ha - well, I am happy. Maybe pregnant and hormonal, but definitely happy. And you are right, enough of these anonymous boards - these comments are making me feel sad about race relations. |
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Well, on another note, BeachHouseGirl with 4 kids who was "super bugged" by her videogame-playing SIL yesterday should be glad that this thread -- and not hers -- has kept us occupied all afternoon!
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NO ONE HERE IS TELLING YOU THAT, OTHER THAN OP. WHO I DON'T THINK IS WHITE. Now, can you (not "black people"), address why you are so obsessed with this? |
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Why is this being turned into the victimhood Olympics? They were both wrong. When you physically bother someone and rudely dismiss their concerns, then it's not unreasonable to think they will threaten to physically remove the object that is bothering them. Both are wrong. But so many people are focusing on the young lady's threat of bad behavior instead of the man's actual bad behavior. If everyone behaves themselves and has manners, situations like these will be politely resolved. That is what kids need to learn. |
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This! She threatened to remove the object that was continuously assaulting her away |
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OP, please save us. Is this exchange helping answer your existential question
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so the biker gets a pass for his continuous assault on the Black woman with his dirty disgusting bike wheel and when said Black woman stands up for herself and threatens to assault the bike (which is assaulting her) she is overreacting. Being assaulted by a dirty bike wheel is not a perceived slight -it's an actual assault. I also believe that the biker thought his right to take his bike on the metro trumped this black woman's right to not have her personal space invaded and that is what she responded to when she threatened to take action against his bike. Could she have tried to deescalate the situation - sure but if I felt like someone thought an inanimate object took precedence over my own human dignity, being nice and polite would not have been my first reaction. Would I have threatened to kick the bike - probably not but I would have politely pointed out that he was assaulting me with his bike. Being passive and meek would have made me feel worse since I was the one harmed so I understand why this lady threatened physical action.
As an aside, just because the Metro is crowded doesn't mean that all of sudden, this lady's right to be treated with dignity and respect by fellow metro riders goes out the window. When you do something wrong, you apologize first, not blame the victim you assaulted for overreacting. However, I am not surprised that a lot of white people thought that she overreacted. They have no experience with their dignity as a human being questioned on a daily basis. Finally, as to OP using this as example - I think the point was to show that the white people in this example are happy go lucky, without a care in the world, where as this black woman was tightly wound and/or maybe has a chip on her shoulder. As an African-American woman, I try to be very pleasant, but it's hard to keep smiling when you encounter so many prejudices, slights, and stereotypes. As for the poster with the playground scenario, for it to be accurate the first child would have to hit the second child with some object over and over again and not simply "bugged" them. But by your reasoning, are you saying that the Child #1 who actually assaulted the Child #2 is not at fault as compared to Child #2 who threatened to assault Child #1 after being continually assaulted ? |
| After this thread, I am staying away from all black people on the Metro. Not even looking at them. Don't want to appear to be doing anything to them, against them, be THINKING about doing anything to them, against them, nothing. Unless I am serving them tea on a silver platter, they will likely think that anything less is a personal affront. |
Good insight. What I don't understand is, why didn't she simply bite the tire hard and puncture it? THAT would teach the biker how to properly behave with ladies in the future. |