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Reply to "Homeless Man Killed by Fellow Passenger on NYC Subway"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]You know what? We’re on page 35 and just going in boring circles at this point. So let’s cut to the chase: I don’t much care about the welfare of the drug addicted mentally ill. Not on the subway, not on the sidewalk outside my office, not in their disgusting tents that we’ve apparently just decided to make permanent fixtures in the nation’s capital. And the liberal among you with (allegedly) more empathy need to do better than “thoughts and prayers” that these situations will magically improve. Every single city in the US that has adopted leftist policies toward crime, drugs, homelessness, etc. is an absolute sewer where this stuff is happening at an exponentially increasing rate. This particular guy was a violent threat to everyone in that subway car. The marine and others who held him down were risking their own lives in public service. As it happens I don’t know how to put a violent man in a choke hold and subdue him, so I likely would have shot him with my CCW if put in the same situation. [/quote] Speaking as a Black woman, I agree with you. If I had been in that subway car, I would’ve been so grateful for that man who put hands on Jordan Neely so everyone else could escape safely. You know why? Because the Jordan Neelys of the world pose the biggest threat to ME. I am an unambiguously Black, dark skinned, blickety Black, mixed with dark and midnight sista. No one’s mistaking me for anything but Black. This matters because you know who people like Jordan Neely most often go for? People like me. Before I finally escaped NYC, I had dozens and dozens of these encounters in the subway, on the bus, on the sidewalk each year. I was heavily pregnant, I had these kinds of encounters on the daily because these predators knew I couldn’t run away. All these bleeding heart white liberals walk around wrapped in white privilege. It’s a very rare black man who’s going to put hands on you, grab your ass, get in your face expecting you to give him money because he’s a brotha, cuss you out, slap you, punch you, follow you home, watch you to learn when you take your train and stand there waiting for you. Rinse and repeat daily. All except the craziest Black folk know you don’t mess with white folk unless you want things to get really real for you. Middle class whites have that kind of immediate threat of violence escalating into actual violence experience maybe once a decade, maybe once a lifetime. So, white liberals can say things like ‘the mentally ill people like Jordan Neely pose little threat’ because what you really mean is that they pose little threat TO YOU. Black women like me, on the other hand? We have the highest murder, rape, DV, robbery etc. rates of any race of women, apart from Native American women on reservations. Do you know who’s beating, robbing, raping, and killing us ? Aggressive Black men like Jordan Neely. Back in the day, no cop would show up for a black woman fighting off some brotha off his meds. Now, if the police do show up, some white liberal is going to let him out the next day on these BS bail policies to come bash my head in and they’ll call it justice. None of you virtue signaling, pathologically narcissistic white liberals think of the victims because you’re so rarely the victims. Honestly, looking at videos of how aggressive Jordan Neely was and seeing how long his rapsheet was, I bless that good samaritan who took him out because women like ME are the biggest beneficiaries every time a Jordan Neely is off the streets. It’s unfortunate he died, but he definitely had it coming. That was some street justice for all of the victims who have suffered at his hands thanks to the arrogant white liberals posting nonsense in this thread. Sorry, not sorry. [/quote] I agree with you. I lived in Manhattan in the mid-1990s, and then again in 2001, and moved to another borough in 2002 and have been here since. I’m on that B’way/Lafayette platform pretty often with DC. I take the train frequently with young kids on field trips, but primarily ride alone, and so I’ve been sort of a part of every kind of subway audience. Since early 2021, at least, I cannot remember a single ride where I was not trapped either in a car or on a narrowed platform with a man experiencing florid illness and screaming and shrieking, or “enhanced” panhandling where those asking stop and stare down at seated people. It’s draining, it’s frightening, and it does get exhausting in a pretty deep way. As much or more to the point, I’m disgusted but not surprised that Neely’s recent victims (summer and fall 2021) were both women over 65. He punched each after racing towards them. Both merit, if ANY mention, a parenthetical in any story. It’s as if we’re supposed to accept that girls and women of a certain age, all and any of us, agree to be assailed or threatened when we take the train. But Ubers get expensive, DD gets motion sickness, the express bus is limited in route, and the regular bus is also limited (but far far safer, statistically and in perception). I do not support Adams and think had Neely been sat on and held if he was hitting that tipping point of seeming extra deranged, we wouldn’t know about this. But damn, anyone thinking that the other man took the train with intent to “murder” or wanted to kill as he approached him is in my view saying that just to say it, from a position of distance and thoughtless privilege. The cobbled together solution will involve involuntary long-term commitment. I actually have the appetite for that for everyone’s well-being. But the protestors who are just KEENING to feel something and shutting down service at lex and 63rd, screaming on the streets to “say his name,” can go straight to hell.[/quote] I think it's possible to feel keenly aware of safety issues and angry at people who make riders feel unsafe--while at the same time feeling unsettled that a human life was snuffed out. [/quote] I never wrote otherwise. I think charges may come his way, and that would be appropriate. That is not at the root of those aching to protest this in my view, as someone who has spent decades in this city. And as ever, the actual behavior and pattern of Neely don’t matter now that he’s been both elevated to and reduced to a symbol, instead of a mistreated but also violent (at minimum 2 charged attacks on women), unpredictable person. It’s all a horror.[/quote]
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