Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Before the Dallas shootings, the New York Times was prominently featuring this rage-filled and hateful article by a black Georgetown professor, full of venom directed at "white America," on its web page:
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/10/opinion/sunday/what-white-america-fails-to-see.html?mabReward=A5&action=click&pgtype=Homepage®ion=CColumn&module=Recommendation&src=rechp&WT.nav=RecEngine&_r=0
After the shootings, the Times starting to bury the article, and no longer feature it on its web page.
It's a disgraceful, overtly racist article that, at least in my opinion, should never have been published and ought to lead to Georgetown's promptly severing any and all ties with Mr. Dyson. It is inconceivable that the Times would have printed any article by a white author purporting to diagnose the pathologies of "Black America," "Hispanic America," or "Jewish America" in such broad, crude terms. But it was happy to print Dyson's article. The rich liberals who run the Times need to take a hard look at themselves now and ask whether they have promoted racial discord and violence, by publishing such vile drivel.
No, OP. The NYT didn't incite anything. Nor did it "bury" anything -- content loses freshness after time and is replaced with newer content.
Let's keep the focus on where it belongs: Badly trained and trigger happy police forces that disproportionately target black people for violence. Thank you for your cooperation in that.
The article is excellent. Maybe it's YOU who needs to take a hard look at yourself what is it you don't understand and what you are willing to do to understand why black people are angry and hurting. Maybe it is YOU who is promoting discord. Contrary to your one-sided belief, 99% of African-Americans support police. You conveniently forget there are minorities on the police force.Anonymous wrote:Before the Dallas shootings, the New York Times was prominently featuring this rage-filled and hateful article by a black Georgetown professor, full of venom directed at "white America," on its web page:
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/10/opinion/sunday/what-white-america-fails-to-see.html?mabReward=A5&action=click&pgtype=Homepage®ion=CColumn&module=Recommendation&src=rechp&WT.nav=RecEngine&_r=0
After the shootings, the Times starting to bury the article, and no longer feature it on its web page.
It's a disgraceful, overtly racist article that, at least in my opinion, should never have been published and ought to lead to Georgetown's promptly severing any and all ties with Mr. Dyson. It is inconceivable that the Times would have printed any article by a white author purporting to diagnose the pathologies of "Black America," "Hispanic America," or "Jewish America" in such broad, crude terms. But it was happy to print Dyson's article. The rich liberals who run the Times need to take a hard look at themselves now and ask whether they have promoted racial discord and violence, by publishing such vile drivel.
Anonymous wrote:Before the Dallas shootings, the New York Times was prominently featuring this rage-filled and hateful article by a black Georgetown professor, full of venom directed at "white America," on its web page:
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/10/opinion/sunday/what-white-america-fails-to-see.html?mabReward=A5&action=click&pgtype=Homepage®ion=CColumn&module=Recommendation&src=rechp&WT.nav=RecEngine&_r=0
After the shootings, the Times starting to bury the article, and no longer feature it on its web page.
It's a disgraceful, overtly racist article that, at least in my opinion, should never have been published and ought to lead to Georgetown's promptly severing any and all ties with Mr. Dyson. It is inconceivable that the Times would have printed any article by a white author purporting to diagnose the pathologies of "Black America," "Hispanic America," or "Jewish America" in such broad, crude terms. But it was happy to print Dyson's article. The rich liberals who run the Times need to take a hard look at themselves now and ask whether they have promoted racial discord and violence, by publishing such vile drivel.
Anonymous wrote:No, I don't think the NYT article incited violence.
Nor do I think that this article was particularly good, to be honest. Not sociology-professor-from-Georgetown-level good.
Even though I think that, yes, everyone has a lot of work to do--Whites maybe especially--to open our eyes to what is going on, and what we an do about it in a constructive, equitable, reparational way.
Anonymous wrote:Wait, wtf? This article was written in RESPONSE to the Dallas shootings and condemns them. What are you on about?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretty damn sure the Dallas shooter does not read the New York Times.
Maybe yes, maybe no, but the article is illustrative of the hate-filled rhetoric that the Times has provided a platform for (so long as it is anti-white and/or anti-police).
People will jump through hoops and claim that Dyson's hate is directed towards white privilege, or institutions controlled largely by whites, but the rhetoric paints all white Americans with a broad, negative brush.
Again, I ask what goal the Times thought it would achieve by publishing such drivel, and how the rich liberals who run that paper can sleep at night knowing the consequences of its actions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great Article about Nixon's War on Drugs in 2016
- In a 1974 study, the National Bureau of Standards warned that the kits “should not be used as sole evidence for the identification of a narcotic or drug of abuse.”
- Chemists themselves had long ago stopped relying on color tests, preferring more reliable mass spectrographs.
- By 1978, the Department of Justice had determined that field tests “should not be used for evidential purposes,”
[- b]The field tests in use today remain inadmissible at trial in nearly every jurisdiction[/b]; instead, prosecutors must present a secondary lab test using more reliable methods.
But this has proved to be a meaningless prohibition. Most drug cases in the United States are decided well before they reach trial, by the far more informal process of plea bargaining. In 2011, RTI International, a nonprofit research group based in North Carolina, found that prosecutors in nine of 10 jurisdictions it surveyed nationwide accepted guilty pleas based solely on the results of field tests, and in our own reporting, we confirmed that prosecutors or judges accept plea deals on that same basis in Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Jacksonville, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Newark, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Salt Lake City, San Diego, Seattle and Tampa.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/10/magazine/how-a-2-roadside-drug-test-sends-innocent-people-to-jail.html?hpw&rref=magazine&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region®ion=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well&_r=0
I don't understand.
Read the article.
Cops pull over someone for invalid turn, yeh right, tested a bread crumb, sent them to jail for a bogus drug felony, they lost their job, their home, and then cops said sorry, it was only a bread crumb.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great Article about Nixon's War on Drugs in 2016
- In a 1974 study, the National Bureau of Standards warned that the kits “should not be used as sole evidence for the identification of a narcotic or drug of abuse.”
- Chemists themselves had long ago stopped relying on color tests, preferring more reliable mass spectrographs.
- By 1978, the Department of Justice had determined that field tests “should not be used for evidential purposes,”
[- b]The field tests in use today remain inadmissible at trial in nearly every jurisdiction[/b]; instead, prosecutors must present a secondary lab test using more reliable methods.
But this has proved to be a meaningless prohibition. Most drug cases in the United States are decided well before they reach trial, by the far more informal process of plea bargaining. In 2011, RTI International, a nonprofit research group based in North Carolina, found that prosecutors in nine of 10 jurisdictions it surveyed nationwide accepted guilty pleas based solely on the results of field tests, and in our own reporting, we confirmed that prosecutors or judges accept plea deals on that same basis in Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Jacksonville, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Newark, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Salt Lake City, San Diego, Seattle and Tampa.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/10/magazine/how-a-2-roadside-drug-test-sends-innocent-people-to-jail.html?hpw&rref=magazine&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region®ion=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well&_r=0
I don't understand.
Anonymous wrote:Great Article about Nixon's War on Drugs in 2016
- In a 1974 study, the National Bureau of Standards warned that the kits “should not be used as sole evidence for the identification of a narcotic or drug of abuse.”
- Chemists themselves had long ago stopped relying on color tests, preferring more reliable mass spectrographs.
- By 1978, the Department of Justice had determined that field tests “should not be used for evidential purposes,”
[- b]The field tests in use today remain inadmissible at trial in nearly every jurisdiction[/b]; instead, prosecutors must present a secondary lab test using more reliable methods.
But this has proved to be a meaningless prohibition. Most drug cases in the United States are decided well before they reach trial, by the far more informal process of plea bargaining. In 2011, RTI International, a nonprofit research group based in North Carolina, found that prosecutors in nine of 10 jurisdictions it surveyed nationwide accepted guilty pleas based solely on the results of field tests, and in our own reporting, we confirmed that prosecutors or judges accept plea deals on that same basis in Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Jacksonville, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Newark, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Salt Lake City, San Diego, Seattle and Tampa.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/10/magazine/how-a-2-roadside-drug-test-sends-innocent-people-to-jail.html?hpw&rref=magazine&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region®ion=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well&_r=0
Anonymous wrote:Pretty damn sure the Dallas shooter does not read the New York Times.