Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretty sad. These times are difficult for police officers, but I suspect black police officers are having an even harder time.
That he was accused of wanting to be a white boy is awful. I remember back in school that high-achieving black students were ridiculed by other blacks for "acting white." That's pretty sad...
I remember that too. Ridiculous.
It still goes on today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretty sad. These times are difficult for police officers, but I suspect black police officers are having an even harder time.
That he was accused of wanting to be a white boy is awful. I remember back in school that high-achieving black students were ridiculed by other blacks for "acting white." That's pretty sad...
I remember that too. Ridiculous.
It still goes on today.
So question...are we going to take this story in its proper context and realize that it is only this officer's personal experience or are we going to jump off the cliff of conjecture and come to the conclusion that this is the narrative of every single black cop in the country?
It is indeed one man's perspective - at least one man who's brave enough to share it with the public. There are others who may support him but who are too scared to come forward.
We will never know . . .
Well I know. I'm Black and DH is a Police officer that has risen through the ranks. And guess what, he is BLACK. The officer in the before mentioned story' p reality is not every Black police officer's reality. Just like intelligent thinking people would not conclude that one white man's reality, regardless of occupation, is another or every other white man's reality of similar occupation.
Conservatives love a token.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretty sad. These times are difficult for police officers, but I suspect black police officers are having an even harder time.
That he was accused of wanting to be a white boy is awful. I remember back in school that high-achieving black students were ridiculed by other blacks for "acting white." That's pretty sad...
I remember that too. Ridiculous.
It still goes on today.
So question...are we going to take this story in its proper context and realize that it is only this officer's personal experience or are we going to jump off the cliff of conjecture and come to the conclusion that this is the narrative of every single black cop in the country?
It is indeed one man's perspective - at least one man who's brave enough to share it with the public. There are others who may support him but who are too scared to come forward.
We will never know . . .
Well I know. I'm Black and DH is a Police officer that has risen through the ranks. And guess what, he is BLACK. The officer in the before mentioned story' p reality is not every Black police officer's reality. Just like intelligent thinking people would not conclude that one white man's reality, regardless of occupation, is another or every other white man's reality of similar occupation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretty sad. These times are difficult for police officers, but I suspect black police officers are having an even harder time.
That he was accused of wanting to be a white boy is awful. I remember back in school that high-achieving black students were ridiculed by other blacks for "acting white." That's pretty sad...
I remember that too. Ridiculous.
It still goes on today.
So question...are we going to take this story in its proper context and realize that it is only this officer's personal experience or are we going to jump off the cliff of conjecture and come to the conclusion that this is the narrative of every single black cop in the country?
It is indeed one man's perspective - at least one man who's brave enough to share it with the public. There are others who may support him but who are too scared to come forward.
We will never know . . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretty sad. These times are difficult for police officers, but I suspect black police officers are having an even harder time.
That he was accused of wanting to be a white boy is awful. I remember back in school that high-achieving black students were ridiculed by other blacks for "acting white." That's pretty sad...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretty sad. These times are difficult for police officers, but I suspect black police officers are having an even harder time.
That he was accused of wanting to be a white boy is awful. I remember back in school that high-achieving black students were ridiculed by other blacks for "acting white." That's pretty sad...
I remember that too. Ridiculous.
It still goes on today.
So question...are we going to take this story in its proper context and realize that it is only this officer's personal experience or are we going to jump off the cliff of conjecture and come to the conclusion that this is the narrative of every single black cop in the country?
It is indeed one man's perspective - at least one man who's brave enough to share it with the public. There are others who may support him but who are too scared to come forward.
We will never know . . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretty sad. These times are difficult for police officers, but I suspect black police officers are having an even harder time.
That he was accused of wanting to be a white boy is awful. I remember back in school that high-achieving black students were ridiculed by other blacks for "acting white." That's pretty sad...
I remember that too. Ridiculous.
It still goes on today.
So question...are we going to take this story in its proper context and realize that it is only this officer's personal experience or are we going to jump off the cliff of conjecture and come to the conclusion that this is the narrative of every single black cop in the country?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretty sad. These times are difficult for police officers, but I suspect black police officers are having an even harder time.
That he was accused of wanting to be a white boy is awful. I remember back in school that high-achieving black students were ridiculed by other blacks for "acting white." That's pretty sad...
I remember that too. Ridiculous.
It still goes on today.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretty sad. These times are difficult for police officers, but I suspect black police officers are having an even harder time.
That he was accused of wanting to be a white boy is awful. I remember back in school that high-achieving black students were ridiculed by other blacks for "acting white." That's pretty sad...
I remember that too. Ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretty sad. These times are difficult for police officers, but I suspect black police officers are having an even harder time.
That he was accused of wanting to be a white boy is awful. I remember back in school that high-achieving black students were ridiculed by other blacks for "acting white." That's pretty sad...
Anonymous wrote:Pretty sad. These times are difficult for police officers, but I suspect black police officers are having an even harder time.
"I watched and lived through the crime that took place in the hood. My own black people killing others over nothing. Crack heads and heroin addicts lined the lobby of my building as I shuffled around them to make my way to our 1 bedroom apartment with 6 of us living inside. I wanted to help my community and stop watching the blood of African Americans spilled on the street at the hands of a fellow black man."
But Stalien expressed his frustration that his efforts to investigate black-on-black violence and bring the culprits to justice had met with outright hostility from the very community he sought to protect.
"They called me 'Uncle Tom', and 'wanna be white boy', and I couldn't understand why," he wrote.
"My own fellow black men and women attacking me, wishing for my death, wishing for the death of my family. I was so confused, so torn, I couldn't understand why my own black people would turn against me, when every time they called …I was there. Every time someone died….I was there. Every time they were going through one of the worst moments in their lives…I was there. So why was I the enemy?"