Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean what would I have done? I think it's disgusting and deplorable, but I wouldn't have done anything. If my kids asked about it, I would have told them that it's a symbol of hate, and that he is an ignorant man.
This is America. There is freedom of speech and he was expressing his beliefs. Hopefully most will alienate him for those beliefs.
If he was white, I'd assume he'd been in prison and gotten them as a mark for his prison gang to help protect him. Either way, not someone I'd care to associate with.
You know some non-white Nazis and White Supremacists?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would have done nothing. He wasn't passing out literature. People, even hateful people, have a right to function in society.
I disagree. I think hateful people need to be shamed for their hate. They need to be called out for it, all the time, everywhere they go, by all the types of people.
Anonymous wrote:There's nothing you can do, unfortunately. I remember the first time I saw a guy like that in public - it was at a restaurant and he was wearing a t-shirt of a known white supremacist/neo-Nazi org.
Anonymous wrote:What do you mean what would I have done? I think it's disgusting and deplorable, but I wouldn't have done anything. If my kids asked about it, I would have told them that it's a symbol of hate, and that he is an ignorant man.
This is America. There is freedom of speech and he was expressing his beliefs. Hopefully most will alienate him for those beliefs.
If he was white, I'd assume he'd been in prison and gotten them as a mark for his prison gang to help protect him. Either way, not someone I'd care to associate with.
Anonymous wrote:
Hate to break it to you people, but kids (and yes, older kids!) offen do whatever is the most outrageous thing they know of.
Kids (like most kids now and then) generally just want to get a rise out of you.
Ignoring it kind of backfires on them.
Think about it.
Anonymous wrote:What do you mean what would I have done? I think it's disgusting and deplorable, but I wouldn't have done anything. If my kids asked about it, I would have told them that it's a symbol of hate, and that he is an ignorant man.
This is America. There is freedom of speech and he was expressing his beliefs. Hopefully most will alienate him for those beliefs.
If he was white, I'd assume he'd been in prison and gotten them as a mark for his prison gang to help protect him. Either way, not someone I'd care to associate with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Smiled at him with my mixed race kids and moved on with my day. First, he wasn't bothering you, and America is all about freedom. Second, you don't know his story in any way or his current beliefs. Third, even assuming the worst, hate is part of the world - seeing a tattoo is nothing.
Excellent points.
OP: the tattoos are likely the result of being in a prison gang. While there is no excuse for such tattoos, please be aware that joining these gangs is often the only means of survive in prison.
Yes - he should be saving up his money to pay for tattoo removal procedures, but that is not easy to do when no one will hire you as a ex-convict.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would have done nothing. He wasn't passing out literature. People, even hateful people, have a right to function in society.
I disagree. I think hateful people need to be shamed for their hate. They need to be called out for it, all the time, everywhere they go, by all the types of people.
Anonymous wrote:I would have done nothing. He wasn't passing out literature. People, even hateful people, have a right to function in society.