Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sell lemonade outside your apartment building.
There was actually a little more to that story. Mom was loudly hawking said lemonaid and woman working at home complained to her and they got into a verbal altercation. Then she called police. I agree the decision to call police was unnecessary but it wasn't just like a little girl selling lemonade led to the police call.
I think in many cases a verbal confrontation/altercation is a contributing factor. The viral stories elide this part.
But nonetheless, you don't call police because you get into a heated argument with someone. That these people did likely points to underlying racism.
Right. So like PP said. Sell lemonade outside your apartment building, without someone saying you can’t do that, then verbally defend your dd’s lemonade stand. Or as most people would say, sell lemonade outside your apartment building.
And your whole theory about confrontation/altercation being a factor. Who started the fight? Then who called the cops?
.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ice hockey
Tell me about it.
https://www.npr.org/2019/01/09/683501433/father-and-son-who-are-african-americans-discuss-racism-in-youth-hockey
Not surprising, considering the fact that every NPR segment is about a "victim."![]()
So the problem isn’t racism, it’s NPR?
Yep. NPR makes up these stories just so they can have a narrative.....says the person who has never read or really listened to NPR but likes to continue his/her own narrative about liberal media bias (because in their weird world, only liberals care about racism, I guess).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ice hockey
Tell me about it.
https://www.npr.org/2019/01/09/683501433/father-and-son-who-are-african-americans-discuss-racism-in-youth-hockey
Not surprising, considering the fact that every NPR segment is about a "victim."![]()
So the problem isn’t racism, it’s NPR?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ice hockey
Tell me about it.
https://www.npr.org/2019/01/09/683501433/father-and-son-who-are-african-americans-discuss-racism-in-youth-hockey
Not surprising, considering the fact that every NPR segment is about a "victim."![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ice hockey
Tell me about it.
https://www.npr.org/2019/01/09/683501433/father-and-son-who-are-african-americans-discuss-racism-in-youth-hockey
Anonymous wrote:Ice hockey
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sell lemonade outside your apartment building.
There was actually a little more to that story. Mom was loudly hawking said lemonaid and woman working at home complained to her and they got into a verbal altercation. Then she called police. I agree the decision to call police was unnecessary but it wasn't just like a little girl selling lemonade led to the police call.
I think in many cases a verbal confrontation/altercation is a contributing factor. The viral stories elide this part.
But nonetheless, you don't call police because you get into a heated argument with someone. That these people did likely points to underlying racism.
Anonymous wrote:Sell lemonade outside your apartment building.