It's bogus for him to raise the first place. He's saying black people are more likely to get shot by cops, because black people are more likely to commit violent crimes. Except that none of the people he cites in that article were committing violent crimes.
I get that. What you are saying is partly true however they are isolated incidents and held up as proof of institutional widespread racism at play rather than isolated incidents.
Once the race card is brought into the equation or any kind of discrimination with the portrayal of something more widespread than isolated incidents of "rogue" policemen then you have to take into account how the institution is acting which requires more than a dozen isolated incidents.
Therefore it is quite reasonable to say (as it is in this country) that a higher percentage of violent crime is undertaken by black Americans than black Americans are a percentage of the population.
What it boils down to is that there is a movement in America (and here) that is insistent that their whole demographic is being disproportionately treated and if you just hold up the black statistics then you can think they have a point..........until you add in the comparison to whites, hispanics etc etc. (see links at end)
So while in some cases I agree with you that
some of these incidents seem not to be applicable to a "violent crime" it does not seem to be a case of widespread institutional racism. What you can say is that the American police forces may have far too weak vetting systems and or assessments and there seems to be a share of American police that are entirely unsuitable for the job. It is something that is always highlighted by minorities yet ignored when it is not a minority.
I was challenged a dozen or so times a while back over the space of 6 months by some cop (UK) that thinks he is the boss and just wants to give it the big one. I went through a spell where I would walk the 3 miles home from my pool matches (after 12pm) and nearly every week the same cop (in car) but with a different partner each time, coming up the hill from the city centre, would stop me (and my pal) asking the same question "Alright Lads, what you up to, where you going. Are those your bikes, had a drink have we". He would then ask for our name and address which we would then give him and then after hanging around waiting for 5 minutes and getting his all clear he would give us that look that he didn't trust us and say "OK then off ya go"
The point being this cop knew we were the same 2 that he had stopped before, at the same place at the same time on the same day of the week each week. He knew we both had clean records, and he knew they were our bikes that we were always pushing home because we had had a few drinks but he obviously felt some power but the new (at the time) terrorism laws in this country meant that some cops suddenly felt they could do what they want just to throw their weight around.
My mate got really wound up after a few times and refused to give his name and address saying it was police bullying and I had to convince him just to give his details so we could go home. I wrote a written complaint in the end and we also went a different route home.
Point being we are both white, not black and the policeman was an over officious idiot who wanted to act the big man in front of his partner.
My main point being that yes there are arsehole police like there are arsehole non police and there are racist police just as there are racist non police.
When a policeman shoots a black person it is immediately cried out as racism. What is it when a white man is shot without reason by the police? Is there a difference there?
To suggest a discrimination you have to take account of stats and details and valid reasoning. The jury that declined to indict policeman in the Michael Brown case were 9 white, 3 black.
Brown had committed Robbery and when the police officer blocked him and his accomplice in Brown reached through the police car window to get the officers gun and in the struggle it fired twice.[<<<This is now a violent crime] He then ran off.
Now you can start to use hindsight arguments of people being unarmed but police do have to make a snap decision. I think in this case there are grounds to suggest the policeman was not acting out of racism and was shooting to protect himself however you can question him shooting the number of times he shot Brown.
How many of these incidents can be identified as racist? Yes they can mostly be identified as police not acting accordingly but they are in most cases stopping someone who has committed an offence and/or has a record. That they acted incorrectly after the event of stopping them does not make it a racist shooting.
The Trayvon Martin shooting wasn't even a police shooting. It was a neighbourhood watch guy and the guy was cleared by forensic evidence of self defence.
3 of the 6 officers tried in the Freddie Gray case were black officers. Why is this a racist police action?
You can always argue about deprived areas, social class, poverty etc as being causative or at least some reason for the increased crime rates but that is not racism. It is a problem that needs addressing across society as a whole for all races and demographics and it won't be helped by cries of racism. It will be helped by the state choosing to work on the issue.
There is one stat (can't find a source at the mo) that suggests that yes more black people % are stopped by police BUT once stopped white people are more likely to be shot.
At the end of the day we can both agree there is racism in America and there is probably more than in the UK and yes if there is racism in society then by sheer logic there will be the same amount of racism in all areas. However that does not mean that any shooting of a black person by a white man or white police officer is a racist shooting.
What it does show however is that police are too ready to use their weapons. Sometimes in cases where they shouldn't have even thought to unholster them but the reality is that while the NRA continues this bad guy with a gun / Good guy with a gun policy and your government goes along with the "right to bear arms" then this sort of stuff is going to continue. There will be whites and blacks and hispanics killed but it shouldn't continually be a black shooting highlighted and white shooting ignored.
To end, the intended message of Black Lives Matter (BLM) is fine. But then white lives matter too don't they? Why are they not protesting about any people getting shot, instead protesting about
black people getting shot? People as a whole, as American residents. As a problem of the country? What this sort of protest instantly does is divide from the start. IT also seems to be that they are ready to jump on anything they can without thinking. Like the "hands up don't shoot" chant which was taken from "witness accounts" which were subsequently dismissed and discredited.
Like many activist groups I suspect they start off with noble intentions but once they get a bit larger then it becomes a vehicle for others to utilise and there are questions about the funding behind the group.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-trending-36777582
Personally before all this BLM thing started up a decade ago I used to house share. My wife and I and our young kids shared with another black single mum and her sister and their children. It was a big house and made things cheaper. Like my wife they were black Portuguese with roots from Angola and Cape Verde. When talking to her it was apparent that she felt white people owed black people. She would say that for hundreds of years her people were treated as slaves and animals and it wasn't good enough to just give them equality.
I think we were talking about "positive" discrimination but that was the gist of things. Her stance was; Yes black people should get positive discrimination, they should get the job first, they should get the houses first, white people owed them. My wife agreed with her to a degree but is not so hell bent on this being the payback, revenge etc. Just that she thinks that white people owe her people.
Now I am not suggesting this is the view of all black communities in all countries but there certainly does often seem to be some of this in a lot of what I see in this country and abroad. People of influence like to piggyback these sort of issues and drive an agenda. Black musicians are well on top of it and are very vocal and not surprisingly they sell loads of records and get the gig at the superbowl on the back of their popularity. A lot of people like to stoke these fires because of what they can get out of it. The initial intent was fine but clever people use the cause to direct the argument to benefit themselves.
Sorry I'll stop because that went on longer than I meant. I just wish all people could just stand back, stop hating and let us all have proper equality and not always demand more rights than someone else. In a lot of cases these fights for equality are not fights for equality, they are fights for preferment and I hate positive discrimination because it means there will never be equality.
http://www.unz.com/article/race-and-crime-in-america/
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/12/u...e-use-of-force-but-not-in-shootings.html?_r=3