Timsup2nothin
Deity
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2013
- Messages
- 46,737
It's going on today, just using a Koran.
J

Tried. Can't follow. Sorry.
It's going on today, just using a Koran.
J
I feel completely out of my league here, countering an All-American gun-totin' ex military but I'm feeling nippy this fine evening. Doesn't the impact of the bullet have very little or no influence of the direction where and how the body falls? I've read that people who don't know they are shot won't even fall down at all (until a point is reached where fatality or unconsciouses kicks in of course). The idea we should fall when shot is ingrained in us from movies and that's why people who know they've been shot fall. And they are just as likely to slump forward as fall backward, more likely even because falling backward is quite unnatural.Brown's body did fall forward despite being shot in the upper area of the body. If he had been standing straight up, it would have knocked him backwards.
edit: And it was discussed. No consensus was reached. Not want to open this discussion again.
I'm great at not re-opening discussions aren't I?
WASHINGTON — President Obama, grappling with how to respond to the racial unrest in Ferguson, Mo., and a wave of anger at law enforcement officials across the country, said Monday that he would tighten standards on the provision of military-style equipment to local police departments and provide funds for police officers to wear cameras.
But Mr. Obama stopped short of curtailing the transfer of military-grade gear to local law enforcement authorities and continued to put off a visit to Ferguson. Instead, the White House tried to channel the rage over the fatal police shooting of a black teenager there into a national debate about how to restore trust between the police and the public.
Administration officials said they concluded after a review that the vast majority of transfers of military-style equipment strengthened local policing, even after the police in Ferguson were criticized for heavy-handed use of such gear to quell protests last summer. But the officials said local authorities needed common standards in the types of hardware they requested and better training in how to use it.
Following two weeks of images from protests in Ferguson, Mo., where police officers deployed military gear and equipment to quell unrest, President Obama ordered a review of several federal programs that provide money and equipment to local police.
All told, the changes were modest, and Mr. Obama himself was circumspect in remarks about Ferguson after an orchestrated day of meetings at the White House with civil rights and religious leaders, big-city mayors, and law enforcement officials. The president seemed eager to keep the focus not on what happened in Ferguson but on its broader lessons for the country.
“Ferguson laid bare a problem that is not unique to St. Louis,” the president told reporters, describing a “simmering distrust that exists between too many police departments and too many communities of color.” He called for a “sustained conversation in which, in each region of the country, people are talking about this honestly.”
The Ferguson case, with its fiercely disputed facts, has posed a particular dilemma for Mr. Obama, forcing him to balance his sympathy for the anger it has aroused among African-Americans with his commitment to the rule of law. He has not spoken about it in the raw, personal tones he brought to other racially charged cases, like the shooting of Trayvon Martin in 2012 or even the arrest of Henry Louis Gates Jr. in 2009 for disorderly conduct after the police thought he was breaking and entering his own home.
The limited nature of the White House response also reflects the reality that transferring military-style surplus gear to police departments remains politically popular in Congress and in the municipalities. While Congress held hearings after the initial unrest in Ferguson in August, it has not acted to curb its grants and transfers of such equipment.
Curtailing those transfers, experts said, would be a reversal of years of policy and would have scant support in Congress. The militarization of police has been part of a broader counterterrorism strategy of fortifying American cities, which took root after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and has become a reliable source of federal largess for local authorities...
This guy needs to learn how to speak good.
"That's right"
Instead, the White House tried to channel the rage over the fatal police shooting of a black teenager there into a national debate about how to restore trust between the police and the public.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Farrakhan
Ah right. "An eye for an eye" and this is how the whole world ends up blind.
MLK would not approve this message.
"Hands up, don't Shoot" seems to be entrenching into popular culture whether it is true or not.
Now Congress and Pro athletes are doing it.
http://www.nydailynews.com/members-congress-hands-gesture-house-floor-article-1.2030010