Corolinth wrote:
Michael Brown is not Trayvon Martin in a number of respects. The first is that according to reports, Michael Brown actually was fairly large and imposing. The second is the incident occurred at noon and there are witnesses. The third is that the shooter is actually a police officer. The fourth is that the officer did not call for medical attention, either for himself or for Michael Brown.
Indications are that the officer was taken to the hospital.
Quote:
Self defense claims are sketchy at best. Unlike George Zimmerman, the officer involved in this shooting was not checked into a hospital with serious injuries. He does appear to have been belted in the face, but he was certainly not drowning in his own blood as Zimmerman claimed to be. The most serious injury he suffered was to his pride, being punched by an uppity young black kid who wasn't respecting his authoritah.
So, if someone punches you in the face, because they didn't inflict serious injury with that blow (as determined later by medical personnel) that means if you defend yourself it was because of
wounded pride? I know how anxious you are to get that "respect athouritah" joke out there that's so frequently mistaken for actual argument, but if you think getting hit in the face is merely wounded pride, you're a total **** idiot. This officer has 6 years on the force with nary a complaint against him - not just no justified complaints, but none at all, yet you want to contend that one day he thought he'd shoot a black kid for injuring his pride. Yes, clearly that total lack of self-control and disregard for the consequences is what got him through 6 years with a clean record.
He may well have been unjustified in the shooting, but it was pretty clearly NOT because of injured pride, no matter how much you might think South Park is inspired social commentary.
First, blows to the head (as repeated evidence from Iraq and Afghanistan, not to mention major-league football) have shown can cause other problems - the immediate kind, like unconsciousness, or later problems from concussion that may not be readily apparent.
Second, when someone is attacking you, you do not magically know at what point they will stop - being hit in the face is an
extreme level of threat, especially when the attacker is larger and stronger than you.
Quote:
Perhaps the biggest and most significant difference between the Michael Brown shooting and that of Trayvon Martin is that police in Florida did not repeatedly violate First Amendment protections. Speaking as a resident of St. Louis who does have to drive through Ferguson on a regular basis for business, I now feel more threatened by Ferguson police who may decide they should arrest me for my own protection against violent protesters than I do the angry black people protesting the police.
That would not be a difference, mainly because the alleged First Amendment issues after the fact have nothing whatsoever to do with the justification or lack thereof of the shooting in the first place. This is a difference only for people looking for an excuse to feel threatened by the police, and who think reporter's versions of incidents are always impeccable, or at least are impeccable when it's convenient for them. You seem to have a real problem comprehending the first amendment, since you also thought that Freedom of Religion means that people have the right to expect the government to force someone else to spend money for their birth control, even when less-intrusive means of providing the same product are available. Here's a hiunt - the First Amendment is not a blunt instrument for Coro to club people he doesn't like over the head with.
Quote:
Reporters with cameras are being arrested while reporting on the story. That is a clear cut case of the police curtailing First Amendment rights. That is not an opinion. That is an objective fact.
So your contention is that reporters can never be arrested while reporting, and are above the law?
The only "objective fact" here is that you don't think through the implications of your statements, nor understand the First Amendment very well. It's nice to know, though, that you think we have a class of super-citizens immune to all allegation of wrongdoing based on nothing more than their own say-so - at least as long as it's convenient for complaints about cops.
Quote:
Journalists reporting on events in Ferguson are being arrested for reporting on events in Ferguson. For those of you who have ever said that the Second Amendment exists to protect the First Amendment: Why are you not calling for Ferguson police to be shot? I post this question expecting to be arrested tomorrow for having done so.
For those of you (that, specifically would be you) that think the First Amendment is there to provide automatic canonical truth to the claims of reporters, and immunity from arrest under any circumstance, why are you not out there shooting the police yourself? Oh right. It's about feeling cool and rebellious, and most importantly smarter than anyone else. I mean, you're right there in MO. Why don't you get off your *** and go do something about it?