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Mr. Scorpio

Mr. Scorpio's Journal
Mr. Scorpio's Journal
August 5, 2016

Where is your Oz now?

August 5, 2016

Cops Successfully Disarm A White Person Without Killing Them Part 7

Jesse Williams: “We know that police somehow manage to de-escalate, disarm and not kill white people everyday.”

7. In San Diego, Lance Tamayo pointed his loaded 9mm pistol at police officers near a park where small children were playing.



Eventually, an officer shot Tamayo one time to disarm him. The police then called his cell phone and proceeded to speak to him for 15 minutes to negotiate a surrender.

http://fox5sandiego.com/2015/06/22/man-gets-3-month-sentence-for-waving-gun-at-cops/
August 5, 2016

Cops Successfully Disarm A White Person Without Killing Them Part 6

Jesse Williams: “We know that police somehow manage to de-escalate, disarm and not kill white people everyday.”

6. When police responded to a call reporting erratic behavior from open carry advocate, Joseph Houseman, they found him on the street wielding a rifle.



After shouting expletives, and refusing a breathalyzer test, officers retrieved his gun. Houseman was not arrested and his gun was returned the following day.

http://video-embed.mlive.com/services/player/bcpid2436806291001?bctid=3621780684001&bckey=AQ~~,AAAAQBxUr7k~,PsMaWpexSO0gBGbwp0HC65I60alsnUQ1
August 5, 2016

KING: Second Amendment protections don’t apply equally to African-Americans

SHAUN KING

If I've learned anything over the past two years of the Black Lives Matter movement, it's that the right to bear arms, a constitutional right protected by America's Second Amendment, does not apply equally to whites and African-Americans. Quite the contrary. Being seen with a gun — fake or real, licensed or not, or even being suspected of having a gun or something that may not even be a gun — while black, in the presence of anybody who isn't black, particularly if they are police officers, is damn near a death wish.

This is not hyperbole.

I encourage you to perform the following test:

Ask your white friends or co-workers, on a scale of 1-10, how nervous would they be, with 1 being not at all and 10 being on the verge of a panic attack, if they possessed a legally owned firearm in the presence of police during a routine traffic stop.

Now, ask your black friends or co-workers the very same question.

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/king-amendment-doesn-protect-african-americans-equally-article-1.2738379
August 5, 2016

Random thoughts...

1. Trump is actually "winning." He's winning so much that people are getting sick of it, just as he promised everyone.

2. Apparently, we're supposed to regard law enforcement as some sort of land predator and behave around them as if we are their prey.

3. The world right now is like a pot of water. The temperature is slowing rising and we're like all crabs in it, with some of us pulling others back into the water and to all of our eventual doom.

4. When life is fleeting, everything is unfinished business in the end.

5. You can never have all the time you need to tell the people that you love how much you love them. When they're gone, you realize that you've never told them enough.

6. Sharing really is caring.





August 5, 2016

Everyone's Future.

August 5, 2016

When ‘White Fragility’ Affects Rappers

The true tale of why Remedy and Diabolic need to have several seats

Talib Kweli Greene

Let’s deal with the facts. Hip-hop was primarily created by black and Latinx youth living in the South Bronx in the 1970s. During that time, highways were being built through poor neighborhoods, destroying the fabric of these communities. Along with budget cuts to programs designed to help poor people of color, these changes disenfranchised many. Arts and after school programs were cut, and rather than being in safe learning environments, many kids took to the streets for their education. They created new slang and a rebellious fashion. They plugged into the lamp posts for power and made up new dances while the DJ played the funkiest part of a song over and over again. They created a new form of poetry, a new form of music that they used to express their pain. Like the rose that grew from the concrete, hip-hop became a quite literal response to systemic oppression faced primarily by poor people of color.

While the South Bronx was, and still is, primarily poor black and Latinx people, there were young white people from all over New York City who were inspired by hip-hop from its inception. Particularly in the graffiti world, white kids were making their mark in hip-hop as early as the original pioneers. It would be more rare to see white DJs, MCs, and B-boys back then, but as hip-hop involved over time, more and more white people became involved in every aspect of the culture and were respected as being down by law. Hip-hop has never been about segregation or some sort of supremacy. Hip-hop has always been about equality. Peace, love, unity and having fun.

Hip-hop has always also been about justice. As rappers moved to the forefront of hip-hop culture in the early 1980s, young people of color were in a unique position to address the oppression we face through music. The first big record to do this was “The Message” by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five. The success of “The Message” created a lane for “conscious” hip-hop to be successful. However, the more conscious hip-hop became, the more pro-black it became. While poor people of every race could relate to Melle Mel’s rap in “The Message,” by the early 1990s popular hip-hop artists like X-Clan, Gang Starr and Public Enemy were pushing a message that was focused primarily on the needs of black people. Hugely inspired by Malcolm X, these artists spoke of self determination and worth and demanded we be accountable for pathologies in our community while simultaneously combating a system that is set up for us to fail. As a young black man raised in a culturally nationalist home, this hip-hop spoke to me. These MCs were my heroes.

No matter the message, white kids always will be the primary consumers of hip-hop music around the world. White kids are most likely to be the ones with the money to support the music, another result of systemic oppression and white privilege. Some of these white kids go beyond being consumers and actually participate in the culture. They learn how to rap, DJ, B-Boy, write graffiti, and they become excellent at it. Because hip-hop as a culture is based on skill, as long as you have skills, you will be respected regardless of race. You will be given what is sometimes crudely referred to as “a pass.” This is a beautiful thing. It is proof that hip-hop has unified more people of different races than any other culture.

https://medium.com/cuepoint/when-white-fragility-affects-rappers-d912e4ba0d8f#.f3fnyoise
August 4, 2016

Cops Successfully Disarm A White Person Without Killing Them Part 5

Jesse Williams: “We know that police somehow manage to de-escalate, disarm and not kill white people everyday.”

5. After killing three and wounding nine at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado, Robert Lewis Dear was brought into police custody.



He surrendered after a five-hour long standoff with police.

http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2015/11/28/457674369/planned-parenthood-shooting-police-name-suspect-procession-for-fallen-officer
August 4, 2016

Cops Successfully Disarm A White Person Without Killing Them Part 4

Jesse Williams: “We know that police somehow manage to de-escalate, disarm and not kill white people everyday.”

4. North Carolina man arrested for firing at a deputy.



“All of a sudden he pulls the gun up and makes some curse words and fortunately and luckily the deputy was able to grab the barrel of the gun and shove him backwards and take control of the shotgun,” said Wake County Sheriff Donnie Harrison in an interview with WTVD.

http://abc11.com/news/man-accused-of-shooting-at-wake-deputy-/1417327/

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