NFL teams do not want Kaepernick. They don’t want the distraction. They don’t want the baggage. They don’t want his activism. They don’t want his divisiveness. He’s not welcome. No amount of pissing and moaning is going to change that.
NFL teams do not want Kaepernick. They don’t want the distraction. They don’t want the baggage. They don’t want his activism. They don’t want his divisiveness. He’s not welcome. No amount of pissing and moaning is going to change that.
In the midst of a national catastrophe, one image has surfaced to comfort and guide us: a muscly dude in camo pants…
It’s reasonably simple.
I agree, and lacking any more details than are in this article, I don’t see a reason to say the reporter acted immorally.
Agreed, and it could have been people who were short on food and genuinely needed it (I think your life saving drug example is probably even better than food). It also might have been common criminals taking advantage of a disaster. I just don’t see a reason to pile on this reporter over calling the cops. Seems…
I think what people should do is consider the context before they make moral judgments. But then, I’m a decent person.
He saw a crime and reported a crime. Sounds like what people should do. Cops can prioritize as necessary. Seems wrong to assume the looters were all just trying to feed their starving children, as opposed to hitting the pharmacy or other non necessities. And how do we know the food was about to go bad, or about to…
I’d be inclined to argue looting frequently devolves into violence, (heck, dead body) and as such police SHOULD be notified.
Having the sick impulse to call the cops, from the site of one of the worst flood disasters in American history, to report victims of that flood for looting a supermarket; but also: a crime
If you read my initial post, I say that she showed poor judgement and could have reasonably foreseen backlash. I just think that outrage is manufactured in a world where millions of people post song lyrics on social media everyday.
I can’t suffer people who think music tastes equate to moral standards. I listen to NWA, have a law degree and work in politics so, personally, I wouldn’t tie a principal playing FTP to him hating police.
I can’t suffer people who think music tastes equate to moral standards. I listen to NWA, have a law degree and work in politics so, personally, I wouldn’t tie a principal playing FTP to him hating police.
Just so you know you fooling no one here about who you are and what you are about
So if a Black principal posted the lyrics to “Fuck the Police” that would be cool with you?
Dude, she just posted lyrics to a Toby Keith song. Is she an idiot for not realizing the potential for backlash as a public official? Yes. Is she probably intentionally advocating racist lynchings in a public forum? Unlikely.
I suspect they mean that without any kind of pre-arrangement, ANY large group is going to be difficult to accommodate (seating together, for example), but moreso if the group have a particular need (such as available Wheelchair spaces, or CC devices, etc), because these things take time to organise. I assume the…
People who don’t want to spend upwards of twenty dollars (if you’re in a major city like LA, or New York, it can be much more) on a film experience that is hindered by something they find unpleasant or distracting aren’t assholes, I’m sorry.
You aren’t an asshole if you don’t want an experience you paid for to be ruined by something you find distracting or unpleasant.
So are we all taking the stance that Trump can never do anything right?
How many flat screens, video game consoles, and car payments would make up for healthcare? Because a lot of people I see complaining about healthcare costs have plenty of those luxuries.