You don't have to get the bus, you can just get in your car and figure out things for yourself. You don't have to jump on bandwagons.
I'm not sure that if you want progress and change you have to "support" BlackLivesMatter at all. People are starting to see that, especially when the true colours keep coming out of what it's all about.
It hasn't really been much more than a front to divide people even more, the point about equality has been completely lost and forgotten about.
The Premier League are back tracking and saying "They dont support the politics of BLM" even though they had their logo plastered over everything.
If everyone gets in their own car you end up with gridlock, nobody making an progress or getting anywhere and just getting roadrage at everyone else even though they just want to get to somewhere close to where you want to go.
So embarrassing reading stories like this back.
How we were back then.
Statue campaign for dropped black player
Then again you might get on a bus thinking you are going somewhere but it takes you somewhere completely different, you are then on the bus
And as soon as you realise it's not taking you that near to your destination you can choose to get off.
Good luck with forcing change on your own. A thousand bees coming at you individually are easy to avoid. A thousand bees coming at you in a swarm are a big problem.
This is a good idea NickA good idea I think for football clubs would be to have integration events in their city / area. Maybe have some of the players there from different backgrounds and countries to be interviewed about their life experiences.
I'd happily listen and take on board things that way than some pricks smashing up statues etc or using it for politics.
A bit like the supporters club Q and A stuff but with the aim of integration / education.
Football clubs have a fairly broad range of players / nationalities (not so much in the lower leagues).
Even so, we have Bakayoko and Biamou who would have grown up in different countries. Then players like Jodi Jones who grew up in London (which the majority of city fans won't have) as a mixed race kid.
Even ex players like Michael Doyle who would have grown up in Ireland would be "different" to people born and raised in Coventry. The obvious one is when Bigi tells his story about moving over to Coventry, that sort of thing is going to go much further.
It's just about sharing experiences / integrating. Then that breeds that sort of attitude between the fans. (well the majority, not the ignorant cunts)
Yeah, people are starting to try and get off now that they have realised all isn't as it seems. There won't be anybody on the bus soon so it will just stop.
I guess it's more like others are seeing the popularity of that particular route and sending out their own buses using the same route number to get people on board even though they're heading to a less popular destination. If you then decide to change the route number all the time people will just be confused and it wouldn't be long before the imitators copied it again.
There isn't a foolproof means of doing it, but a collective will be more effective than a load of individuals.
I've been asking about the aims and stuff and it turns out the aims are just pathetic politics. Raised over a million off the back of it though.Getting lost with all the analogies here. Unless people are clear about what success looks like, or what the end goal is, I guess we’re going to keep hearing conflicting messages and seeing different actions carried out under the same banner.
Getting lost with all the analogies here. Unless people are clear about what success looks like, or what the end goal is, I guess we’re going to keep hearing conflicting messages and seeing different actions carried out under the same banner.
If you’re cynical, the vague nature of what any success would like is deliberate.
To use an example, dismantling Physical legal structures e.g. discrimination laws (against women, LGBT and POC) was a objective goal that could be achieved.
On social media, and even close friends of mine talk of dismantling/changing ‘the system’. It is often the case that the issues and/or solutions are addressed in a very abstract, metaphysical way.
I read Burke at university, commenting on the French Revolution and he warned against the dangerous of such upheaval on metaphysical abstractions.
I suppose what I’m looking for are some of the leading figures in the campaign to lay out what the concrete objectives are in the short and long term, with some idea of a strategy. The war in Afghanistan has gone on for 20 years precisely because nobody could say what ‘mission complete’ would look like.
I get that I’m a scientist thinking in black and white terms (excuse the pun).
Defund the Police (Which means get rid of the police but if you get questioned about it, it means "Reroute funding")
That has also meant different things according to who you ask. Some literally mean completely scrap it, but others mean to cut the funding and reroute it elsewhere. The appeal of sound bites is that everyone thinks it applies to them, but that’s also the drawback.
I suppose what I’m looking for are some of the leading figures in the campaign to lay out what the concrete objectives are in the short and long term, with some idea of a strategy. The war in Afghanistan has gone on for 20 years precisely because nobody could say what ‘mission complete’ would look like.
I get that I’m a scientist thinking in black and white terms (excuse the pun).
Defund the Police (Which means get rid of the police but if you get questioned about it, it means "Reroute funding")
It means get rid of the police by your interpretation of it. Doesn't mean everyone means it that way. It can mean anything from slight budget cuts, to change how it is spent on law and order, to the crackpot militants that mean completely get rid of the police.
MAGA got loads of people on board. Because it was open to interpretation and what one person believes would make America great would be what another thinks would be terrible for it. But they bother gather under the same banner.
Same with Fund the NHS. Hardly anyone would disagree with that. But it could mean more funding for frontline, adding in levels of management or getting private companies involved amongst many other things. I imagine quite a few wouldn't be so keen on the last two though.
That's the thing. "Depending on who you ask". I mean when you research it, the people pushing it want the police to be scrapped completely, all of the speakers at marches and protests seem to be pushing that.
It's like when we had NOPM, it stood for Not One Penny More but it was Not One Penny More when we were losing or if there was a big game coming up.
BLM has been around for years and has aims and propaganda when you have a look into it, it shouldn't have really been the phrase that was pushed. It's like somebody pushing "English Defence League" now and saying it's for army vets who have defending the country. There was such a frenzy after George Floyd that nobody really stopped to think, everybody just jumped on it.
Somebody has now made over a million quid from it in this country alone, how much worldwide?
That's the thing. "Depending on who you ask". I mean when you research it, the people pushing it want the police to be scrapped completely, all of the speakers at marches and protests seem to be pushing that.
It's like when we had NOPM, it stood for Not One Penny More but it was Not One Penny More when we were losing or if there was a big game coming up.
BLM has been around for years and has aims and propaganda when you have a look into it, it shouldn't have really been the phrase that was pushed. It's like somebody pushing "English Defence League" now and saying it's for army vets who have defending the country. There was such a frenzy after George Floyd that nobody really stopped to think, everybody just jumped on it.
Somebody has now made over a million quid from it in this country alone, how much worldwide?
A huge movement now but it risks being undermined by lack of direction.
Could've done with you in about a million threads about CCFC protests.
The protests to get us back in Coventry had a very clear aim, the ones to get rid of SISU sort of but few could answer ‘and who should replace them?’.
Are you claiming all the millions of people marching and protesting believe everything the leaders of the BPM org believe?
If not, what’s your point? That protesters should all leave when someone with shitty views turns up? You just come across as “this isn’t perfect so we should ignore it”. It’s perfectly possible to say “I agree with black lives matter but I don’t agree with defunding the police (or whatever)”. I don’t get why you’re expecting purity from a grassroots uprising.
It’s a real problem with a lot of social movements these days. Hard and fast legislation changes aren’t what’s needed and that’s what protest has been effective at. You can’t protest the government about racism in society for example because they don’t have the power to change it. So who are you demanding action from and how do you hold them accountable?
I mean, Black Lives Matter is the actual thing that they founded and was already founded before it was suddenly pushed. The Premier League are using the logo on shirts.
I'm claiming that not many people seemed to have stopped to check things before jumping on it and asked what the aims were. Of course a lot of people were there because they wanted Equality, then again people march for Brexit based on being misled on aims and by creating anger and divide.
This isn't grassroots, it's not a new thing. That's my point, it's been around for years and had the same views pushed even before it went "big" but nobody stopped to think. Meanwhile people are raking in the cash for their political organisations.
It is grassroots. You’re attributing far too much power to an organisation rather than a general message. And from what I can tell no the EPL aren’t using their logo, they’re just using the phrase.
Of course, but you should still have an idea of what success looks like and therefore how it might be achieved.
Do you think @hill83 is taking cues from the organisation? Am I?
I suppose what I’m looking for are some of the leading figures in the campaign to lay out what the concrete objectives are in the short and long term, with some idea of a strategy. The war in Afghanistan has gone on for 20 years precisely because nobody could say what ‘mission complete’ would look like.
I get that I’m a scientist thinking in black and white terms (excuse the pun).
This is a good idea Nick
The organisation I work for is taking a similar approach. I have just come off a call, and there were some very interesting views and experiences from people from different backgrounds and countries.
The predominant objective of the movement is to end ‘systemic injustices’. The precise meaning of this is not clear. There is a subsection If the movement that is neo-Marxist, a co-founder of the movement claim they are ‘trained Marxists’. So the term for them, would be the overthrow of capitalism and so on. Whereas the ordinary person going to demonstrations want to address disparities in society. However, disparities and discrimination are not mutually exclusive - again, this is a v complex, multifaceted issue that is being simplified.
Police brutality in the USA is such a complex issue. Firstly, the amount of guns in US society means the police have to be armed. Secondly, they also need to combat ready.
Where I sympathise with the ‘defund the police’, is that there are police departments that are almost microcosms of the industrial military complex. Reroute this spending on putting more police, and invest in better training and possibly even mental well-being services. After all, it is a very stressful and thankless profession. For anyone interested, look up Jocko Wilink’s appearance on Joe Rogan’s podcast (JRE 1492).
However, the term ‘defund the police’ is a loaded term that is often use to promote anti-police sentiments and/or policies. From abolition of the police force, to rerouting funding to various new branches e.g. mental health teams and so on. Yet, the viability of having no police, or unarmed units doing areas of policing is an untried policy that is based on unsound principles that could put more people at risk.
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