Huh. I was just joining Reelya in making fun of strawmen. Of course, what I replied to was just this alone:
Still using the Mike "put my hands up" Brown excuse? Even if he never had his hands up? Isn't it nice to see people latching onto lies that support their agenda?
I am not even American and know almost nothing about other cases, but this thing is something even I know.
So what? How central do you believe that really was to my post?
If someone doesn't have his hands up then the cops are fully entitled to murder them. Get with the program, SG.
Which I honestly did find amusing, enough that I wanted to join in the fun.
The rest of the post got edited in just 30 seconds after I posted. Even I don't type so fast, so it was probably just a coincidence that it involved one of my posts...
As for the edit, what I said before was:
There have been a couple of cases in this thread where the policeman (always a man, of course) acted against the law. A couple.
Which I still believe. SalmonGod, you "refuted" this with a screenshot of hashtags about police brutality. That's not an argument, and I didn't see any reason to treat it as one.
I'll explain though, since someone else seems to think you're right:
Your list wasn't taken from this thread. I was explicitly addressing the issues discussed here, not police brutality in general.
I don't think Michael Brown was a victim of police brutality at the hands of Wilson. Similarly, It's my opinion that all but a couple of the cases discussed here have not involved actual police brutality. I'm sure we disagree about this, but I was sharing my opinion. I'm NOT saying anything like "situation X NEVER happens", as Reelya decided to imply. I really wouldn't have known that that Reelya was talking about me, except that he said these things right after quoting me. It's bizarre. If I had any faith in this thread anymore, I wouldn't be laughing.
I'll go ahead and say, of course police brutality occurs. The most frustrating thing about this thread, when I still took it seriously, was that false or sketchy accusations were drawing attention from the actual problem. Making false accusations doesn't raise awareness of a true problem, it helps people stop caring. That makes sense, right?
Of course we mostly disagree about whether these cases were true or false. (As I was trying to say, there a couple we probably agree are real). I would have preferred that we could discuss the cases honestly, like we did the Michael Brown case at the time. Quoting testimonies, making reasoned arguments.
If you prefer to dismiss all of law enforcement as "the problem" and suggest that they deserve "consequences", and can only argue against things nobody has said... Well, I'll continue to laugh so I don't cry. Because you're doing yourself and the actual victims a grave disservice, not to mention the people you're trying to disparage.