Yah they will. Because this year they'll be attacking the suburbs. That way the left can point to people rightfully defending themselves as "gun toting lunatics disrupting peaceful protests"
I think the tactic of attacking suburbs is to spread the police force as thin as possible, keep in mind a lot of what they were doing was in mostly closed cities, and they don’t want to go back to those cities functionally being open again. So as we see Downtowns re open I’m sure we’re gonna see more of the attacks on neighborhoods.
I think they know there is no way they can convict Chauvin when GF had a lethal dose of Fentanyl in his system, no bruising on neck...I think they will have the trial and then the entire city will be destroyed and our politicians will beg for bailouts. Minneapolis already looks pretty bad-they destroyed over 200 buildings last year.
I'm only here for the hockey. I think Minneapolis is a cesspool and lost forever. Hopefully they will burn it to the ground after the Chauvin trial and start fresh.
>George Floyd didn't live his life like it mattered.
Profound. Lessons can be learned, even from the dumbest of people (in terms of what not to do, seeing their bad example of outcome as a cautionary tale.)
We should all live our lives as if everything we do matters, because it does. No matter how inconsequential our mundane daily actions may seem, everything we do has an effect on someone or something on some level. A compliment or insult (or suggesting someone tune into an interesting radio show) has the power to alter the course of another person's life, in terms of being that catalyst that influences them toward a career or life-direction change. A task left un-finished might cause a work-related injury to the one left to finish the job. Sometimes these seemingly-chance everyday activities and decisions have massive consequences for good or bad, and one had no idea that morning... or some future morning, as a result of what happened earlier... this is the day they would face.
So with all that unavoidable uncertainty about the future, and what should be self-preservation instinct (if not awareness of the situations you create for others) life is complex enough without deliberately making matters worse by centering ones' pursuits around drug/alcohol abuse and the chaos that surrounds a life of crime and drug-seeking "behavior." In a state of drug/alcohol-induced blackout, that person can be unaware consciously of what they are doing, even though they are being very physically and verbally aggressive. It's much like day-surgery anesthesia, but with guns and police cars and helicopters that you can't remember the next day.
As a former binge-drinker, I know exactly what the blackout state is like (not really, I remember nothing.) It can be difficult to convince someone they are experiencing this when they go off the deep end, because they don't remember any of it. If you had their previous later-in-the-night activities on video, that person would be appalled. People in this state can wake up the morning-after in a holding-cell or hospital room, possibly facing criminal charges for DUI or assault or worse, with no memory at all of what transpired the night before. The ones who don't wake up due to overdose/accident/suicide-by-cop never even know what happened to themselves in the end, their last conscious memory being fading from fun and frivolity into a long comfy nap... as their body bumbles about chasing subconscious desires and aggressions at the mercy of the dope and booze doing doughnuts with the steering wheel of their life.
I don't mean for this to sound preachy or to be telling anyone how to live their life. My point is life is unpredictable and tricky enough, especially with all the artificially-induced pitfalls of our narcissism-and-technology-based modern society. It is true insanity to choose the path of street-drug/alcohol intoxication unto temporary amnesia: if you do that, you are not only trusting your life and well-being to nothing but fate and dumb luck, but taking chances you have no right to take with the safety of others (who might be meeting you on the road, unaware that you are not even in control of your bladder much less your car.)
Mr. Floyd's choice to consume an overdose amount of drugs in his car in a public downtown area was ill-advised for many reasons, but to me the foremost is he did not consider how his actions might affect others. That arrest was a very dangerous situation, with many civilians closing in. He unnecessarily put those police in danger, with civilians at point-blank range of any scuffling or gunfire (from potentially anyone there that day.) He put civilians blocks away in danger of stray rounds, had there been shots fired. I could list 10 more ways Mr. Floyd dungoof'd there, all of them possibly an unthinkable disaster for an innocent person as a result of Mr. Floyd's resisting a DUI arrest down the street.
tl;dr I can't believe we have to explain "Don't be that guy" when it so frequently goes badly and results in a snowballing avalanche of lulzy/unintended consequences like a Wiley Coyote video game remix with moar blood and gore (and guns and police cars and helicopters that you can't remember the next day.) But that's why I rant so often about MSM/Hollywood encouraging and normalizing violence/criminality/substance-abuse as "entertainment," they are literally programming impressionable people to imitate that stuff, because a high percentage of modern kids often don't have proper family/parental guidance to show by example what is traditionally normal and proper behavior.
That could really open some endless feedback loops! Have them supporting and cancelling the same people or causes at the same time. They'd short circuit their smooth brains 🤪🤯
They won't be getting the media coverage now that xiden was installed.
No media coverage means no narcissistic virtue signaling in the form of "protests"
They weren't getting media coverage in 2020. Everyone was saying "mostly peaceful protest", while the reporter was in front of a burning building.
That was media cover, not coverage
Propaganda coverage
Well put.
Next time I storm the capitol, I'm wearing a Biden hat.
Fiery, but mostly peaceful.
Yah they will. Because this year they'll be attacking the suburbs. That way the left can point to people rightfully defending themselves as "gun toting lunatics disrupting peaceful protests"
Well shit... That does seem like the "logical" next step.
It will be interesting to see the Feds arrest entire towns. Antifa can only function when under the umbrella of friendly police forces.
I think the tactic of attacking suburbs is to spread the police force as thin as possible, keep in mind a lot of what they were doing was in mostly closed cities, and they don’t want to go back to those cities functionally being open again. So as we see Downtowns re open I’m sure we’re gonna see more of the attacks on neighborhoods.
Are they not aware the suburbs can defend themselves? If not they’d better learn about it.
Most of the larger cities are blue where their riots are supported. Suburbs are less likely to be as blue as the big cities.
They'd love a protester bloodbath. It would fit so many narrative holes the media would have a collective orgasm reporting the carnage.
You haven't noticed they got their ass kicked consistently, no guns required.
Not in Minneapolis. Chauvin trial starts soon and they have wrapped the city in razor wire.
Monday. Jury selection.
I would hate to be on that jury. I bet they will have a "diverse" jury and try to fill it with the dumbest residents they can find.
You think they'll really clamp down on rioters?
I think they know there is no way they can convict Chauvin when GF had a lethal dose of Fentanyl in his system, no bruising on neck...I think they will have the trial and then the entire city will be destroyed and our politicians will beg for bailouts. Minneapolis already looks pretty bad-they destroyed over 200 buildings last year.
No
Don’t you mean Mogadishu- St. Paul?
Why are you faggots fucking up the Midwest?
Minnedishu.
I'm only here for the hockey. I think Minneapolis is a cesspool and lost forever. Hopefully they will burn it to the ground after the Chauvin trial and start fresh.
A life is more important than property, so let us loot the city if a black man dies.
George Floyd didn't live his life like it mattered.
He was a career criminal with a long criminal rapsheet and a confrontational thug who killed himself by overdosing on a wildly illegal narcotic.
I've taken shits that provided more benefit to society than George Floyd ever did.
>George Floyd didn't live his life like it mattered.
Profound. Lessons can be learned, even from the dumbest of people (in terms of what not to do, seeing their bad example of outcome as a cautionary tale.)
We should all live our lives as if everything we do matters, because it does. No matter how inconsequential our mundane daily actions may seem, everything we do has an effect on someone or something on some level. A compliment or insult (or suggesting someone tune into an interesting radio show) has the power to alter the course of another person's life, in terms of being that catalyst that influences them toward a career or life-direction change. A task left un-finished might cause a work-related injury to the one left to finish the job. Sometimes these seemingly-chance everyday activities and decisions have massive consequences for good or bad, and one had no idea that morning... or some future morning, as a result of what happened earlier... this is the day they would face.
So with all that unavoidable uncertainty about the future, and what should be self-preservation instinct (if not awareness of the situations you create for others) life is complex enough without deliberately making matters worse by centering ones' pursuits around drug/alcohol abuse and the chaos that surrounds a life of crime and drug-seeking "behavior." In a state of drug/alcohol-induced blackout, that person can be unaware consciously of what they are doing, even though they are being very physically and verbally aggressive. It's much like day-surgery anesthesia, but with guns and police cars and helicopters that you can't remember the next day.
As a former binge-drinker, I know exactly what the blackout state is like (not really, I remember nothing.) It can be difficult to convince someone they are experiencing this when they go off the deep end, because they don't remember any of it. If you had their previous later-in-the-night activities on video, that person would be appalled. People in this state can wake up the morning-after in a holding-cell or hospital room, possibly facing criminal charges for DUI or assault or worse, with no memory at all of what transpired the night before. The ones who don't wake up due to overdose/accident/suicide-by-cop never even know what happened to themselves in the end, their last conscious memory being fading from fun and frivolity into a long comfy nap... as their body bumbles about chasing subconscious desires and aggressions at the mercy of the dope and booze doing doughnuts with the steering wheel of their life.
I don't mean for this to sound preachy or to be telling anyone how to live their life. My point is life is unpredictable and tricky enough, especially with all the artificially-induced pitfalls of our narcissism-and-technology-based modern society. It is true insanity to choose the path of street-drug/alcohol intoxication unto temporary amnesia: if you do that, you are not only trusting your life and well-being to nothing but fate and dumb luck, but taking chances you have no right to take with the safety of others (who might be meeting you on the road, unaware that you are not even in control of your bladder much less your car.)
Mr. Floyd's choice to consume an overdose amount of drugs in his car in a public downtown area was ill-advised for many reasons, but to me the foremost is he did not consider how his actions might affect others. That arrest was a very dangerous situation, with many civilians closing in. He unnecessarily put those police in danger, with civilians at point-blank range of any scuffling or gunfire (from potentially anyone there that day.) He put civilians blocks away in danger of stray rounds, had there been shots fired. I could list 10 more ways Mr. Floyd dungoof'd there, all of them possibly an unthinkable disaster for an innocent person as a result of Mr. Floyd's resisting a DUI arrest down the street.
tl;dr I can't believe we have to explain "Don't be that guy" when it so frequently goes badly and results in a snowballing avalanche of lulzy/unintended consequences like a Wiley Coyote video game remix with moar blood and gore (and guns and police cars and helicopters that you can't remember the next day.) But that's why I rant so often about MSM/Hollywood encouraging and normalizing violence/criminality/substance-abuse as "entertainment," they are literally programming impressionable people to imitate that stuff, because a high percentage of modern kids often don't have proper family/parental guidance to show by example what is traditionally normal and proper behavior.
conditions apply
Only if killed by a white person
...even if actually dying of a fentanyl overdose.
If somehow we could get the media to cover Rachel Dolezal, I think the left is prepared to accept trans-racialism this time.
That could really open some endless feedback loops! Have them supporting and cancelling the same people or causes at the same time. They'd short circuit their smooth brains 🤪🤯
We should try to make it happen if only for the lulz.
We kinda do that every day by pushing back on their lunatic ideas.
Meme Wars 2021.
Can’t fucking wait.
I hope they burn this whole diseased corrupt temple to the ground.