Not to be a wet blanket, but I've found that it's extremely difficult to encourage free thinking in individuals. While I don't disagree that they should be reading those books, I've had more success with asking indefensible, thought provoking questions.
For example, asking how judging and perceiving people differently based on race is any way in line with MLKs ideas. Or in the case of WuFlu, asking if vaccines don't prevent infection, when do the lockdowns end?
It doesn't really work on leftists, but it does work on normies.
Doing that while mixing in real world statistics and history is always a pretty effective tool.
For instance, there's this widespread belief that police brutality is out of control.
But there's been studies done that show that in all cases police hesitate much more to use force when a black person is involved as opposed to a white person. The reason being that they don't want to be perceived as "racist" if the do use force — which obviously happens regardless.
There are over 900,000 active duty police officers in the United States.
Each one has countless encounters with the public every single year. In 2019, there were 9 unarmed black men killed by police — 13 if you include off-duty police officers.
That's out of a black population of 42,000,0000+. If you do that math, that means 0.00000225% of unarmed blacks are killed by police each year.
For comparison, while committing significantly less violent crimes, 25 unarmed whites were killed by police that year.
It's also worth noting that 48 Police Officers were killed in the line of duty.
So tell me, how, exactly, is the black community the victim of "police hunting down and shooting them indiscriminately" when all data points to that absolutely not being the case?
They can miss me with their paranoid hysterics and ghost stories. I did my homework on the topic.
I know that, you know that, but I can just see a normie tuning out once it gets beyond two sentences. Remember, we're dealing with someone that's used to easily digestible soundbites, feelings, and very dumbed down and distilled ideas.
The police brutality thing admittedly is a lot harder to bring around because so much of it relies on statistics.
I did have success when I got a friend to see that the police narrative the media spouts is a lie. But mostly you are right. I’ve tried to get people to see that racism isn’t everywhere or how they can co demon racism but be racist to whites.
One of my go-to arguments: why are there more men than women in prison? Because men commit more crimes, right? Then why are there more black people than white people in prison?
I really wish I could hook people with that one, especially with the new stats being 12/55 for 2020. I did manage to break it all the way down with one person to the less than 1% figure before their brain exploded and they walked away without saying anything.
Not to be a wet blanket, but I've found that it's extremely difficult to encourage free thinking in individuals. While I don't disagree that they should be reading those books, I've had more success with asking indefensible, thought provoking questions.
For example, asking how judging and perceiving people differently based on race is any way in line with MLKs ideas. Or in the case of WuFlu, asking if vaccines don't prevent infection, when do the lockdowns end?
It doesn't really work on leftists, but it does work on normies.
Doing that while mixing in real world statistics and history is always a pretty effective tool.
For instance, there's this widespread belief that police brutality is out of control.
But there's been studies done that show that in all cases police hesitate much more to use force when a black person is involved as opposed to a white person. The reason being that they don't want to be perceived as "racist" if the do use force — which obviously happens regardless.
There are over 900,000 active duty police officers in the United States.
Each one has countless encounters with the public every single year. In 2019, there were 9 unarmed black men killed by police — 13 if you include off-duty police officers.
That's out of a black population of 42,000,0000+. If you do that math, that means 0.00000225% of unarmed blacks are killed by police each year.
For comparison, while committing significantly less violent crimes, 25 unarmed whites were killed by police that year. It's also worth noting that 48 Police Officers were killed in the line of duty.
So tell me, how, exactly, is the black community the victim of "police hunting down and shooting them indiscriminately" when all data points to that absolutely not being the case?
They can miss me with their paranoid hysterics and ghost stories. I did my homework on the topic.
I know that, you know that, but I can just see a normie tuning out once it gets beyond two sentences. Remember, we're dealing with someone that's used to easily digestible soundbites, feelings, and very dumbed down and distilled ideas.
The police brutality thing admittedly is a lot harder to bring around because so much of it relies on statistics.
Plus, most of those unarmed shootings were justified use of force.
Well, I mean they're probably unarmed at least SOME of the time, even if they ARE Americans...
Agreed. I don’t know how they get away with the “hunting down” narratives
I did have success when I got a friend to see that the police narrative the media spouts is a lie. But mostly you are right. I’ve tried to get people to see that racism isn’t everywhere or how they can co demon racism but be racist to whites.
One of my go-to arguments: why are there more men than women in prison? Because men commit more crimes, right? Then why are there more black people than white people in prison?
I really wish I could hook people with that one, especially with the new stats being 12/55 for 2020. I did manage to break it all the way down with one person to the less than 1% figure before their brain exploded and they walked away without saying anything.