Meghan54
Lifer
- Oct 18, 2009
- 11,684
- 5,228
- 136
Hell, and one rough weekend in Chicago is nothing compared to the number of people killed by eating processed foods!
Let's not forget second hand smoke....that' the real killer. You betcha!
Hell, and one rough weekend in Chicago is nothing compared to the number of people killed by eating processed foods!
This is from Southern Poverty Law Center - the same group that considers Pepe and a number of other internet memes to be "hate symbols" or something along those lines.
They are incompetent fools who have no clue what the fuck they are talking about.
I have zero respect for someone that can't even do enough research to understand internet memes. They are utterly clueless morons.
Er, I'm sorry, but Pepe has been routinely used by hate groups. Richard Spencer used it frequently (he's been sued by Pepe's creator for abusing copyright). I've seen it used in multiple instances of anti-Semitic attacks on social networks, such as one that had Pepe in an SS uniform near an oven.
I have zero respect for someone like you, who's ignorant of how this imagery has been routinely, purposefully used for hate speech while simultaneously having the gall to label the SPLC as "incompetent fools."
See my next post. Trump's effect is probably measurable, but, Hate Crimes were on the rise before Trump for a reason. Trump has no doubt been helping add to the problem, but, it was a problem before him as well as a problem in other countries.
AFAIK the first notable spike in hate crimes was in 2015. And the noted upsurge was mainly an increase in attacks against Muslims. Trump announced his candidacy in June that year and wasted no time pouring his bile all over Muslims.
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/15/us/politics/fbi-hate-crimes-muslims.html
I don't know the degree of Trump's impact either. Causation can be difficult to determine. But if we're looking for correlations, we can't measure it from January 2017 when he took office. It has to be looked at from when he started his candidacy because that is when the rhetoric started and was heard on the national stage.
See my next post. Trump's effect is probably measurable, but, Hate Crimes were on the rise before Trump for a reason. Trump has no doubt been helping add to the problem, but, it was a problem before him as well as a problem in other countries.
Measurable results vs stuff you pull out of your ass.That was one of Obama's legacies in fomenting civil and racial unrest.
That was one of Obama's legacies in fomenting civil and racial unrest.
Trump saw where the hate was, and sought it out. That creates a feedback and it builds. But, we saw a rise that started in 2015 and has continued. The trend we see in the US is also roughly seen in the UK for the same time period. The same trend can be seen in France where 2014 was a low, and then grows in 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018.
We are seeing the trend go up after 2014 in western countries. I see it more that Trump tapped into the hate which helped it grow. I do not think he is the cause of the trend that started before him and is happening in other countries.
You seem to have missed my point. Trump's hateful rhetoric started in the year 2015, the same year we see a rise.
The right far in the US is connected to the far right in Europe. These groups communicate and coordinate. Also, the American POTUS has special significance in foreign countries in ways that their heads of state do not have here. The theory of connecting Trump to a rise in hate crimes and hate group activity is that Trump's rhetoric an bigotry has emboldened them. I don't see why the same can't be true for the far right in Europe, when they see that the new "leader of the free world" is a fellow traveler.
It's also possible that there was a pre-existing rise in the far right which Trump took advantage of as you say. But if so, what was the cause? We suddenly see an increase throughout the west starting in 2015. What we're discussing here is an effect. Every effect has a cause. So if you don't think it's Trump, then what is it?
You mean certain people were angry that a guy like him (That was one of Obama's legacies in fomenting civil and racial unrest.
This is from Southern Poverty Law Center - the same group that considers Pepe and a number of other internet memes to be "hate symbols" or something along those lines.
They are incompetent fools who have no clue what the fuck they are talking about.
I have zero respect for someone that can't even do enough research to understand internet memes. They are utterly clueless morons.
What makes you think it was the US that influenced Europe? Europe was going through a massive increase in immigration and there was a backlash because of it.
https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/i...-arab-immigration-europe-170608135924754.html
Immigration started before 2015, but, it peeked in 2015. There appeared to be a willingness to take them in, but, it surged very quickly stoking underlying issues. It then spread to US news outlets stoking underlying issues here in the US. At the end of the Obama administration, there were talks about bringing over immigrants to the US. There was news report after news report about issues Europe was having taking in millions of immigrants.
That to me seems far more likely of a trigger than Trump.
Er, I'm sorry, but Pepe has been routinely used by hate groups. Richard Spencer used it frequently (he's been sued by Pepe's creator for abusing copyright). I've seen it used in multiple instances of anti-Semitic attacks on social networks, such as one that had Pepe in an SS uniform near an oven.
I have zero respect for someone like you, who's ignorant of how this imagery has been routinely, purposefully used for hate speech while simultaneously having the gall to label the SPLC as "incompetent fools."
That last part about it spreading to the US is an opinion, not a fact. It's been theorized that the release of census data that year which showed that white people would no longer be a majority sooner than expected caused a surge. If we're looking for something besides Trump, that would be a better explanation of US extremism than European immigration.
I accept the fact that Trump is likely both an effect and a cause. Many variables can enter into these equations. It's nigh impossible that his contribution is anywhere near zero.
That was one of Obama's legacies in fomenting civil and racial unrest.
It's like my thread of black people being harassed for just exiting. Obama fomented hate by just being black.That was one of Obama's legacies in fomenting civil and racial unrest.
Well, yes its opinion. I did not present it as fact.
If you are suggesting that its possible that we had rises in both the US and Europe but for distinct reasons, then its possible. What I think is more likely is that they are symbiotic.
I think it's multi-causal, that there are separate reasons and they are also symbiotic. The symbiotic part can go both ways, but I think we tend to influence them more than the other way around because they follow our politics there more than we follow there's here. If a far right candidate in Europe is making racist remarks, most Americans probably don't even know about it. If an American presidential candidate is doing that, most people in Europe probably do know about it.
I think you are too focused on a leader being the influence, and I think that is a mistake. I think its quite possible that the feelings are partly and in my opinion mainly a grassroots thing.
The US media was picking up the influx of immigrants into Europe. Further, the negative incidents that happened were shown quite a bit. I imagine those stories were far more prevalent in Europe as well. Seeing that Europeans started to swing left and we get things like Brexit. The US seeing it also reacts. Then, we start seeing large groups coming to the southern border in the media and we have much of the same reaction.
Like I said, I accept that Trump is both cause and effect. We can debate the relative contributions of the two. Then again, the conclusion that you are urging is that we have a lot of racists here who decided to elect a racist POTUS. This doesn't soften what is wrong on the right. Frankly, it would be better for them if it was mainly down to Trump.
This is from Southern Poverty Law Center - the same group that considers Pepe and a number of other internet memes to be "hate symbols" or something along those lines.
They are incompetent fools who have no clue what the fuck they are talking about.
I have zero respect for someone that can't even do enough research to understand internet memes. They are utterly clueless morons.
Measurable results vs stuff you pull out of your ass.
You need to try harder.
Said without any intentional irony but brimming with so much actual irony. I like how you think that memes can only be funny nonsense and context apparently never matters (the most hilarious part is you genuinely think you're being objective about context when you clearly don't actually know what the fuck you're talking about). I also get a kick out of how you think just because 4Chan "trolling" by using those memes the same way white supremacists groups do somehow means that's all it ever was, while ignoring that 4Chan has a lot of blatantly racist/sexist idiots on it (that aren't just trolling). That your best defense of something is "4Chan was just trolling"...hahahaha, just holy shit, makes it impossible to take you seriously on anything related to this stuff.
You'd be so easy to recruit for cults that you'd be sucking their leader's dick by the first night. "Guys, I'm sure they super aren't a cult, they just like hanging out and having a good time, ok so the leader likes having a bunch of underage girls as wives and they preach fucking kids and think the end of the world is coming, but that's just like a meme, man - look at all the 4Channers talking about the same! - they don't really believe that, and like look people were wrong about Jonestown, they didn't even use Kool-Aid, it was Flavor Aid, so see the SPLC have no clue what the fuck they're talking about!"
