Elitist Obama romanticizes George Floyd's death for street cred

SugarDaddy1

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Former President Barack Obama told his 132 million Twitter followers how they could get involved with reimagining policing. George Floyd's death certainly reimagined policing. You can see the consequences of "Saint George's" reimagined police force in the reluctant and deliberate reaction to the 18-year-old psychopath Salvador Ramos.

BlazeTV host Jason Whitlock of "Fearless" believed those police officers stood outside that elementary school and rejected men's natural masculine instinct to sacrifice their safety and lives to protect women and children.

"Man's instincts have been reimagined in the last two decades, and the left and feminists have told us that our masculinity is toxic. Police are told by the Democratic Party and radical political activists that George Floyd, Jacob Blake, Eric Garner, and Brianna Taylor's trigger-pulling boyfriend are heroes and law enforcement is the villain. We've incentivized police to stand down, stand back, and give criminals a safe space to work out their frustrations," Jason said.

"Obama is romanticizing George Floyd, and it's not surprising given Obama's resume. He's mixed-race, half black, half white. He grew up in Hawaii and was raised by white people. He attended elite schools, including Harvard. Obama desires street cred, but he knows absolutely nothing about the streets. Other than what he learned from watching his favorite TV show, 'The Wire.' Obama naively thinks George Floyd is 'The Wire' character Bubbles — a well-intentioned gold-hearted dope fiend. The truth about Floyd is more like an older just-released-from-prison version of Marquis Byrd Hilton — the violent enforcer Omar Little framed for murder," said Jason.
https://www.theblaze.com/shows/fear...th-for-street-cred?rebelltitem=1#rebelltitem1
 
He was.murdered and those who murdered him were convicted as.such.

Whether you want to see this as a problem or not is your own issue.
 
To you, correct Whether he was for others isn't your call...nor is their reasoning for that.
George Floyd's saintly contributions to society: Facts you should know before you canonize Floyd as some kind of saint or erect statues in his honor.

1. Arrested twice for theft, plea deal down from aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon
2. Brandishing a firearm against Aracely Henriquez, Held the weapon against her body.
3.Illegal trespass.
4.Nine arrest for drug possession and distribution.
5. Served eight years in prison both State and county jail.
6. There are more charges but you get the point.
 
George Floyd's saintly contributions to society: Facts you should know before you canonize Floyd as some kind of saint or erect statues in his honor.

1. Arrested twice for theft, plea deal down from aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon
2. Brandishing a firearm against Aracely Henriquez, Held the weapon against her body.
3.Illegal trespass.
4.Nine arrest for drug possession and distribution.
5. Served eight years in prison both State and county jail.
6. There are more charges but you get the point.
He was a victim of police brutality. Whether you can acknowledge that is irrelevant.

You attempting to minimize his impact says more about you than it does about him.
 
George Floyd's saintly contributions to society: Facts you should know before you canonize Floyd as some kind of saint or erect statues in his honor.

1. Arrested twice for theft, plea deal down from aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon
2. Brandishing a firearm against Aracely Henriquez, Held the weapon against her body.
3.Illegal trespass.
4.Nine arrest for drug possession and distribution.
5. Served eight years in prison both State and county jail.
6. There are more charges but you get the point.

So what. He was still a living person and shouldn't have died the way he did, like a dog in the street.

SMH. And you guys say you're the ones who are pro-life.

Also I wasn't aware you have to be a fucking saint to die with some measure of dignity either.
 
So what. He was still a living person and shouldn't have died the way he did, like a dog in the street.

SMH. And you guys say you're the ones who are pro-life.

Also I wasn't aware you have to be a fucking saint to die with some measure of dignity either.
All of you clowns made Floyd out to be a victim and a hero. Chauvin is in jail for murder and he got what's coming to him but don't use Chauvin's criminal prosecution to deflect from the fact that Floyd was a piece of shit and a menace to society.
 
All of you clowns made Floyd out to be a victim and a hero. Chauvin is in jail for murder and he got what's coming to him but don't use Chauvin's criminal prosecution to deflect from the fact that Floyd was a piece of shit and a menace to society.
Awwww some is still butt hurt from Chauvin's conviction....
 
All of you clowns made Floyd out to be a victim and a hero. Chauvin is in jail for murder and he got what's coming to him but don't use Chauvin's criminal prosecution to deflect from the fact that Floyd was a piece of shit and a menace to society.
No one made him out to be a hero, lying dipshit. He was most certainly a victim.
 
All of you clowns made Floyd out to be a victim and a hero. Chauvin is in jail for murder and he got what's coming to him but don't use Chauvin's criminal prosecution to deflect from the fact that Floyd was a piece of shit and a menace to society.
He was a victim. That part is the part you keep refusing to admit.
 
George Floyd's saintly contributions to society: Facts you should know before you canonize Floyd as some kind of saint or erect statues in his honor.

1. Arrested twice for theft, plea deal down from aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon
2. Brandishing a firearm against Aracely Henriquez, Held the weapon against her body.
3.Illegal trespass.
4.Nine arrest for drug possession and distribution.
5. Served eight years in prison both State and county jail.
6. There are more charges but you get the point.
He is dead as a result of his own actions. Mind you, I did NOT day he deserved to die. But from the drugs in his system to his behavior while under the influence of said drugs led directly to his death.

I read the autopsy report, have you? In a nut shell the report said that the stress of his arrest, stress brought on by his own actions, "contributed" to his death. The "contributed" is what all of the charges against the officers involved hinged on.

His death is not something to memorialize, celebrate, or even particularly worthy of remembrance. The community as a whole is better off without his presence.
 
He is dead as a result of his own actions. Mind you, I did NOT day he deserved to die. But from the drugs in his system to his behavior while under the influence of said drugs led directly to his death.

I read the autopsy report, have you? In a nut shell the report said that the stress of his arrest, stress brought on by his own actions, "contributed" to his death. The "contributed" is what all of the charges against the officers involved hinged on.

His death is not something to memorialize, celebrate, or even particularly worthy of remembrance. The community as a whole is better off without his presence.
Like your daughter, he was victim to an impotent authority figure with a penis substitute for a brain.
 
He is dead as a result of his own actions. Mind you, I did NOT day he deserved to die. But from the drugs in his system to his behavior while under the influence of said drugs led directly to his death.

I read the autopsy report, have you? In a nut shell the report said that the stress of his arrest, stress brought on by his own actions, "contributed" to his death. The "contributed" is what all of the charges against the officers involved hinged on.

His death is not something to memorialize, celebrate, or even particularly worthy of remembrance. The community as a whole is better off without his presence.
He was a better man than you.
 
He is dead as a result of his own actions. Mind you, I did NOT day he deserved to die. But from the drugs in his system to his behavior while under the influence of said drugs led directly to his death.

I read the autopsy report, have you? In a nut shell the report said that the stress of his arrest, stress brought on by his own actions, "contributed" to his death. The "contributed" is what all of the charges against the officers involved hinged on.

His death is not something to memorialize, celebrate, or even particularly worthy of remembrance. The community as a whole is better off without his presence.
I'm not disputing your observations. I read both autopsies and toxicology reports. I never wrote that you wrote he deserved to die. A healthy person would not have succumbed to the treatment he received while being arrested.
 
I'm not disputing your observations. I read both autopsies and toxicology reports. I never said he deserved to die. A healthy person would not have succumbed to the treatment he received while being arrested.
Yes, they killed him.

And somehow your answer is that he should've been healthier.
 
I'm not disputing your observations. I read both autopsies and toxicology reports. I never wrote that you wrote he deserved to die. A healthy person would not have succumbed to the treatment he received while being arrested.
True. But he had the choice not to resist.
 
True. But he had the choice not to resist.
You're preaching to the quire. How many incidents escalated to a fatality because the individual resisted arrest, I would say most of them. I've written a lot on the subject.
 
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