Kevin Graham wrote:honorentheos wrote:That is the thread from last month when this happened (it seems like a couple of months ago, though). And it is pretty clear in watching the context that 1) the BHI are the primary problem on all fronts including the people spouting off racist ____,
Agreed, but the BHI is an entirely different thing really. They're idiots ranting on their own, and I have no idea why so many of those kids decided to surround them as if to encourage them to keep ranting, but to each their own I guess.
They showed up in the area designated for them to meet to wait for their bus. The videos show them being called out by the BHI, being ranted at, milling around, and at some point they give a school cheer. Then the Native Americans start moving into the same immediate space. It's not a reasonable conclusion to say, HEY! These adults are obviously stupid so let's not accept that is the real problem at the center of this. Instead, let's focus on the teenage kids and what kind of judgment they demonstrated because that makes sense.
"We surrounded and they won't do a damn thing. Bold as a lion!"2) the guy with the drum and the kid in his way in the original video did not end up in that situation because the kid moved to confront him nor is the guy prevented from walking to one side or the other
Right, and that is the big take away from the subsequent footage. Though for folks like EA and me, it doesn't really affect how we look at the kids' behavior. But I was glad to see that the encounter didn't begin with kids going after the Indians.
Actually, EA insists the take away is that the MAGA hat is a symbol on par with a Confederate Flag hat worn with intent, so there is a lot going on here in relation to the whole history of racism in America that justifies all of the rushing to judgement. I find that immensely distasteful. It was a bad call. The media screwed up, people were too quick to judge because of emotions. I think the right thing to do is own it, move on.
"Look at the hats!""Why'd you call us Young Clansmen?" "Look at your clothes"3) the guy turns around when the kid leaves to catch his bus that showed up.
If you're talking about the Indian, he and his little group were entirely surrounded until an adult chaperone from the group instructed the kids to move along. After they dispersed he was free to go in any direction he wanted.
The kids bus showed up and the chapparone told them the bus was there so they needed to go get on it. Philips then turned around where his group was right behind him, and they started drumming while one of the guys started saying something about their having, "damned won".
"Bus is here." "Let's go home!""I got 'em!" "We damned won, grandpa!"Most of the time the kid is just looking at the guy while he chants and there are kids clapping along with him.
Yep. Though that was the same takeaway from the initial video. The kid never spoke, he just stood there and smirked. My biggest takeaway from the context is that the stare down lasted a full 3 minutes.
In other videos where you can see the kid, it's not the case that he stood there smirking for 3 minutes.
"This is not your land."The tomahawk chops, the only actual racist thing going on in so far as the kids' actions, happened early on and isn't apparent during the so-called confrontation.
Not sure how that matters. You also have a couple dozen kids chanting which could easily be interpreted as mocking the Indian's demonstration. And there were clearly side discussions going on and we only caught a glimpse of a couple of them and heard clearly a few soundbytes. One of them included a kid telling the Indians they're not indigenous to any land, and that being conquered is just part of life. That's like going to a Black Pride demonstration and telling them they have nothing to be proud about.
Again, if you are excusing a group of adults because reasons but are blaming a group of teenagers because of their judgement, you're doing something wrong.
The whole thing is insane. The kids are not being overtly racist. Some of them apparently bought MAGA hats while in DC. They've come to symbolize a lot of things that they, as indivudal people, are not actually guilty of in any sense of the word. The kid at the center of it all is being blamed because he wore a hat some people have loaded with a lot of meaning and symbolisms that equates it with KKK hoods and Swastikas.
I don't know about all that. It seems to be your projection into the matter that hasn't been expressed by me or the media. Social media maybe.
You? I wouldn't say I saw that from you. But seriously, read the other thread and how it ended and revisit that.
I don't know, man. It's a problem that we can't acknowledge the initial reactions to the video were off. Way off. To then come back and not only fail to acknowledge that but double down because of some bigger thing it represents - all with some kids in the middle of it, who wore hats and other super evil stuff - is amazing in what it says about people.
I can acknowledge that context is important and that the full context changes things a bit. I just don't see it changing as much as you seem to think. There were kids in the group who were still being little assholes. The star of the show made the decision, for whatever reason, to engage in a 3 minute staredown with an old man who was demonstrating. If that part had never happened I doubt any of this would have made the news or social media.
Ok. Right.