Excellent. It is about being on the side of the heretics rather than those who would do the burning.
My problem with CRT is that I am not sure what it accomplishes.
For example, if you have 100k unprocessed rape test kits and you do the research and it says 80% are from black women (it is my understanding that this is what the research s…
Excellent. It is about being on the side of the heretics rather than those who would do the burning.
My problem with CRT is that I am not sure what it accomplishes.
For example, if you have 100k unprocessed rape test kits and you do the research and it says 80% are from black women (it is my understanding that this is what the research says btw), how many untested rape kits do you have at the end? 100k -- and they still have to be processed.
So if you process them and prioritize the black women's, chances are, because studies show that most rape victims know their attacker or the attacker is from their community, that when these men are prosecuted, you are going to end up with more black men in jail. Rape is a serious crime and the sentences are quite right heavy for it.
Is the attempt to clear the rape test kit backlog now racist because the policy has led to more violent black men being incarcerated? Or more importantly, is the community, in particular the women contained within that community, as a whole safer? Something which would have happened sooner if the police had done their job and processed the rape test kits in a timely fashion. in other words does knowing the genetic make up of the victims actually help in the processing? Or is it more important to focus on solving the unsolved crimes across all communities?
Just wait until the new laws to prevent "mass shootings" are enacted. See what happens when disproportionate percentages of people grouped by melanin get caught up in enforcement of said new laws...
Excellent. It is about being on the side of the heretics rather than those who would do the burning.
My problem with CRT is that I am not sure what it accomplishes.
For example, if you have 100k unprocessed rape test kits and you do the research and it says 80% are from black women (it is my understanding that this is what the research says btw), how many untested rape kits do you have at the end? 100k -- and they still have to be processed.
So if you process them and prioritize the black women's, chances are, because studies show that most rape victims know their attacker or the attacker is from their community, that when these men are prosecuted, you are going to end up with more black men in jail. Rape is a serious crime and the sentences are quite right heavy for it.
Is the attempt to clear the rape test kit backlog now racist because the policy has led to more violent black men being incarcerated? Or more importantly, is the community, in particular the women contained within that community, as a whole safer? Something which would have happened sooner if the police had done their job and processed the rape test kits in a timely fashion. in other words does knowing the genetic make up of the victims actually help in the processing? Or is it more important to focus on solving the unsolved crimes across all communities?
Just wait until the new laws to prevent "mass shootings" are enacted. See what happens when disproportionate percentages of people grouped by melanin get caught up in enforcement of said new laws...