@dnd277

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At the end of Valasik's book he made a really good point when he talks how the gangs operate. If the society that claims to want to stop gun violence and "unify" sees the violence caused by these alt(right/lite) groups, why then target black neighborhoods at such a disproportionate rate?
and pepe the frog hurt man. like why? i just didn't know and wasn;t made aware that they are that invasive, especially on social media #so339
and it's also just crazy how invasive these communities are. Because these aren't just your average "gang" (i.e. bloods or crips), but these people inflict harm because they morally believe it's right. Then when black people try to stand up for themselves, we are literally beaten and criminalized to the world.
Since the alt-right side of "life" (just being racist and spiteful) is taboo, those with those belief find spaces where they can express themselves fully. And I did not know a lot of their symbols are hidden in music and art which could that just looks cool on the street #so339
There are so many myths about alt-right and alt-lite gangs and it makes no sense. I just think people purposefully try to push it outta sight because when it comes to gang violence, these genre of gangs are at the top of the list. #so339
In the beginning of Valasik's book, he became with talking about the categorization of gangs and what classifies them. When people purposefully choose to exclude white-supremist groups as apart of the categories, it only perpetuates the violence cause by these youth, but then put pressure on black communities because of setereotypes #so339
It really hit me when Luther and Hayes talked about the crime Victimization, and how selective empathy is used mostly only when race is involved. This leads to literally moral regression in the justice system because can how two people do the same crime and get different sentences? #so339
Luther and Hayes talk about how as a black man or woman, the crime weighs more due to how media perceives the damage of the crime based on who committed it. So the media's construction of an criminal became being black, which skews the view of people in society, which leads to more prejudice #so339
In Chapter 1 of Hayes, he really digs in how media influence how we associate and connotated people with certain things/events in our society. When a certain pattern is portrayed in media, we don't often take account to how people harbor the crime with the "people" , not the person #so339
When Stuart listened to a drill song with Reggie, he understood how he could relate to it. It's not about the acutal violence, but feeling/courage it gives to do what you want. And for Reggie, its was math homework. So when people think of drill listeners, they may misperceived the majority of real listeners #so339