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Another Bills reporter trying to make himself the story


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6 hours ago, leh-nerd skin-erd said:

I dunno Muppalito.  It’s been a long time since my religious days (for whatever that means), but it seems to me it’s not really an either or, or that the score is kept like in a rousing game of Skeeball.   With enough love in your heart, both are possible.  I can’t recall any suggestion that 100% faith and love in God means you can only love your fellow man 52%.  

@C.Biscuit97in regards to your comment there are Christians whom support and those who don't Trust me on that. I have those same questions but Ive sworn off PPP type discussion. Religious ones in themselves are difficult I do appreciate the dialogue.

 

to the other comment I know it sounds like percentages are involved like you illustrated. Let me try to state this as far as my own understanding (not speaking for anyone else) the Love of putting God first for me is hierarchical. His is first as my heavenly Father, my creator. Loving Him in highest regard allows MORE love to be present within us for others including family. And love is not a finite term. In my opinion it is possible to love my son equally as much as my daughter. Because I have love for one doesnt diminish the love I have available for my spouse, my parents etc. Since it is crux to this discussion I post it here but Im not clergy or anyone with any more wisdom than anyone else simply faith and a testimony regarding it. Totally different thread ? Shalom.  

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2 hours ago, HamSandwhich said:

It’s difficult if you think that the idea is completely false, that the majority of white people are not racist as the BLM and anti-racists believe (in fact you are racist no matter what based on your white skin color). Maybe he didn’t want to weigh in because he does not believe in the narrative and doesnt want to create any more controversy by saying so. If you look under the covers of what BLM stands for, it’s not what it seems. Maybe he found that and what he learned is that it’s not right what they stand for. 

You must be a disciple of the church of critical race theory. Your suggestion is to cow tow to far leftist ideas of the day. Why did you choose that direction? What if he doesn’t believe in all that ridiculousness? 

There is so much that is problematic in your assertions.  BLM is relatively new.  If they are your hang up, fine.   Racism is far from a new construct, nor is the systemic tendrils of it.  There was no BLM in 1619, 1776, 1850, etc.  Acknowledging racism is not a far left ideaology, but a common sense outlook that one can gain by reading books on slavery, reconstruction, Black codes of that era, Jim Crow, redlining and the suburbanization of America.  Or you can simply observe.  
 

The Southern Christian Leadership Conference and Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committe we’re both seen, by many in the late 50’s-60’s as “radical” and out of the norm in their day.  Their is no movement against racism that is totally embraced, particularly by those who actively practice it or benefit.

 

Not all white people are racists or intentionally discriminatory, but there are many who are.

 

But as I said to DFT, we’ll agree to disagree. ✌?

 

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I know most of this has basically already been said, but I just wanted to expand on it from my perspective:

 

I gave up religion more than 30 years ago, but I still try to live my life by the scripture that Fromm quoted (paraphrased), "Love God with all of your heart, and treat your neighbor as yourself." If the whole world tried to do that, this would be a much better place. So, how could it be a wrong answer? He's basically saying with that, I am trying to follow that principle, which would mean I am going to try and not repeat any past bad behavior. I am going to try and love and be compassionate and sensitive to all others in the future ("try" being the key word for all of us, of course).

 

And in fact, it is not just a Christian/Jesus thing. Not only was it the number one advice by Jesus, but it is also the golden rule for almost every culture and religion in the world. It is the one rule to rule them all:

 

“Do not do to others what angers you if done to you by others.” 
 Socrates

 

“Do not do to others what you do not want them to do to you.” 
― Confucius

 

"One should never do that to another which one regards as injurious to one’s own self. This, in brief, is the rule of dharma. Other behavior is due to selfish desires."

--- Mahabharata,  Anushasana Parva 113:8 from the Vedic tradition of India circa 3000 BC

 

"That character is best that doesn't do to another what isn't good for itself" and "Don't do to others what isn't good for you."

--- Zoroaster, Persia (c. 500 BC), Iː36

 

"That which is hateful to you, do not do to your neighbor. That is the whole Torah; the rest is the explanation. Go and study it."

--- Hillel the Elder, as quoted in the Talmud (c. 200 CE), Shabbat 31a

 

"None of you is a true believer unless he wishes for his brother what he wishes for himself."

--- MuhammadHadith (Bukhari 1:2:12, Muslim 1:72f, and An-Nawawi 13)

 

"Each one should do unto others as he would have others do unto him."

--- Manco Cápac, Inca leader in Peru c. 1200 (Wattles 1996: 192)

 

If Marcel was acting from a place of love and compassion (like the golden rule says to) and not from a selfish need to either get a story or to push his own ideas or beliefs onto someone else, he would have understood that this kid is probably terrified of giving an answer that sounds bad or could be misconstrued, after having had to take the heat for his previous racially-charged comments. He's young and still dealing with the fallout of his previous statements, what did MLJ expect? If Jake started talking up BLM or whatever, then people would say he's just doing it because he's trying to prove/pretend he's not a racist. Seriously, what answer would have been acceptable? Did he just want to see the kid prostrate himself? Is that what the interview was really about? Then that is totally a bad move on Marcel's side, not Jake's.

 

Besides, actions speak louder than words...but actions take time. Anyone can say I'm sorry, I learned my lesson. We've seen hundreds of people do that and we either knew they didn't mean it at the time or their subsequent actions proved that it was just a lie said to get through a difficult moment. Let the kid learn and grow from this in his own time. I like MLJ a lot as a reporter, but I find it extremely arrogant to say that you want another person to respond a certain way or that Jake should be completely on the other side of this already and be able to respond with deep and thoughtful remarks, when he has had, what, 3 months to process it all? I hate to see people I respect, like MLJ, fall into the traps of the misguided righteousness that is so rampant these days. 

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4 hours ago, DFT said:

He wasn’t asked for an explanation though.  He was asked his thoughts on what’s going on.  His answer was a profession of faith (quoting the Bible). The interviewer wanted him to relate it to his insensitive comment (as do many of the posters here - which please know I don’t condemn at all.). But if you go into a conversation expecting to receive a specific answer, ask question(s) that direct the conversation.  Don’t condemn a guy for answering a general question with a faith-based answer (not directed towards you, Gunner)...   Is that really where you want to be when Jesus returns?  ?

And a “profession of faith” is not an answer. To any question. It’s a dodge

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12 hours ago, JakeFrommStateFarm said:

I thought Jake did the right thing by dodging the question.

 

His main responsibility right now is too keep his mouth shut and avoid any additional bad press to the team.

 

I'm sure he was counseled by his coaches and members of the front office to keep his mouth shut.  Otherwise he may not be a Bill for much longer.

 

Give the kid credit.  The reporter laid a trap for him and he avoided it.

 

Maybe that is the most important lesson learned for him.


Thanks for popping by Jake. 

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9 hours ago, purple haze said:

There is so much that is problematic in your assertions.  BLM is relatively new.  If they are your hang up, fine.   Racism is far from a new construct, nor is the systemic tendrils of it.  There was no BLM in 1619, 1776, 1850, etc.  Acknowledging racism is not a far left ideaology, but a common sense outlook that one can gain by reading books on slavery, reconstruction, Black codes of that era, Jim Crow, redlining and the suburbanization of America.  Or you can simply observe.  
 

The Southern Christian Leadership Conference and Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committe we’re both seen, by many in the late 50’s-60’s as “radical” and out of the norm in their day.  Their is no movement against racism that is totally embraced, particularly by those who actively practice it or benefit.

 

Not all white people are racists or intentionally discriminatory, but there are many who are.

 

But as I said to DFT, we’ll agree to disagree. ✌?

 

I would not argue that racism has existed through the centuries, however, the movement of BLM is a new construct with old Marxist, intersectional, critics race theory tenants. It seeks to confuse everything and deconstruct society, and then consolidate power for itself in the reimagined new world order. A socialist/racist dystopia with fascist thought control. It’s all a power grab.  
 

I reject the idea of systemic racism in today’s society.  The fact that you say “you can just observe” is just absolutely ridiculous. To those who are all about anti-racism today, absolutely everything is racist. The racist ideologies of the past do not continue on today in systemic fashion. There are some racists (and will unfortunately always be) but they are the exception not the rule anymore.  There are racists against every race, including against whites (I reject the idea that racism is purely oppressor over operessor, that wrong idea is a new construct too). There will always be people who simply hate, they are the fringe. 
 

It’s not lost on me that you surreptitiously added in the date 1619, in a nod against the fiction that is the 1619 project which serves to try and rewrite history in a racist manner. 
 

You can say, individually, not all white people are racist and I agree with you but the book “white fragility” which is being adopted and taught in corporations around the country, asserts that if you’re whites and you don’t agree, you’re racist and you’re hiding it.  If you agree you’re racist and you need to work against racism for the rest of your life and genuflect to the movement, but you can never rid yourself of racism. All simply because of the color of your skin, where have I heard that before? 
 

When I observe everyday Americans and their daily activities, very rarely will I see or hear anything racist. Your flippanr comment that people can just “observe” does not hold water. Its clear based on your response that you hold “lived experiences” more important than actual hard data which completely turn the entire idea that BLM started on its head and shows you how ridiculous it’s pretenses are.
 

According to raw and official statistics from the gorvernment, Rougjly 1000 deaths (this number has been steady like this for decades) by cops happen every year. In a country that of over 350 million people that is a minuscule number which is anything but systemic, but we aren’t talking about even 1000 are we?  No because the majority is police killing or white people. So let’s give the benefit of the doubt and give the percentage of 40 percent are black deaths at the hands of cops. What BLM is concerned about is white on black cops that were done for racist reasons. The majority of killings are justified (attacked the cops, death by suicide, etc). So let’s knock that down to 100. So 100 are black people being killed by cops that are not necessarily done the right way.  Studies actually show that blacks are far more likely to die at the hands of a minority officer, so let’s knock a that number down the o about 30. Some of those are just simply bad policing or negligent with no racist undertones to them, let’s knock that down the to about 10-15. 10-15 could potentially be due to racist motivations. If true those people she be prosecuted for that reason, but there is no way you can all 10-15 incident systemic. Yet we see civil unrest due to “systemic racism” in police killings. It’s an absolute farce. What do I know, I’m using what people like you probably think is racist, numbers.

 

Simply saying that there are so many things wrong with my statement and then going on a tangent about all these other amorphous ideas that don’t even speak to my argument at all, does not make you right, instead it makes you look silly. 

Edited by HamSandwhich
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1 hour ago, GunnerBill said:

 

A problem I won't encounter. 

Realistically whether you believe in him or not, you cannot say that for certain

 

nobody not even the smartest man in the world knows what happens when we die

 

Nothing may happen, you may come back to earth as a toad who honestly knows

 

But what lies beyond... Nobody has an actual clue

Edited by Buffalo716
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38 minutes ago, Buffalo716 said:

Realistically whether you believe in him or not, you cannot say that for certain

 

nobody not even the smartest man in the world knows what happens when we die

 

Nothing may happen, you may come back to earth as a toad who honestly knows

 

But what lies beyond... Nobody has an actual clue

 

Well if I do encounter him I will be sure to tell him I don't believe in him. 

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7 hours ago, JoPoy88 said:

And a “profession of faith” is not an answer. To any question. It’s a dodge

To someone who doesn’t believe in the same thing, sure it may seem that way. But your hardline stance on the matter makes you just as intolerant as the person you’re condemning.   

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Fromm could have cleared this whole thing up if he said, for example: Unlike the religious community, with notable exceptions, the atheist community is an incredibly diverse community with incredibly diverse attitudes about different things,


 

 

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1 minute ago, BringBackFergy said:


Fromm could have cleared this whole thing up if he said, for example: Unlike the religious community, with notable exceptions, the atheist community is an incredibly diverse community with incredibly diverse attitudes about different things,


 

 

The devil made you say that, didn't he?  ?

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