this is sure to end well…

by russell

From the Boston Globe, the brothers are arming up.  Why?  Because they perceive that they are increased risk of being harmed or killed.

Who wouldn't, right?

Unfortunately, it seems that a black person with a gun is that much more likely to be a former black person with a gun.

Centripetal force; not a good thing.  It's not so hard for things to fall apart.

Good luck to all.

45 thoughts on “this is sure to end well…”

  1. It is rather notable how the NRA doesn’t seem to get particularly worked up when a black man in legal possession of a gun is shot by police. If it happens to a white man, of course, their screams of outrage will shake the rafters of the halls of Congress. But somehow the same happening to a black man doesn’t motivate much of a reaction. I wonder how they rationalize that to themselves….

    Reply
  2. It is rather notable how the NRA doesn’t seem to get particularly worked up when a black man in legal possession of a gun is shot by police. If it happens to a white man, of course, their screams of outrage will shake the rafters of the halls of Congress. But somehow the same happening to a black man doesn’t motivate much of a reaction. I wonder how they rationalize that to themselves….

    Reply
  3. It is rather notable how the NRA doesn’t seem to get particularly worked up when a black man in legal possession of a gun is shot by police. If it happens to a white man, of course, their screams of outrage will shake the rafters of the halls of Congress. But somehow the same happening to a black man doesn’t motivate much of a reaction. I wonder how they rationalize that to themselves….

    Reply
  4. The self-fulfilling prophecy from white supremacists of a race war. WEEEE!!!
    If I didn’t have kids, I’d be thinking about quitting the species … somehow.

    Reply
  5. The self-fulfilling prophecy from white supremacists of a race war. WEEEE!!!
    If I didn’t have kids, I’d be thinking about quitting the species … somehow.

    Reply
  6. The self-fulfilling prophecy from white supremacists of a race war. WEEEE!!!
    If I didn’t have kids, I’d be thinking about quitting the species … somehow.

    Reply
  7. The disparity in weaponry available to each side guarantees that if the race war becomes an actual shooting war, it will be asymmetrical along the lines of Iraq’s insurgency era. Or Syria, as it is today.
    Yes! You, too, can live in a virtual Baghdad! Or Aleppo!

    Reply
  8. The disparity in weaponry available to each side guarantees that if the race war becomes an actual shooting war, it will be asymmetrical along the lines of Iraq’s insurgency era. Or Syria, as it is today.
    Yes! You, too, can live in a virtual Baghdad! Or Aleppo!

    Reply
  9. The disparity in weaponry available to each side guarantees that if the race war becomes an actual shooting war, it will be asymmetrical along the lines of Iraq’s insurgency era. Or Syria, as it is today.
    Yes! You, too, can live in a virtual Baghdad! Or Aleppo!

    Reply
  10. I’m not sure the disparity in weaponry is quite as large as you think. A disproportionate number of our military troops are minorities. With all the access to advanced weaponry, and training in using it, that implies.
    So yeah, the initial phase might be asymmetrical when it comes to casualties. But after that, we’d be looking at a highly trained and well armed side vs a bunch of ideologues with fervor greater than their training. And both, be it noted, fighting on what is essentially their home turf.

    Reply
  11. I’m not sure the disparity in weaponry is quite as large as you think. A disproportionate number of our military troops are minorities. With all the access to advanced weaponry, and training in using it, that implies.
    So yeah, the initial phase might be asymmetrical when it comes to casualties. But after that, we’d be looking at a highly trained and well armed side vs a bunch of ideologues with fervor greater than their training. And both, be it noted, fighting on what is essentially their home turf.

    Reply
  12. I’m not sure the disparity in weaponry is quite as large as you think. A disproportionate number of our military troops are minorities. With all the access to advanced weaponry, and training in using it, that implies.
    So yeah, the initial phase might be asymmetrical when it comes to casualties. But after that, we’d be looking at a highly trained and well armed side vs a bunch of ideologues with fervor greater than their training. And both, be it noted, fighting on what is essentially their home turf.

    Reply
  13. That’s a good and interesting point, wj.
    It made me think of de-Baathification, when Bremer (or whoever it was) dissolved Saddam’s highly-trained and well-equipped military force who knew the territory because it was their home territory. That worked out well, didn’t it?
    It also made me think about the differences between the US and Iraqi military, in terms of their internal cohesion and oaths of service. There’s already been some question as to who the US Armed Forces would be loyal to, if the Trump Administration ordered them to do something illegal and/or morally repugnant. Would they obey their oath, which is to the Constitution and the country? Or would they obey the chain of command?
    During W’s reign, the USAF was thoroughly infiltrated by Dominionists itching for a religious war. I don’t know about the other services, but that was alarming.

    Reply
  14. That’s a good and interesting point, wj.
    It made me think of de-Baathification, when Bremer (or whoever it was) dissolved Saddam’s highly-trained and well-equipped military force who knew the territory because it was their home territory. That worked out well, didn’t it?
    It also made me think about the differences between the US and Iraqi military, in terms of their internal cohesion and oaths of service. There’s already been some question as to who the US Armed Forces would be loyal to, if the Trump Administration ordered them to do something illegal and/or morally repugnant. Would they obey their oath, which is to the Constitution and the country? Or would they obey the chain of command?
    During W’s reign, the USAF was thoroughly infiltrated by Dominionists itching for a religious war. I don’t know about the other services, but that was alarming.

    Reply
  15. That’s a good and interesting point, wj.
    It made me think of de-Baathification, when Bremer (or whoever it was) dissolved Saddam’s highly-trained and well-equipped military force who knew the territory because it was their home territory. That worked out well, didn’t it?
    It also made me think about the differences between the US and Iraqi military, in terms of their internal cohesion and oaths of service. There’s already been some question as to who the US Armed Forces would be loyal to, if the Trump Administration ordered them to do something illegal and/or morally repugnant. Would they obey their oath, which is to the Constitution and the country? Or would they obey the chain of command?
    During W’s reign, the USAF was thoroughly infiltrated by Dominionists itching for a religious war. I don’t know about the other services, but that was alarming.

    Reply
  16. One of the parts of training that all members of the military receive is on the subject of illegal orders. What they are, what to do if you get one, etc. Which, to the extent that it works, would deal with that. I confess that the successful implementation of torture, which was unarguably an illegal order, makes me less than totally optimistic.
    I hope that the Air Force, at least, has learned from their experience with officers pushing one particular religious view. Whether the Army and Navy have picked up on it, I don’t know.

    Reply
  17. One of the parts of training that all members of the military receive is on the subject of illegal orders. What they are, what to do if you get one, etc. Which, to the extent that it works, would deal with that. I confess that the successful implementation of torture, which was unarguably an illegal order, makes me less than totally optimistic.
    I hope that the Air Force, at least, has learned from their experience with officers pushing one particular religious view. Whether the Army and Navy have picked up on it, I don’t know.

    Reply
  18. One of the parts of training that all members of the military receive is on the subject of illegal orders. What they are, what to do if you get one, etc. Which, to the extent that it works, would deal with that. I confess that the successful implementation of torture, which was unarguably an illegal order, makes me less than totally optimistic.
    I hope that the Air Force, at least, has learned from their experience with officers pushing one particular religious view. Whether the Army and Navy have picked up on it, I don’t know.

    Reply
  19. Apparently non-Native locals are arming in NDAk and intimidating local businesses taht sell supplies to the camps. I wish Obama would just declare the area to be a national monument and hazve done with it.

    Reply
  20. Apparently non-Native locals are arming in NDAk and intimidating local businesses taht sell supplies to the camps. I wish Obama would just declare the area to be a national monument and hazve done with it.

    Reply
  21. Apparently non-Native locals are arming in NDAk and intimidating local businesses taht sell supplies to the camps. I wish Obama would just declare the area to be a national monument and hazve done with it.

    Reply
  22. I hope that the Air Force, at least, has learned from their experience with officers pushing one particular religious view.
    Have they gotten better about this? I know there were some public pushes in that regard in the last decade, but I also know a year or two back they tried to nonchalantly interpret an updated DoD directive on enlistment oaths to exclude the possibility of affirmations in lieu of oaths before getting publicly smacked for it.
    Whether the Army and Navy have picked up on it, I don’t know.
    As far as other services go, IDK, but the Army seemed pretty laissez-faire while I was in at the start of the decade. We had chaplains of pretty much every major faith (though e.g. the Buddhists were pretty thin on the ground), open atheists in positions of authority, etc. I’m sure specific commands and branches are worse, but in general the Army seems pretty big-tent.
    If I had to pick a service outside the AF to raise a concerned eyebrow at, it’d be the Marines…

    Reply
  23. I hope that the Air Force, at least, has learned from their experience with officers pushing one particular religious view.
    Have they gotten better about this? I know there were some public pushes in that regard in the last decade, but I also know a year or two back they tried to nonchalantly interpret an updated DoD directive on enlistment oaths to exclude the possibility of affirmations in lieu of oaths before getting publicly smacked for it.
    Whether the Army and Navy have picked up on it, I don’t know.
    As far as other services go, IDK, but the Army seemed pretty laissez-faire while I was in at the start of the decade. We had chaplains of pretty much every major faith (though e.g. the Buddhists were pretty thin on the ground), open atheists in positions of authority, etc. I’m sure specific commands and branches are worse, but in general the Army seems pretty big-tent.
    If I had to pick a service outside the AF to raise a concerned eyebrow at, it’d be the Marines…

    Reply
  24. I hope that the Air Force, at least, has learned from their experience with officers pushing one particular religious view.
    Have they gotten better about this? I know there were some public pushes in that regard in the last decade, but I also know a year or two back they tried to nonchalantly interpret an updated DoD directive on enlistment oaths to exclude the possibility of affirmations in lieu of oaths before getting publicly smacked for it.
    Whether the Army and Navy have picked up on it, I don’t know.
    As far as other services go, IDK, but the Army seemed pretty laissez-faire while I was in at the start of the decade. We had chaplains of pretty much every major faith (though e.g. the Buddhists were pretty thin on the ground), open atheists in positions of authority, etc. I’m sure specific commands and branches are worse, but in general the Army seems pretty big-tent.
    If I had to pick a service outside the AF to raise a concerned eyebrow at, it’d be the Marines…

    Reply
  25. What I wonder about is city police forces: we know that some national police organizations endorsed Trump, and there was open insubordination in. e. g., the NYPD over Black Lives Matter, etc. How far would Trump get if he declared the Democratic governments of “sanctuary cities” (and perhaps the associated states) treasonous and illegitimate and ordered their police to overthrow them?

    Reply
  26. What I wonder about is city police forces: we know that some national police organizations endorsed Trump, and there was open insubordination in. e. g., the NYPD over Black Lives Matter, etc. How far would Trump get if he declared the Democratic governments of “sanctuary cities” (and perhaps the associated states) treasonous and illegitimate and ordered their police to overthrow them?

    Reply
  27. What I wonder about is city police forces: we know that some national police organizations endorsed Trump, and there was open insubordination in. e. g., the NYPD over Black Lives Matter, etc. How far would Trump get if he declared the Democratic governments of “sanctuary cities” (and perhaps the associated states) treasonous and illegitimate and ordered their police to overthrow them?

    Reply
  28. …and, also, what would National Guard units do in the event of open armed confrontation between a modern US state and the Federal government?

    Reply
  29. …and, also, what would National Guard units do in the event of open armed confrontation between a modern US state and the Federal government?

    Reply
  30. …and, also, what would National Guard units do in the event of open armed confrontation between a modern US state and the Federal government?

    Reply
  31. sanctuary jurisdictions are a place where the federal vs local tension is likely to come up.
    in general, being a “sanctuary city” means your local police will not investigate, arrest, or charge people solely for being in violation of immigration law. as a practical matter, it usually means local cops won’t ask people about their legal status.
    immigration enforcement is properly a federal job, so this is at least logical. for people whose primary responsibility is public safety, it also encourages openness between law enforcement and the immigrant communities (legal or not). which makes their job a hell of a lot easier.

    Reply
  32. sanctuary jurisdictions are a place where the federal vs local tension is likely to come up.
    in general, being a “sanctuary city” means your local police will not investigate, arrest, or charge people solely for being in violation of immigration law. as a practical matter, it usually means local cops won’t ask people about their legal status.
    immigration enforcement is properly a federal job, so this is at least logical. for people whose primary responsibility is public safety, it also encourages openness between law enforcement and the immigrant communities (legal or not). which makes their job a hell of a lot easier.

    Reply
  33. sanctuary jurisdictions are a place where the federal vs local tension is likely to come up.
    in general, being a “sanctuary city” means your local police will not investigate, arrest, or charge people solely for being in violation of immigration law. as a practical matter, it usually means local cops won’t ask people about their legal status.
    immigration enforcement is properly a federal job, so this is at least logical. for people whose primary responsibility is public safety, it also encourages openness between law enforcement and the immigrant communities (legal or not). which makes their job a hell of a lot easier.

    Reply
  34. As for the question of the National Guard, we can look to history for an answer. During the Civil Rights Movement times, there were a couple of instances where the Federal government (i.e. the President) “nationalized” the National Guard in a state. That is, took them into direct Federal command in order to prevent the state government from using them to help suppress civil rights demonstrations, etc. Worked exactly as intended.
    You might also consider the case of Arkansas. President Eisenhower sent the 101st Airborne into Little Rock to enforce the Supreme Court decision on integrating Central High. I remember watching it on the evening news. There were lots of protesters around yelling epithets at the students and at the soldiers. But no sign of anyone going beyond words.

    Reply
  35. As for the question of the National Guard, we can look to history for an answer. During the Civil Rights Movement times, there were a couple of instances where the Federal government (i.e. the President) “nationalized” the National Guard in a state. That is, took them into direct Federal command in order to prevent the state government from using them to help suppress civil rights demonstrations, etc. Worked exactly as intended.
    You might also consider the case of Arkansas. President Eisenhower sent the 101st Airborne into Little Rock to enforce the Supreme Court decision on integrating Central High. I remember watching it on the evening news. There were lots of protesters around yelling epithets at the students and at the soldiers. But no sign of anyone going beyond words.

    Reply
  36. As for the question of the National Guard, we can look to history for an answer. During the Civil Rights Movement times, there were a couple of instances where the Federal government (i.e. the President) “nationalized” the National Guard in a state. That is, took them into direct Federal command in order to prevent the state government from using them to help suppress civil rights demonstrations, etc. Worked exactly as intended.
    You might also consider the case of Arkansas. President Eisenhower sent the 101st Airborne into Little Rock to enforce the Supreme Court decision on integrating Central High. I remember watching it on the evening news. There were lots of protesters around yelling epithets at the students and at the soldiers. But no sign of anyone going beyond words.

    Reply

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