Are Liberals still saying we're living in a White Supremacist Country?

Here you go again. Pick out a story and chastise the papers that did not emblazon it in headlines. How many violent crimes occur in America every day? There are 125 gun deaths every day. Should that story push them off the news? Well, it already does. We pretty much have to have a mass shooting to get airtime or paper space.
 
Here you go again. Pick out a story and chastise the papers that did not emblazon it in headlines. How many violent crimes occur in America every day? There are 125 gun deaths every day. Should that story push them off the news? Well, it already does. We pretty much have to have a mass shooting to get airtime or paper space.
Had this been a white person attacking a black person it would be the headline be in every newspaper and the kess story on every news show. It would go on for weeks and the propaganda that America as a "systemically racist" country would be perpetuated. Go fuck yourself asshole. You people never get tired of being hypocritical do you?
 
This POS was let out of his last felony by a Progressive Black Female judge with no bail to await trial...
His mother asked the police to put him in jail because she saw him as dangerous and in need of mental treatment. We do not have that available anymore because the money wasted in that belonged to the wealthy. He is mentally ill.
 
His mother asked the police to put him in jail because she saw him as dangerous and in need of mental treatment. We do not have that available anymore because the money wasted in that belonged to the wealthy. He is mentally ill.
Prove that's why.

On the other hand, there's plenty of proof that the Progressive (Leftist) movement has fought long and hard to keep the mentally ill from being institutionalized, closely monitored, or otherwise kept in check by some medical or legal system.

As the Progressive movement gained momentum, there was an increasing emphasis on social justice and the welfare of marginalized populations, including those with mental illnesses. Reformers sought to address the systemic issues that led to the neglect and mistreatment of individuals with mental health challenges. The rise of the social work profession also contributed to the growing awareness of mental health issues, as social workers advocated for better treatment options and policies that prioritized the welfare of individuals over institutional confinement.


Today, many of those who would historically be institutionalized in asylums are now instead incarcerated in jail, cycling in and out of emergency rooms, and living on the streets. Nowhere is this more clear than the city of Los Angeles, which has a swelling population of homeless people, many of whom suffer from mental illness.


Money won't fix the broken, unworkable, system we have in place to deal with mental illness. Until society accepts that many who are mentally ill need supervised treatment 24/7, we'll continue to have many who are mentally ill roaming our streets and cities committing crimes. Benign neglect isn't working and the system pushed on us by the Progressive movement is clearly just another failure of their ideas, the cost of good intentions.
 
Prove that's why.

On the other hand, there's plenty of proof that the Progressive (Leftist) movement has fought long and hard to keep the mentally ill from being institutionalized, closely monitored, or otherwise kept in check by some medical or legal system.

As the Progressive movement gained momentum, there was an increasing emphasis on social justice and the welfare of marginalized populations, including those with mental illnesses. Reformers sought to address the systemic issues that led to the neglect and mistreatment of individuals with mental health challenges. The rise of the social work profession also contributed to the growing awareness of mental health issues, as social workers advocated for better treatment options and policies that prioritized the welfare of individuals over institutional confinement.


Today, many of those who would historically be institutionalized in asylums are now instead incarcerated in jail, cycling in and out of emergency rooms, and living on the streets. Nowhere is this more clear than the city of Los Angeles, which has a swelling population of homeless people, many of whom suffer from mental illness.


Money won't fix the broken, unworkable, system we have in place to deal with mental illness. Until society accepts that many who are mentally ill need supervised treatment 24/7, we'll continue to have many who are mentally ill roaming our streets and cities committing crimes. Benign neglect isn't working and the system pushed on us by the Progressive movement is clearly just another failure of their ideas, the cost of good intentions.
You prove it is not why. Since the kid just got caught, it will take a while to determine what his motivation was. But a fact is, he suffered from mental illness. That is who most will assume he was a Trumpy.
 
You prove it is not why. Since the kid just got caught, it will take a while to determine what his motivation was. But a fact is, he suffered from mental illness. That is who most will assume he was a Trumpy.
I did prove that money wasn't the issue.

The police couldn't do anything about his mental health issues unless he was an immediate threat to the public

Brown’s second-most recent arrest on Jan. 19 came after he called 911 during a welfare check, telling cops that he believed his brain was being controlled by a microchip.

“Brown wanted officers to investigate this ‘man-made’ material that was inside of his body,” his arrest affidavit reads.

“Officers advised Brown that the issue was a medical issue and that there was nothing further they could do,” the affidavit states, at which point Brown flew into a rage and was arrested and charged with “misuse of the 911 system.”

The alleged killer, Decarlos Brown, was schizophrenic. His mother reports that, after he gained release in 2020 from a five-year sentence for robbery with a deadly weapon, he began to say strange things and behave aggressively (he assaulted his sister). She got him evaluated and then got an involuntary-commitment order.

After two weeks of monitoring, he was diagnosed with schizophrenia and released. His mother couldn’t handle Brown and kicked him out of the house...

Brown’s story is shocking, yet all too familiar. It recurs over and over again in cities that tolerate the untreated mentally ill sleeping on grates. Since the great wave of deinstitutionalization in the 1960s, we’ve lost the collective will to insist that those suffering from serious mental illness get help, in an institution if necessary.
This requires spending more resources on psychiatric beds and changing laws to make it easier to mandate treatment and institutionalization. To acknowledge this does not entail, as the mayor put it in her statement, “villainizing” the mentally ill. It is true that most people suffering from these disorders don’t commit acts of violence. Still, it does no one any favors — not the mentally ill, or the general public — to let them go untreated, living lives of squalor in public places.

Money isn't the primary issue here. The primary issue is having the resolve, legal system, and commitment to taking the mentally ill off the streets and putting them in a controlled environment where they can both be treated and monitored. Letting them roam free and unsupervised is not only endangering the public, it is cruel.
 
Prove that's why.

On the other hand, there's plenty of proof that the Progressive (Leftist) movement has fought long and hard to keep the mentally ill from being institutionalized, closely monitored, or otherwise kept in check by some medical or legal system.

As the Progressive movement gained momentum, there was an increasing emphasis on social justice and the welfare of marginalized populations, including those with mental illnesses. Reformers sought to address the systemic issues that led to the neglect and mistreatment of individuals with mental health challenges. The rise of the social work profession also contributed to the growing awareness of mental health issues, as social workers advocated for better treatment options and policies that prioritized the welfare of individuals over institutional confinement.


Today, many of those who would historically be institutionalized in asylums are now instead incarcerated in jail, cycling in and out of emergency rooms, and living on the streets. Nowhere is this more clear than the city of Los Angeles, which has a swelling population of homeless people, many of whom suffer from mental illness.


Money won't fix the broken, unworkable, system we have in place to deal with mental illness. Until society accepts that many who are mentally ill need supervised treatment 24/7, we'll continue to have many who are mentally ill roaming our streets and cities committing crimes. Benign neglect isn't working and the system pushed on us by the Progressive movement is clearly just another failure of their ideas, the cost of good intentions.
As usual, you are clueless. https://obrag.org/2023/04/how-reaga...-institutions-led-to-the-homelessness-crisis/
 
His mother asked the police to put him in jail because she saw him as dangerous and in need of mental treatment. We do not have that available anymore because the money wasted in that belonged to the wealthy. He is mentally ill.
So then you agree with Trump that we need to bring back insane asylums.
 
Here you go again. Pick out a story and chastise the papers that did not emblazon it in headlines. How many violent crimes occur in America every day? There are 125 gun deaths every day. Should that story push them off the news? Well, it already does. We pretty much have to have a mass shooting to get airtime or paper space.
Pivoting won't work, Sybil. Stay on topic.
 
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