There is something threatening about being video-recorded by someone with a cell phone against their will. It has happened to me before, and it wasn't fun. I calmly asked the guy to stop video-recording me, and he just kept sticking the phone camera in my face, very disconcerting. Now, she was clearly in the wrong too, she should have apologized to have her dog off leash, which was against the rules. The situation could have been resolved much more amicably, if cooler heads prevailed. However, I don't really see that this incident is related to racism.
NY is the home of racism starting from the day Ellis Island opened? And here I thought racism might have started during slavery.
Link to her interview. You don't know what was said before the recording began. And you don't offer other people's dogs treats nor would I let a stranger in the park give one to my dog. The story is he approached her because she didn't have he dog on a leash and was questioning her about it. Why can blacks do that to white but whites not to blacks?
She is a horrible woman, of that there is no doubt. With that being said, in a nation of 330 million people, there are literally countless instances of people behaving horribly, and that includes white to black, black to white, black to black, white to white, red to white etc. The list is literally endless, yet it still represents a tiny fraction of the populace. With that being said, singling out an individual instance of a horrible person, and using that for the sole reason of inflaming racial tensions is a net negative for society. If she were part of some type of movement, that would be one thing. This isnt the knock out game where groups of black youth are looking for others from another race to sucker punch them into unconsciousness. This isnt a member of a white supremacist group that went out looking for a black man to frame. It is just some crazy b*tch trying to get her way and was willing to do or say whatever she could that she thought was going to help her get her way. The more you stir sh*t the more it stinks. You are not helping the situation. You are in fact a part of the problem.
They were trying to ask a guy in their neighborhood what he was doing. And the delivery guy who was stopped and asked what he was doing by the HOA president in the gated community. The cries have been if a white person questions a black person as to why they are doing what they are doing it's racists but here we see a black guy questioning a white woman and the white woman is the racist.
“I’m not a racist. I did not mean to harm that man in any way.”- haha typical from a NYC rich white liberal after being like a racist
So he never said anything about a treat to her. And I would NEVER let a stranger just walk up and give my dog something to eat and now with the COVID thing I don't let them pet. It was about her dog not being on a leash. So why is it OK for blacks to do that towards whites but not white to blacks where is is labeled racist to do so?
we have leash laws in NYC. he asked her to follow the law. people get attacked by dogs all the time, i was almost bit by one a few months ago
NYers are not known for jumping into pickup trucks and chasing down black joggers, while armed with shotguns.
Hahahahaha...right...they were just merely asking a guy who was jogging what he was doing. Not to mention they did it by chasing him down armed with guns. Wow.
No they wanted to ask what he was doing and question his actions. Why is it OK for blacks to question whites but not the other way around?
Again why is it OK for blacks to question whites on what they are doing but not the other way around that being racist? Why didn't the black guy just call the police as is being asked of the white guys in the two incidences I noted?
Pretty sure there's no law against jogging. There is a leash law, one that the woman wasn't obeying. So there's that.
LMAO ya right Ronstar, man you really think NY doesn't have history.. Dude, why do you even try stuff like that lololo, hilarious!
No they attempted to conduct a citizens arrest, while armed. the arrest was unlawful and the jogger defended himself under Georgia's SYG law.
Why do you keep making sweeping generalizations? Each incident is specific on it's own. As I pointed out...there is no law against jogging. In the case of the woman in the park...there is a leash law that she was not obeying. Therein lies the difference.