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I would not give a penny.My priest put out a letter that he made a donation to Casa Juan Diego in the name of Martin Gugino, as it is a local organization associated with the Catholic Workers Movement.
I would not give a penny.My priest put out a letter that he made a donation to Casa Juan Diego in the name of Martin Gugino, as it is a local organization associated with the Catholic Workers Movement.
Not as bad as blaming the victim. And I wonder why so many are fed up with injustice in other parts of the country. I did not know so many people thought this was acceptable.Bad bad behavior Gugino.
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That I believe. It is a good charity. To top it off, it assists a lot of undocumented immigrants.I would not give a penny.
Acceptable?I did not know so many people thought this was acceptable.
Lots of ‘good’ charities are hurting and will be worse off in months ahead. Thinking there will be extinction of some great charities that started out on the right foot but went bad.That I believe. It is a good charity. To top it off, it assists a lot of undocumented immigrants.
They do serve and protect. They are not paid to be friendly friends…like a restaurant or store greeter.They put on a vest, grab a shield, then forget that they are police and supposed to protect and serve citizens.
–The police everywhere have no “modicum of common sense and/or humanity.” None.the misconception that the police had a modicum of common sense and/or humanity.
Illegal aliens, in the country illegally.undocumented immigrants.
Context matters. I was referring specifically to this topic, here, and this incident here. They were not pelted with bricks or bottles. There are not molotov cocktails. This man did not spit on them. You used the logic that if one is from Milwaukee he mus be a cannibal.–The police everywhere have no “modicum of common sense and/or humanity.” None.
This is who they help. It is a charity supported by the diocese of Galveston-Houston, providing assistance for immediate needs.undocumented immigrants.
That is its own issue. Do you know if there is thread on it yet? I haven’s seen it yet.In Seattle now the respectable protesters are shaking down small businesses in the area they control for “donations”
Why are the actions of a few protesters imputed to the whole, but the actions of a few police have to be viewed as isolated incidents? Particularly given that the police are members of a specially selected, trained and supervised cadre of professionals, who can and should police their own ranks, while literally anyone can walk up and join a protest?The following actions were on full display for all the world to see all across US cities last week
–Because it sure looked like that WAS the whole. These riots and looting went on in every major city in America - or, more appropriately, all the major democrat-run ones.Why are the actions of a few protesters imputed to the whole,
This is a completely untenable position, as I suspect you realize, and factually untrue. There have been millions of protesters and only a handful of incidents. I also notice you side step my main point - it makes no sense to hold a group that cannot control its makeup accountable for the actions of every member, while simultaneously excusing a group that does control its makeup (and is responsible for their training and their actions) from the actions of its members. You can’t say a bad cop is a “bad apple,” but say a violent protester is the whole group. Not without completely surrendering intellectual honesty and consistency.–Because it sure looked like that WAS the whole. These riots and looting went on in every major city in America - or, more appropriately, all the major democrat-run ones.
Bolded for emphasis by me.The various police officers and their families now in the hospital or the funeral home as a result of the social reformers will probably get a visit from a chaplain, possibly covering up his collar.
–Nope. 100% disagree.This is a completely untenable position, as I suspect you realize, and factually untrue