What is unfair about using a suspects color in a description?!? We use all colors EQUALLY!vision wrote:Spoken like a true whitey. How dare someone be sensitive when they are unfairly treated! ...Will Robinson wrote:And the reason people would even consider omitting that descriptor isn't based on efficiently locating a suspect. It is to accommodate the sensitivities of people who resemble the description. Or to perpetuate the race baiting industry...
To them I say life is tough.
Your whole argument is built on this flawed premise that it is somehow unfair. That is ridiculous to the extreme!
In your subsequent response to Spidey you go on to suggest that if we use a more euphemistic description of skin color and they then complain about that the response is to modify our approach again!!
Ridiculous!
Where does it stop? When they complain that even reporting crimes committed by black people is an offense?!?
Before you sneer at that remember that we have a Dem Congresswoman who suggested 'We shouldn't charge young black men with a crime for selling crack cocaine because that is the only job the white man has left them to hold!'
Your flawed premise is compounding the problem. You are afraid to draw the line on something quite simple because it would require some tough love.
There is nothing unfair about calling a small pointed shovel a spade, even if some people use 'spade' as a racial slur. We don't need to drop the word spade from the lexicon to protect black people's feelings. And if you did drop it and they then decided that even the use of the letters s p a d e are offensive it wouldn't be an indication that we need to do more work trying to protect them from their hypersensitivity! It would be a sign that you are completely silly!