No. I'm saying that politically the chief needed to say what he said, regardless of how he felt personally or any impact the group may have had. It's not hard to understand why.
How did the Oath Keepers further inflame the situation? Because The Guardian wrote a titled article and the SPLC thinks guns are icky and labels most who own them extremists? Seems to me one year ago things were a bit worse, what with the fires and looting and whatnot. Was that because they were there this time? Dunno, but it wasn't any worse than the first time the news was covering this.
I would agree that the chief needed to be careful in want he said. And once you get to be Chief, you must learn to be pretty careful with your words. I think that we agree on that. In fact, from what I can tell, the next day the chief refused comment and stood behind the county exc. (I think that is who it was). But you know, as long as we are playing make believe, this is sort of what I think he might have said
if he really wanted the Oath Keepers around but could not say so.
"We appreciate the well meaning sentiments and offers of assistance we are receiving from throughout the country during this difficult time. But right now our focus is to work with local and state law enforcement to bring claim to the situation."
As for charges against the Guardian, I think that you guys have presented sometimes weak, and in all honesty sometimes silly, arguments for an egregious bias on the part of the paper and the reporter.
In the space of about 10 minutes, I sequentially collected, (in order) a number of news links from Google as they popped up.
There is everything from the left to the far right (and a bunch of stuff in the middle) in the array list that came up. They all had a common theme. Any guesses as to what that theme might be?
NPRhttp://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2015/08/12/431978076/oath-keepers-say-theyre-defending-ferguson-others-say-theyre-not-helping… some local officials say the Oath Keepers aren't helpful, or even welcome. …
Another protester, Mary Chandler, said the police failed to confront the Oath Keepers in the way they challenge some of the protesters in Ferguson. "We can't even stand on this side of the street without the weapons being pointed at us," Chandler said during a street demonstration on Tuesday night. "But yet you can bring those people that can come in, no questions asked, with rifles and things strapped across their body and everything is OK and you don't feel any sense of danger at all."
Both St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar and County Executive Steve Stenger say the Oath Keepers aren't welcome in Ferguson.
Stenger told St. Louis Public Radio's Jason Rosenbaum, "The last thing you need in a situation like we have are people walking around with semi-automatic weapons.
It's inflaming a situation that's already inflamed."
NBChttp://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/michael-brown-shooting/oath-keepers-turn-michael-brown-protests-ferguson-missouri-n407696…, St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar described their presence as "both unnecessary and inflammatory."
The organization — which claims to have more than 30,000 members — was founded in 2004 by former U.S. Army paratrooper and Yale Law School graduate Stewart Rhodes.
Rhodes has referred to Hillary Clinton as "Hitlery" and earlier this year
said that Sen. John McCain should be tried for treason and "hung by the neck until dead" for going "along with the program of the destruction of this country."
Bearing Arms - Guns & Patriots - SAVING LIBERTY AND LIVEShttp://bearingarms.com/oath-keepers-go-home/It seems quite clear that the four white Oath Keepers self-deployed to a black neighborhood in which there is considerable racial tension, in what many regard as nothing more or less than a show of force.
They interjected themselves into a community where they were neither wanted nor requested, and raised tensions instead of assuaging them as the prior group of Oath Keepers did in December of 2014.
I don’t know anything about the individual Oath Keepers involved in this most recent appearance of the Oath Keepers in Ferguson, but then again, their intentions and pedigrees are all but irrelevant. The public perception of what they were doing, and why they were there, is what matters.
Oath Keepers, go home.Chicago Tribunehttp://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/ct-ferguson-oath-keepers-armed-militia-20150811-story.htmlNabeehah Azeez called the presence of the armed men "a contradiction in how things work."
"The rules don't apply to everyone," she said. "If those were black men walking around with rifles, they probably wouldn't be living today
County police ordered them [Oath Keepers] to leave then, but group members intermittently returned.
PSMAGhttp://www.psmag.com/politics-and-law/oath-keepers-and-twisted-legacy-of-american-vigilantismWhy is it that white Americans carry high-powered weapons openly in the name of "property," while African Americans constantly risk the full wrath of state power for virtually no reason?
BBChttp://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-33867245One protester was filmed asking an Oath Keeper member "If you're armed, why can't the protesters be armed? Doesn't the second amendment apply to them too?"
Another man remarks, "what about protecting black people?", to which the so-called Oath Keeper replied: "All lives matter, sure."
St Louis Todayhttp://www.stltoday.com/news/local/metro/armed-members-of-oath-keepers-return-to-ferguson-streets/article_e1275f62-db42-5cf5-9bac-6b5c8fb43981.htmlSt. Louis County Executive Steve Stenger however decried the arrival of the Oath Keepers on Ferguson streets.
"Their presence is unnecessary and it is inflammatory," the county executive told reporters Tuesday evening. "
The last thing we need in this situation is people walking around with automatic weapons. They are inflaming a situation that is already inflamed."
Newsmaxhttp://www.newsmax.com/US/oath-keepers-ferguson-missouri-riots/2015/08/11/id/669497/"You're going to bring some uncommissioned citizens, white citizens, into a black community like this? It's disrespectful," said Talal Ahmad, 30, who is black and has been a fixture of the last year's protests, which prompted a Justice Department review that found Ferguson's police department routinely violated city residents' civil rights.