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Bosox Org is feeling it...
#1
[Image: 200722190034-red-sox-black-lives-matter-...ge-169.jpg]
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#2
Permanent  banner or will they recognize that other lives matter too new banners?  Racist to say only black lives matter.  Just curious.
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#3
Quote: @IDVikingfan said:
Permanent  banner or will they recognize that other lives matter too new banners?  Racist to say only black lives matter.  Just curious.
I'd bet its temporary.

Where does it say "only?"

Thats where a lot of whiteys get tripped-up...It's not even implied that ONLY Black Lives Matter.Origin of Black Lives MatterFirst recorded in 2013; the slogan that arose from the hashtag #BlackLivesMatteron social media after George Zimmerman was acquitted of murder in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed African-American teenagerThe phrase Black Lives Matter was coined as a social media hashtag in 2013, sparked by an acquittal in the shooting death of an unarmed African-American teenager. Within a couple of years, it grew from a popular hashtag and rallying cry to the name of a full-fledged political movement in the U.S. and worldwide, aiming to ensure basic human rights for all black people. 

The hashtag itself, #BlackLivesMatter , was chosen by the American Dialect Society as its 2014 Word of the Year, because it played such an important role in current political discourse. As a first for a hashtag, the vote led to passionate discussions over whether a hashtag can be a Word of the Year. There was also discussion as to whether a three-word phrase could be considered a word. The society argued that while hashtags, especially phrasal ones, may not fall under “the traditional definition of a word,” some can become “vocabulary items” and end up seamlessly woven into the language. 

Originally used as metadata to organize messages on Twitter, hashtags now can function just like words or phrases do. Black Lives Matter , with or without the hashtag, with initial capital letters or entirely in lowercase, is now commonly used as a phrase and can refer to broad, general principles: Does the candidate believe that Black Lives Matter? We need to assert that all black lives matter. 

The phrase also has influenced the language of activism, inspiring people to rally around similar hashtags, such as #BlackKidsMatter , #BlackWomenMatter , #BlackLawyersMatter , and #BlackTeachersMatter , which focus the values of the larger movement in support of specific groups within the black community. Another spinoff of Black Lives Matter centers on a profession instead of race: #BlueLivesMatter gained exposure on social media when police officers were killed on duty. 

But the visibility of Black Lives Matter has caused some to misinterpret the movement’s mission as valuing black lives above other lives. For example, the hashtags #WhiteLivesMatter (used by a white supremacist group of the same name) and #AllLivesMatter (used by mostly white and conservative critics) have sprung up in opposition to the Black Lives Matter movement. 

However, these derivative and evolving hashtags have been subject to criticism on varying levels, as many view them as attempts to detract attention from the vital efforts to ensure basic human rights and dignity for all black people

https://www.dictionary.com/browse/black-lives-matter
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#4
It's the victim complex, no one can suffer more than ...
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#5
Quote: @purplefaithful said:
@IDVikingfan said:
Permanent  banner or will they recognize that other lives matter too new banners?  Racist to say only black lives matter.  Just curious.
I'd bet its temporary.

Where does it say "only?"

Thats where a lot of whiteys get tripped-up...It's not even implied that ONLY Black Lives Matter.Origin of Black Lives MatterFirst recorded in 2013; the slogan that arose from the hashtag #BlackLivesMatteron social media after George Zimmerman was acquitted of murder in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed African-American teenagerThe phrase Black Lives Matter was coined as a social media hashtag in 2013, sparked by an acquittal in the shooting death of an unarmed African-American teenager. Within a couple of years, it grew from a popular hashtag and rallying cry to the name of a full-fledged political movement in the U.S. and worldwide, aiming to ensure basic human rights for all black people. 

The hashtag itself, #BlackLivesMatter , was chosen by the American Dialect Society as its 2014 Word of the Year, because it played such an important role in current political discourse. As a first for a hashtag, the vote led to passionate discussions over whether a hashtag can be a Word of the Year. There was also discussion as to whether a three-word phrase could be considered a word. The society argued that while hashtags, especially phrasal ones, may not fall under “the traditional definition of a word,” some can become “vocabulary items” and end up seamlessly woven into the language. 

Originally used as metadata to organize messages on Twitter, hashtags now can function just like words or phrases do. Black Lives Matter , with or without the hashtag, with initial capital letters or entirely in lowercase, is now commonly used as a phrase and can refer to broad, general principles: Does the candidate believe that Black Lives Matter? We need to assert that all black lives matter. 

The phrase also has influenced the language of activism, inspiring people to rally around similar hashtags, such as #BlackKidsMatter , #BlackWomenMatter , #BlackLawyersMatter , and #BlackTeachersMatter , which focus the values of the larger movement in support of specific groups within the black community. Another spinoff of Black Lives Matter centers on a profession instead of race: #BlueLivesMatter gained exposure on social media when police officers were killed on duty. 

But the visibility of Black Lives Matter has caused some to misinterpret the movement’s mission as valuing black lives above other lives. For example, the hashtags #WhiteLivesMatter (used by a white supremacist group of the same name) and #AllLivesMatter (used by mostly white and conservative critics) have sprung up in opposition to the Black Lives Matter movement. 

However, these derivative and evolving hashtags have been subject to criticism on varying levels, as many view them as attempts to detract attention from the vital efforts to ensure basic human rights and dignity for all black people

https://www.dictionary.com/browse/black-lives-matter
I would also guess that it will not be a permanent banner and for sure, no mention that other races matter in future banner.  Really more accurate to say all.

Your "whitey" slur was offensive.  My beliefs are based on what I taught in church and in school not based on my skin color.   All are created equal.  Thou shall not murder and thou shall not steal.  The shall not does not apply to a specific group or groups but protecting all.  I don't really care what you think about my beliefs but I can assure you that they NOT based on my race.
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#6
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#7
Quote: @IDVikingfan said:
@purplefaithful said:
@IDVikingfan said:
Permanent  banner or will they recognize that other lives matter too new banners?  Racist to say only black lives matter.  Just curious.
I'd bet its temporary.

Where does it say "only?"

Thats where a lot of whiteys get tripped-up...It's not even implied that ONLY Black Lives Matter.Origin of Black Lives MatterFirst recorded in 2013; the slogan that arose from the hashtag #BlackLivesMatteron social media after George Zimmerman was acquitted of murder in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed African-American teenagerThe phrase Black Lives Matter was coined as a social media hashtag in 2013, sparked by an acquittal in the shooting death of an unarmed African-American teenager. Within a couple of years, it grew from a popular hashtag and rallying cry to the name of a full-fledged political movement in the U.S. and worldwide, aiming to ensure basic human rights for all black people. 

The hashtag itself, #BlackLivesMatter , was chosen by the American Dialect Society as its 2014 Word of the Year, because it played such an important role in current political discourse. As a first for a hashtag, the vote led to passionate discussions over whether a hashtag can be a Word of the Year. There was also discussion as to whether a three-word phrase could be considered a word. The society argued that while hashtags, especially phrasal ones, may not fall under “the traditional definition of a word,” some can become “vocabulary items” and end up seamlessly woven into the language. 

Originally used as metadata to organize messages on Twitter, hashtags now can function just like words or phrases do. Black Lives Matter , with or without the hashtag, with initial capital letters or entirely in lowercase, is now commonly used as a phrase and can refer to broad, general principles: Does the candidate believe that Black Lives Matter? We need to assert that all black lives matter. 

The phrase also has influenced the language of activism, inspiring people to rally around similar hashtags, such as #BlackKidsMatter , #BlackWomenMatter , #BlackLawyersMatter , and #BlackTeachersMatter , which focus the values of the larger movement in support of specific groups within the black community. Another spinoff of Black Lives Matter centers on a profession instead of race: #BlueLivesMatter gained exposure on social media when police officers were killed on duty. 

But the visibility of Black Lives Matter has caused some to misinterpret the movement’s mission as valuing black lives above other lives. For example, the hashtags #WhiteLivesMatter (used by a white supremacist group of the same name) and #AllLivesMatter (used by mostly white and conservative critics) have sprung up in opposition to the Black Lives Matter movement. 

However, these derivative and evolving hashtags have been subject to criticism on varying levels, as many view them as attempts to detract attention from the vital efforts to ensure basic human rights and dignity for all black people

https://www.dictionary.com/browse/black-lives-matter
I would also guess that it will not be a permanent banner and for sure, no mention that other races matter in future banner.  Really more accurate to say all.

Your "whitey" slur was offensive.  My beliefs are based on what I taught in church and in school not based on my skin color.   All are created equal.  Thou shall not murder and thou shall not steal.  The shall not does not apply to a specific group or groups but protecting all.  I don't really care what you think about my beliefs but I can assure you that they NOT based on my race.
No offense meant ID...
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#8
when did ones own (non biased) opinion become something bad in this country?   why is it racist to view a movement that singles out one race as racist, and whos supporters are destroying and defacing public property left and right as a bad thing?

the movement was a good thing,  what it has become, and the rhetoric and actions, used by many of those that defend it, has become so offensive and racist in its own right that I dont see how corporate America will stand behind it.  I could be wrong,  but just like most other movements they will fall short of their intentions and become a footnote in history.

It doesnt matter what those that support it think their actions represent,  it only matters how others view its purpose and message and if most others view it as divisive... well then it failed. 
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#9
The Toronto Raptors are feeling it too.

https://twitter.com/Ez4u2say_Janis/statu...36066?s=19
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