Comments
bkornblith t1_j13mn77 wrote
This is like naming streets Gay Avenue etc. It is all a prop. it does nothing to change the systems of oppressions in place.
HEIMDVLLR t1_j13s549 wrote
This country erected statues and created holidays for men who did a lot worse.
BiblioPhil t1_j13xzb5 wrote
Yeah, but those were white guys!! These are black teens and they might have stolen from people, so who cares if we wrongly accuse them of rape??
...is the thought process, I assume
BiblioPhil t1_j13y29x wrote
And yet, like with Gay Avenue, people will still complain about it and reveal their biases
bkornblith t1_j13yx5r wrote
Oh people will always be hateful monsters
WickhamAkimbo t1_j13zidm wrote
Or maybe they're both bad and you shouldn't treat politics as a team sport? Maybe grow up a little?
WickhamAkimbo t1_j13zm6z wrote
And those statues were also wrong. Does that make you right?
BiblioPhil t1_j140255 wrote
Maybe acknowledge that being wrongly accused of rape is unjust regardless of whether you've stolen from someone. Team sports have nothing to do with it (unless you're suggesting that only one "team" says that).
BiblioPhil t1_j140iuu wrote
I actually think celebrating different sexual orientations is a way of creating fewer monsters in the first place.
mowotlarx t1_j140mi8 wrote
That's funny because people take photos in front of Gay Street every minute of every day, because it brings them joy and they want to share. Just because you have no personal stake in an issue doesn't mean it's not important.
HEIMDVLLR t1_j140o84 wrote
Yet here you are defending this statement, about a group of boys who went to jail and spent a lot time behind bars. They paid for whatever crimes they may have committed that night and for crimes they didn’t commit.
What jail time has any of the individuals this country erected statues of serve? Also love how you leaped over the holiday part!
[deleted] t1_j14130n wrote
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mowotlarx t1_j141fqh wrote
These are 4 words etched into a gate in Central Park, not a 10 point plan to tackle criminal justice and world issues. Every entrance gate has words etched on to them and now this one does too. This isn't trying to be anything other than what it is - recognizing a group of people in a georgraphically significant location.
Honestly arguments like this are exhausting. We can walk and chew gum. We can commission art and signs and still work on fixing larger systems.
WickhamAkimbo t1_j141p56 wrote
It is absolutely unjust and should be recognized as such. This thread was, from the beginning, talking about recognizing that while not memorializing people that nonetheless also committed other crimes.
WickhamAkimbo t1_j141uxp wrote
Those statues and holidays are also wrong. Does that make you right?
BiblioPhil t1_j1425zr wrote
I actually don't think whether or not they committed "other crimes" was the point of the post. The point was that they were wrongly accused due to racism.
As another commenter pointed out, it's never been a requirement that someone be perfect for a statue to be made of them. Why start imposing that requirement now?
BiblioPhil t1_j142q9v wrote
If you put up a statue of someone, you better have a damn good reason and solve every associated problem. That's why they waited until the last concussion victim recovered before putting up the Rocky statue in Philly
HEIMDVLLR t1_j143s6r wrote
You speak as if those statues no longer exist and those holidays are no longer celebrated.
I’ll answer your question after you create a post about why we should get rid of those statues and why we shouldn’t be celebrating holidays that honor criminals.
[deleted] t1_j143smj wrote
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WickhamAkimbo t1_j143yon wrote
That's a good counter-argument. I think for a lot of people the spree mugging is a big enough issue that they are going to have an issue memorializing them.
WickhamAkimbo t1_j144i3m wrote
I'll edit to "are".
I'm not even making a post about getting rid of this one, just expressing mild dissent. 😂 I generally save my energy for more pressing issues than statues, but feel free to point me towards anything you think should come down. The most obvious target to me in NYC is the Columbus statue at Columbus Circle.
HEIMDVLLR t1_j145wlc wrote
> I generally save my energy for more pressing issues than statues
That is a lie. Look at you in the comments right now. I wasn’t even talking to you and you jumped in the comments. Why?
newestindustry t1_j1479ie wrote
Spree mugging or not, those people would have an issue with this particular memorial no matter what, for reasons that are extremely obvious to everyone.
[deleted] t1_j149p5q wrote
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summitrock t1_j149q36 wrote
Heheh erected
newestindustry t1_j14bis9 wrote
This is how conservatives argue about everything now, I guess. So tiresome
BiblioPhil t1_j14fq1n wrote
I wonder what the overlap is between people who oppose this statue on those grounds and people who defend Columbus monuments or Trump votes. I'm guessing...very large.
drpvn t1_j14g2je wrote
This is the flowchart I use to determine my position on every issue.
Dan-D-Lyon t1_j14i3lt wrote
"This Monument stands as an apology for the time the criminal justice system of New York falsely accused a group of violent, larcenous reprobates of also being rapists"
JetmoYo t1_j14i92e wrote
Aside from wishing we all have mercy for teenage mistakes*, big and small, I think you might be missing the point. The Fives' case has taken on much larger significance in terms of how the entire system abuses its power. Criminal justice, media, prisons etc.
To that end, the plight of the "exonerated" goes beyond just the Fives' story. The gate seems to honor this. And if their story continues to bring attention to issues of systemic bias and even more pointed reforms against corrupt prosecutors and coerced confessions, then I'm all for it.
(* Not sure where the men are now with admitting these lesser/other crimes, but the on-the-record confessions of the robberies or assaults also gets muddied with the coerced confession of the rape. Cops were coercing confessions. But supposedly the boys confessions of the lesser crimes matched with eye witness accounts and timelines (According the the Times). While the rape confessions did not.)
WickhamAkimbo t1_j14iobm wrote
I guess you asked me to create a post, and that's more energy to me than a comment. These comments take very little energy.
summitrock t1_j14n23b wrote
Just getting back to this thread now and I very much agree with this statement.
And now that I’m actually reading the article it appears the gate is in fact not directly for the CP5 but rather for all people who have been exonerated like you say, which is a noble cause. So here here to the people who made this happen and I hope the CP5 get more of these symbolic shows of remorse + fat pockets due to the injustice. Now just have to put trumps head on a spike outside the gates of the exonerated and go full GoT.
(Yes I Commented without reading the article have mercy for me 😂)
BiblioPhil t1_j14n731 wrote
The point is that supporting both is contradictory, yet many people do it. Because their issue with commemorating the exonerated people isn't that they were flawed individuals. It's something else.
drpvn t1_j14p7zu wrote
I’m not a mind reader. My issue with honoring these five guys in particular—and there’s a gigantic difference between, on the one hand, apologizing to them on behalf of the city and state, paying them compensation, and condemning the miscarriage of justice that happened, and, on the other hand, honoring them—is that all the information I have strongly suggests that these guys were absolute pieces of shit, at least as teenagers.
What Trump voters think about this just doesn’t enter into my mind at all. Not every issue needs to be a fight among two warring factions for control over an overarching narrative. But that’s just me.
If Mark Wahlberg were unjustly convicted of rape and then exonerated, I would still think he was a piece of shit.
Taking a step back, though, this debate shouldn’t really be about these guys in particular. The gate doesn’t honor them specifically. It’s about people who have been exonerated. But it’s hard to separate them from the larger issue given that they always show up as the poster boys.
[deleted] t1_j14pxno wrote
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JetmoYo t1_j14r845 wrote
You are exonerated! Walking to the exit o_o
spoil_of_the_cities t1_j14u8k8 wrote
It's Gay Street and it's named after Mr. Gay
newestindustry t1_j1516cb wrote
Where’s White Entertainment Television!!!!
lazerphace t1_j15jsg8 wrote
NYC is tired of people who constantly excuse criminal behavior. The "conservative" you responded to says
>sorry that it bothers you that I don’t honor scumbags who commit gang assault and muggings.
and I agree.
mrmrmrj t1_j15pc6c wrote
The vast majority of crime victims in NYC are minorities.
newestindustry t1_j15tgsl wrote
If your main takeaway from the Central Park Five is that it doesn't matter whether or not they were innocent of the crime they were incarcerated for because they were a bunch of "scumbags" (I might have gone with "savages" or "thugs" if I was blowing the dogwhistle that hard), to quote Bad Santa, your soul is dogshit and everything about you is ugly.
geronimoquince t1_j161sve wrote
Those poor kids. They didn't rape her. They just beat her and held her down while their friend did.
Fig85420 t1_j16anxr wrote
Seems like a great use of public resources. Bravo justice advocates
Traditional_Way1052 t1_j16kfm8 wrote
Is that bad?
drpvn t1_j16oqkx wrote
A suspect in a burglary is being interrogated by police. He's waived his Miranda rights because he's very stupid. He denies any involvement in the burglary. The police tell him, look, buddy, the surveillance camera got you on tape as clear as day. Stop wasting everyone's time and confess and maybe this will go easier for you. The suspect confesses. But the police lied: there was no surveillance tape. Should the confession be tossed out because the police didn't tell the truth?
Traditional_Way1052 t1_j16p014 wrote
Yes. You should not be able to lie. Other countries survive just fine without this ability for their cops.
Traditional_Way1052 t1_j16p6s8 wrote
A suspect in a burglary is told they are caught on camera and the only suspect. They didn't do it but take a plea deal which gives less time because they're terrified of the evidence they think exists, even if they know they only walked by at the wrong time.
Should they be compelled to take a plea deal for that reason?
drpvn t1_j16pv63 wrote
Should an undercover policeman be allowed to tell the lie that he is not a cop?
drpvn t1_j16q46u wrote
Nobody is compelled to take a plea deal.
But yes, I lean toward thinking that conduct by interrogators should remain legal.
PopEnvironmental1335 t1_j16rkb3 wrote
Season 3 of Serial discusses at length how many people are basically coerced into taking a plea deal. A lawyer even went on record and said that judges get pissed if too many people choose a jury trial. The courts are so overloaded that there has to be a certain number of plea deals or else everything grinds to a halt. The system is designed to punish people who don’t plea guilty.
drpvn t1_j16rr41 wrote
What about the other hypothetical I asked: Should an undercover cop be required to tell people that he’s a cop, or should he be allowed to lie about that?
PopEnvironmental1335 t1_j16shjc wrote
I just wanted to give a resource where people can learn about why plea deals can be coercive
drpvn t1_j16t5d3 wrote
Oh sorry; I thought you were the other guy.
PopEnvironmental1335 t1_j16tehz wrote
Np it’s an interesting topic!
liferestrt t1_j16uex9 wrote
I think that's different since it's not an interrogation.
drpvn t1_j16v0kj wrote
It is different but why should the cop be allowed to lie? The lie that he’s not undercover may lead others to make incriminating statements that are later used against them in court, just as statements in an interrogation are.
Edit: just got a 14-day ban for my initial comment on this thread.
nyc-ModTeam t1_j16w7vz wrote
Rule 1 - No intolerance, dog whistles, violence or petty behavior
(a). Intolerance will result in a permanent ban. Toxic language including referring to others as animals, subhuman, trash or any similar variation is not allowed.
(b). No dog whistles.
(c). No inciting violence, advocating the destruction of property or encouragement of theft.
(d). No petty behavior. This includes announcing that you have down-voted or reported someone, picking fights, name calling, insulting, bullying or calling out bad grammar.
Traditional_Way1052 t1_j185lrw wrote
Undercover is entirely different imo, the other guy.
Traditional_Way1052 t1_j185zrr wrote
Are you aware what percentage of people go to trial? People can absolutely be compelled to take a plea deal; for financial reasons, for family reasons, for the sheer horror that is jail. If you aren't even going to acknowledge that possibility, I'm not sure it's worth discussing. It's absolutely coercive. It's designed that way.
Of course undercover is different, they're out in the wild so to speak. If you can't see how that's different, again, I think you're being disingenuous. They're two very different things.
Traditional_Way1052 t1_j1865zl wrote
14 day ban for what???
MakerMikeNYC t1_j1euff4 wrote
For real?? Across rom the 110th street jail???? SMH
tuebrook1976 t1_j287w2s wrote
Exactly.
tuebrook1976 t1_j287zr8 wrote
Or, alternatively, you are intelligent. I go with the latter.
tuebrook1976 t1_j288bem wrote
They DIDN'T do anything wrong. Just did their job - that is, trying to make the streets safer. How many WHEN THEY SEE US t shirts do you own?
tuebrook1976 t1_j288dlo wrote
So what's your point?
hibok1 t1_j2dpx81 wrote
That somehow people will find something wrong with this and complain about it
[deleted] t1_j2dskbr wrote
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summitrock t1_j13k1he wrote
Gate of the wrongly accused….
I despise what happened to these kids and how Trump went after them was hideous but they were out on a jacking spree mugging everyone in sight when the rape occurred. I’d like to see them compensated for their lost time but putting up a stone monument to them is a little perpexling.