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Ronin Kraut
Actual Justice Warrior
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Comments by "Ronin Kraut" (@roninkraut6873) on "White Students Attacked For BLM At Elementary School" video.
@idorus You do have a point in having tolerance but the sudden physical exertion didn’t help. This has happened to a lot of people where they die after a struggle with the police (not being beaten). It’s a phenomenon called excited delirium. The autopsy doctor had seen the limited police YouTube video we all saw at first which caused the emotional response. He was already biased before doing his exam. This is part of a cycle we have experienced in the US for decades.
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@egobrain6826 He does have a point. And we have to be careful when we look at those stats of overdoses. I’m not sure if you are referring to fentanyl or opiates but both have their explanations. People who overdose on opiates are usually taking prescriptions and then are forced to seek illicit drugs because they are cut off by their doctor. They overdose on street drugs and then the hospital lists it as an opiate overdose. Or they are taking something else (like alcohol). The fentanyl issue is taking a dose and being tolerant but then you are given something that has 200X the normal amount and anyone would have died from that. There are plenty of studies and research that shows tolerance and how someone could take a substance for a long time and not overdose. This case was very different though. There were multiple factors at play here and not just the excess of drugs on board. We also know that the officer wasn’t kneeling on his neck, he was on his upper shoulder area. It wasn’t because he was “murdered” (because he wasn’t).
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@soleursuelos3616 Actually it was necessary for him to be “knelt on” that long. Two reason made it so. Floyd’s own behavior while resisting arrest and the crowd gathering around the officers. They were trying to take him into custody. The crowd presents a threat to the officers’ safety. This was kind of talked about at trial but not really. The use of force expert should have talked more about why Chauvin’s attention was on the crowd more than checking on Floyd. Officers have been beaten and killed by surrounding mobs. The reasonable people understood what happened but the emotional response took over for most. It was a miscarriage of Justice. If you actually cared then maybe you’d know about Tony Timpa. The white man who died nearly the same way as Floyd a year before. Since he wasn’t black the narrative didn’t fit.
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@egobrain6826 But that’s what I was agreeing with that person on. It’s a debate tactic. 🤦♂️ I think we are losing a bit in translation here. Fentanyl is a completely different animal. I’ve known people who were using it then took some illicit drugs and died because there was too much fentanyl in it. Fentanyl can even be absorbed through your skin. There have been officers OD because of this when arresting someone trafficking it. We know Floyd tried to swallow a bunch when arrested too. That whole case was a miscarriage of justice
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This has been going on for decades. In the 80’s we had Roots. This caused a lot of physical violence in schools across America. People believed, and still believe, it was an historically accurate portrayal and it caused outrage against white children. Then we had the same racist hoaxes in the 80’s and 90’s. Then we had the Rodney King arrest being edited and played on repeat on the news which caused the 92 LA riots. Race hustling has made a very tiny few very rich while indoctrinating very many to be racist. It stops for awhile when the majority (whites for now) have had enough. My fear is one day it won’t stop..
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@chrisshergie1030 He’s saying Lortab 10’s as in the strength or 10mg. He took 45-50 of lortab 10mg pills per day
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@egobrain6826 He kind of does. First timers die all the time because they take what their addict friend takes. I don’t agree at all with the analysis of the Floyd trial but addicts are able to take a lot for a long period of time. They are also able to operate cars more effectively than a non addict taking the same amount. There is evidence of this. But I’m not saying addicts cannot die. Because they can. There is such a thing as stacking and eventually you get to a certain point long enough and your heart shuts down.
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@egobrain6826 So he had a point with tolerance being a thing? Thanks, you proved what I’ve been trying to say. And no, you don’t just have tolerance one day and not the next. It depends on the amount. There is a limit to what your system can take within a certain time period. Some drugs are out of your system in 24-48 hrs while others take 24-48 days. There are certain opioids that don’t get out of your system and they build up until you shut down and die.
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@egobrain6826 No. It was clearly a point of him having tolerance from years of drug abuse. That’s what I was saying he had a point on. You don’t have to agree and you can continue to argue this but you’d be wrong. The conversation was between me and the other person. So your entire argument is worthless
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@chrisshergie1030 Actually, I think there’s research showing how addictive social media (including YouTube) can be. I think you’re right.
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