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In reply to the discussion: If MSNBC continues to have Morning Joe and Mika, that is not good ... [View all]brooklynite
(96,882 posts)17. Are you saying that's factually untrue?
That's what polls indicate. I've never understood why people blame the messenger for news they don't like.
Support For Black Lives Matter Surged During Protests, But Is Waning Among White Americans
The recent protests against police brutality are some of the largest and most widespread in American history. An estimated 15 million to 26 million Americans have taken to the streets to protest police violence and advocate for Black lives.
The remarkable size and scope of these demonstrations has translated into real policy gains, too. Dozens of state and local police reforms have been enacted since the protests started. And at the federal level, President Trump signed an executive order that outlines his administrations priorities for police reform, including creating a national database that catalogues police misconduct. The House of Representatives passed an even more ambitious piece of legislation that proposes a series of reforms, like tying federal funding to bans on chokeholds and setting up a task force to address excessive police force, but the GOP-controlled Senate hasnt taken it up.
Arguably, though, the protests impact on public opinion has been even more immediate and wide-ranging. Unfavorable views of the police, acknowledgement of widespread discrimination against African Americans and support for Black Lives Matter all jumped up by at least 10 percentage points, according to tracking polls conducted shortly before and after the protests by both Democracy Fund + UCLA Nationscape and Civiqs.
These changes in public opinion are being driven in large part by white Americans, who for years have been much less likely than Black Americans to acknowledge that racial inequality remains a real problem. Since the first wave of large-scale Black Lives Matter protests in 2014, white Americans racial attitudes have gradually become more liberalized while Black Americans views have remained relatively steady.
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/support-for-black-lives-matter-surged-during-protests-but-is-waning-among-white-americans/
The recent protests against police brutality are some of the largest and most widespread in American history. An estimated 15 million to 26 million Americans have taken to the streets to protest police violence and advocate for Black lives.
The remarkable size and scope of these demonstrations has translated into real policy gains, too. Dozens of state and local police reforms have been enacted since the protests started. And at the federal level, President Trump signed an executive order that outlines his administrations priorities for police reform, including creating a national database that catalogues police misconduct. The House of Representatives passed an even more ambitious piece of legislation that proposes a series of reforms, like tying federal funding to bans on chokeholds and setting up a task force to address excessive police force, but the GOP-controlled Senate hasnt taken it up.
Arguably, though, the protests impact on public opinion has been even more immediate and wide-ranging. Unfavorable views of the police, acknowledgement of widespread discrimination against African Americans and support for Black Lives Matter all jumped up by at least 10 percentage points, according to tracking polls conducted shortly before and after the protests by both Democracy Fund + UCLA Nationscape and Civiqs.
These changes in public opinion are being driven in large part by white Americans, who for years have been much less likely than Black Americans to acknowledge that racial inequality remains a real problem. Since the first wave of large-scale Black Lives Matter protests in 2014, white Americans racial attitudes have gradually become more liberalized while Black Americans views have remained relatively steady.
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/support-for-black-lives-matter-surged-during-protests-but-is-waning-among-white-americans/
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If MSNBC continues to have Morning Joe and Mika, that is not good ... [View all]
akbacchus_BC
Aug 2020
OP
Don't watch them, their ratings go down, they are moved or dropped, problem solved.
Magoo48
Aug 2020
#1
There is Karnacki telling how whites are turning against BLM. I watch Morning Joe more than any
doc03
Aug 2020
#2
I like the show for the most part. I do still blame them for their part in the coronation of the
Vinca
Aug 2020
#3
I agree about getting all the help plus we need allies. Times have changed
akbacchus_BC
Aug 2020
#19
I share your sentiment about MJ/Mika. I like Nicole Wallace, Rachel Maddow and Lawrence O'Donnell.
akbacchus_BC
Aug 2020
#24
Its Politics, Dems are more above board and I don't feel that the enemy of my enemy
akbacchus_BC
Aug 2020
#37
I only watch as I wanted to figure out if they had really changed their opinions.
akbacchus_BC
Aug 2020
#15
If "being on our side" means "promoting Biden and opposing Trump", then they are...
brooklynite
Aug 2020
#53
All the those historical ghosts were still around in 1968 and, . . . in 2016 and 2020
empedocles
Aug 2020
#45
I am not casting stones at MJ, however, I cannot forget how Mika was so negative
akbacchus_BC
Aug 2020
#31
I never said I wanted MSNBC to be a version of faux noise! Why are you assuming that?
akbacchus_BC
Aug 2020
#32
No, we want shows more like Rachel and less from "ex"-Republicans and Trump fluffers.
MrsCoffee
Aug 2020
#38
Faux noise is not gonna pay them more than MSNBC. Plus MSNBC is a more reputable
akbacchus_BC
Aug 2020
#48
Sorry, no. MSNBC is more honest, professional, and trustworthy, but not more reputable.
Towlie
Aug 2020
#74
What was the "stuff about Clinton" that they repeated? I watch them every morning and I didn't
CTyankee
Aug 2020
#56
I liked Clinton and voted for him. However, he was in charge of his own "downfall."
CTyankee
Aug 2020
#68