-Fred Hampton was a black activist from Chicago – an extraordinary speaker, youth organizer for the NAACP.

-He joined the Black Panthers and shone so brightly that he was made chair of the Chicago chapter when he was only 20.

-He founded the Rainbow Coalition, which brought together Black and Latino activists and radical anti-poverty Catholics.  He forged an alliance among major Chicago street gangs to help them make peace and work for social change.

-In 1967, when he was just 19, Hampton was identified by the FBI as a “radical threat.” The FBI tried to subvert his activities in Chicago, sowing disinformation to get the groups he’d drawn together to distrust each other, and getting an FBI plant next to him as a bodyguard.

-(This is part of an illegal FBI program called COINTELPRO, which aimed to paint black civil rights activists (among others) as violent and threatening.  If you’ve only seen pictures of the Black Panthers as armed and dangerous revolutionaries, and never heard of their children’s breakfast program, their community health clinics, or their “copwatch” patrols, this is why.   It’s because COINTELPRO was a highly successful work of political propaganda.)

-On December 3, 1969, Hampton taught a political education course at a local church, and then several Panthers gathered at his apartment for a late dinner.  One of them was the FBI plant bodyguard, who drugged Hampton.

-At 4:45 AM on December 4, a squad of Chicago Police officers and FBI agents with a warrant to search for weapons stormed the apartment. Investigations later showed they fired between 90 and 99 times.  The Panther on security detail, Mark Clark, was holding a shotgun.  He was shot, and the gun went off into the ceiling.  This was the only shot fired by the Panthers.

-Fred Hampton, in another room, didn’t awaken.  He was shot in his bed.  Twice, in the head, at point-blank range.  He was 21.

-Four weeks after witnessing Hampton’s death, his finance Deborah Johnson gave birth to their son, Fred Hampton Jr.  That’s him in the photograph, visiting the grave of a father who died before he was born.  A resting place riddled with bullets.

via

  • electric_nan@lemmy.ml
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    14 days ago

    If all you know about Fred Hampton is that decades after his death, cops still fear him this much, you know what a great man he was.

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        I think it does. Cops were terrified of Hampton. They had to have him drugged before they were brave enough to storm in and murder him in his sleep. Remember how scared Dorner made cops?

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        He obviously still has a hold over them mentally. If that isn’t power I don’t know what is.

        • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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          13 days ago

          If we take what you’re saying as truth then that means people who suffer from anxiety are more likely to be hateful.

          I don’t think that’s true. I think fear certainly plays a part but I can very safely say I hate people that I would never be afraid of.

        • teslasaur@lemmy.world
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          Not really. It has more in common with disgust. I know it’s a common trope though.

          I remember teachers trying to make us kids feel better when someone had gotten bullied. “He’s just jealous of you”. Even then it struck me as something incredibly forced and not true. Having heard bullies laugh about the sentiment afterwards gives me reason to think they weren’t jealous.

          The same “lie” is being fed now, only in a different format. “They were afraid of him”. No, they really aren’t afraid.

          • Clent@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            Bullying is very much fear based. People while high self worth do not bully others. Bullying is always an internal weakness lashing out.

            You may only remember jealousy as one reason but there are many reasons for bullying others but at its root it’s an internal fear of inferiority.

            When you recall the bullied reacting to this asssessment, what do you imagine the response would be; immediate self reflection?

            • teslasaur@lemmy.world
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              Yes, it’s fear-based. But the bullies do not feel fear or jealousy. That is a completely fabricated reason, made to comfort the bullied.

              The bullies want to make others feel smaller. It has more to do with lack of empathy, and nothing to do with fear.

              Why would the bullied feel self-reflection for being lied to by parents/teachers etc? I think you got it the other way around.

              • Clent@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                I do not expect them to self-reflect. I expect them to deflect. Which could be attributed to them laughing at explanations for why they are bullies.

                Belief that they are laughing because they know it is false is not back up by the behavior profile.

                For example, if someone told Trump he has narcissist personality disorder because his father refused him the lover and praise he craved as a child, if he stopped and pondered the accusation, it’s actually more likely to be false than if he explosively reflects the accusation.

                There are well defined behavior patterns. These patterns are continuously being developers and reworked but the implication is that we are not these unique snowflakes.

                We are actually incredibly predictable at an individual level and our true motivations are knowable even if we refuse to acknowledge it; especially when we emotionally reject acknowledgment.

                • teslasaur@lemmy.world
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                  12 days ago

                  I asked why the bullied would feel self-reflection, as if its their fault for being bullied?

                  What if i said that the bullies grew up in happy families, well adjusted. They just have/had a superiority complex and looked down on others. Not all fit the nice mold that you describe.

                  And it doesn’t take away the fact that kids are lied to, for comfort that doesn’t help in the slightest. Followed by the nonsense nowadays where every bully is described as “afraid”.

  • _stranger_@lemmy.world
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    We can only hope to live lives that leave fascists seething for generations after we die. Rest in power.

    • Doctor_Satan@lemmy.world
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      I’d rather lead a life that leaves fascists dead after I die. But I’ll take seething as a consolation prize.

    • But_my_mom_says_im_cool@lemmy.world
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      The first time I heard about the Tulsa race riots it blew my mind that it wasn’t common teaching in schools.

      White folk told black people to gtfo and go build their own town, so they did and it prospered while the white towns went to shit. So of course the racists are like “we gotta kill all the black folk and burn their town, cause they’re doing better than us!”

      • nico198X@feddit.nl
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        And this is still the underlying cancer in America. We’re here today because Obama broke their brain.

        Popular, two -term, erudite, black man as president with no scandals.

      • SkunkWorkz@lemmy.world
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        *Tulsa race massacre.

        It was not a riot. It was a targeted organized attack to kill black people.

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    The rest of the story from Wikipedia:

    During the raid, Panther Mark Clark was also killed and several others were seriously wounded. In January 1970, the Cook County Coroner held an inquest; the coroner’s jury concluded that Hampton’s and Clark’s deaths were justifiable homicides.[14][15][16][17]

    A civil lawsuit for wrongful death was later filed on behalf of the survivors and the relatives of Hampton and Clark.[18] It was resolved in 1982 by a settlement of $1.85 million (equivalent to $6.03 million in 2024); the U.S. federal government, Cook County, and the City of Chicago each paid one-third to a group of nine plaintiffs. Given revelations about the illegal COINTELPRO program and documents associated with the killings, many scholars now consider Hampton’s death, at age 21, a deliberate assassination at the FBI’s initiative. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fred_Hampton

        • unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de
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          its very easily solvable from a technical standpoint. the reason we cant is entirely because of copyright laws.

          archive.org page mirrors could be used instead of direct links, the problem is that archive.org is in danger of being sued for hosting those mirrors.

          that would still leave a single point of failure, but if you implemented a bittorrent style version of archive.org you could easily archive any webpage and media forever.

          everything structurally bad about the internet is bad because of copyright laws.

        • KingPorkChop@lemmy.ca
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          14 days ago

          It’s also part of the rewriting of history. AI is going to make the mutation of facts even easier as more people feel comfortable asking AI questions. They can program it to vomit out whatever misinformation they want.

        • ShaggySnacks@lemmy.myserv.one
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          I remember growing up people saying “Once, it’s on the internet. It’s there forever”. Turns out, the Internet is subjected the power of entropy like everything else.

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            Huge swathes of the internet being shut down via overzealous copyright enforcement isn’t entropy.

            Like everything else that’s killing or at the very least making worse all the best qualities of the internet, it’s enshittification to maximize profits and corporate ownership of every aspect of life they can possibly get their greedily grasping hands on.

        • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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          Yes thats 100% true, Fred was drugged, moved to a different room, and killed while unconscious.

          However all other aspects of the raid are inconsistent among various witnesses: who shot first, where the gunman in the first room was killed, how the police presented themselves, etc. The agents responsible deserved to face time for the wrongful killing of Fred, but the raid on the compound in itself is an expected outcome of the Black Panther’s actions. Their ideology created this outcome, using them as some sort of icon now 60 years later is disingenuous and pointless.

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    If it weren’t for the Black Panthers there wouldn’t be meal programs in public schools. The BP “Free Breakfast for Children” program was so popular and so effective at raising awareness and popularity for the BP party that the government became paranoid that they were constructing an effective “fifth column”. All of the sudden states started passing laws creating food programs for public schools in order to undermine their message.

    Nothing good happens in this country unless the rich are scared. The same thing applied to the New Deal.

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    Jfc that’s dark. Fred Hampton was a badass who was murdered by the state. But that’s not enough and they shoot his fucking tombstone? Get the fuck over it! You already killed our guy to suppress a movement. You don’t have to be aggrieved any longer, you fucking pussies.

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      He was murdered by cops who have since retired, this is being done by newer pigs who want to show their loyalty to the boot.

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    Nobody actually knows who shot the headstone, it was discovered damaged in 2016:

    Flint Taylor — one of the lawyers for Hampton’s family — recently journeyed to Haynesville to eulogize Fred Hampton’s mother, Iberia, a devoted mother and courageous activist who passed away in October 2016. He discovered this desecration of Hampton’s grave at that time.

    As far as I can tell the notion that it’s a police tradition seems to originate from a possibly sarcastic post on r/stupidpol on that other site.

    But he was definitely assassinated by the police and the FBI, which is probably much worse.

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        Yeah, but it hurts to have ‘myths’ like this perpetuated. My line of thinking is that if you wanna hate cops, there’s plenty of actually true things to use against them. If you float a story like this it hurts because someone that is happy with the police will point out that this might not be true and now you’re arguing about whether this is true vs. the disgusting behavior of US police.

        I agree it has the air of plausibility, but it feels like hearsay to me. If it meets others’ threshold of “truthiness”, I can’t fully disagree, but for me this isn’t over that threshold. I’ll choose one of the few hundred other police abuses just this year to criticize them.

        • Regrettable_incident@lemmy.world
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          Yeah, I get you, and I agree entirely. There’s no shortage of genuine shit to throw at the police. Inventing stuff just casts doubt on the genuine shit. I wouldn’t be at all surprised to learn that cops were behind this but all we have is speculation.

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        in bakersfield california, they have an informal “most violent cop” award where they sew fake blood onto stuffed animal baby seals as the trophy….

        among hitchhikers it’s well known that the cops there will take your gear, shave your head, and abandon you at the edge of town….

        i did doubt the annual shooting of a headstone one, just because it would be too easy to catch them. although cops may have done it once.
        i think this also coincided with the series about hampton and the fbi informant bodyguard… who killed himself shortly after the series came out….

        • kerntucky@infosec.pub
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          in bakersfield california, they have an informal “most violent cop” award where they sew fake blood onto stuffed animal baby seals as the trophy….

          I wouldn’t be surprised if that were true but do you have a source that can confirm it?

          In related news:

          In Kern County, California, cops kill 1.5 people per 100,000 residents—prompting an investigation by The Guardian, but not by state or federal overseers.

          While attempting to track every police killing in the United States during 2015, journalists at The Guardian discovered that cops in Kern County aren’t just the deadliest force in the state relative to the population, they are the deadliest in the nation. “In all, 13 people have been killed so far this year by law enforcement officers in Kern County, which has a population of just under 875,000,” the newspaper has just reported. “During the same period, nine people were killed by the NYPD across the five counties of New York City, where almost 10 times as many people live and about 23 times as many sworn law-enforcement officers patrol.”

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        Eh, I think at least for the past few decades it isn’t actually too plausible.

        Any known discharge of a firearm by police requires some sort of review. While they may be super lax and claim all sorts of false rationalizations for shooting a living person, I think even they would be unable to come up with a rationalization for discharging at a headstone in a public area.

        Now if it is “take a whack at the headstone with a crowbar”, I could believe that, but I don’t think they’d risk shooting a headstone out of the blue.

        • yarr@feddit.nl
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          Any known discharge of a firearm by police requires some sort of review.

          I think “known” is the operative keyword here. If a police revolver goes off without a citizen to hear it, did it still make a sound?

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            Revolvers aren’t exactly known for being stealth… It’s just too much risk to desecrate a grave of someone who was dead before most of those officers were even born that most folks have never even heard of. At this point even the oldest on the force would be a generation removed from any officers that were working in 1969.

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    ACAB. That cannot be said enough.

    As a proud father of two young men, this absolutely breaks my heart while simultaneously pisses me the fuck off to no end.

    The people in power are good for nothing cowards. “In God We Trust?” Yeah, if this is what your God allows, then fuck Him and fuck you too. I hope everybody involved in this murder rots in whatever wasteland of Hell they believe in.

    Goddamnit.

    • sporkler@lemmy.world
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      Anyone who can find any reason to shoot at the grave of a young respected political activist who worked against the side of hate deserves denial of peace in the afterlife as well.

  • lowleekun@ani.social
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    Thanks for this post. The police propaganda was so successful that even i have seen the black panthers as a violent gang, without realising it. Thanks for spreading knowledge about people who have fought for their rights and the rights of others even in the eyes of horrible oppression and death. May we be blessed with more people like him.

    • CalipherJones@lemmy.world
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      The Government wouldn’t let black people create their own state and wouldn’t let them integrate into white society. What other option is there besides the threat of violence to defend ones own community at that point?

      • floofloof@lemmy.ca
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        These days, there are options like being kidnapped by the cops and sent for life imprisonment in El Salvador.

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          14 days ago

          I’m a firearms expert with over 10 hours of experience in Call of Duty and I say it would ricochet exactly back at the person who shot it (who would die and drop a grenade, as is tradition).

        • Jerb322@lemmy.world
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          13 days ago

          Ballistics High Speed did that. It was like a 10" cube (25 cm). It took a shape charge to break it. They shot it with a lot of different bullet sizes. Up to and including a 50BMG.

        • GraniteM@lemmy.world
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          It would not! In fact, if we use a tungsten alloy, it’ll be both cheaper and less likely to chip. Here’s a quick estimate:


          Estimate: Tungsten Heavy Alloy Gravestone (83,415 cm³)

          Gravestone Dimensions:

          • Height: 3 feet (91 cm)
          • Width: 2 feet (61 cm)
          • Depth: 0.5 feet (15 cm)
          • Volume: ~83,415 cm³
          • Estimated Weight: ~1,500 kg (using 18.0 g/cm³ tungsten heavy alloy)

          Item Estimated Cost (USD)
          Raw Materials (Tungsten Heavy Alloy) $48,000
          Machining & Shaping $11,000
          Engraving (laser or CNC) $750
          Freight Transport (special handling) $2,000
          Installation (crane + labor) $3,000
          Total Estimated Cost $64,750

          This cost reflects a bullet-resistant, nearly indestructible gravestone crafted from dense tungsten alloy—designed to last centuries with virtually no erosion or damage under normal conditions.

            • GraniteM@lemmy.world
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              I did, I admit it. I haven’t the faintest idea how much a tungsten alloy gravestone would actually cost to craft and install. I’m sorry.

              • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                12 days ago

                Try asking it things that you do understand a few times. Maybe you’ll realize that it doesn’t know shit about shit and the only reason that you think it’s suitable for your comment is because its about something you don’t know enough about to question.

            • GraniteM@lemmy.world
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              Respect for… the hardworking people who list prices of tungsten alloy in dollars per gram? I’m just screwing around with a silly idea on the internet, man. Would it make you feel better if I had just invented a number off the top of my head?

              A hundred and fifty thousand dollars. That’s how much it would cost. I know that because my cousin works in tungsten alloy, and my brother makes headstones. No, wait, we can get it second hand, so actually it’ll only cost five hundred dollars. There, now I’ve created an original thought, and that’s much better than ballparking it with GPT.

              But honestly, man, I’m just trying to hang out and have a pretty low-stakes conversation, and you come out here and you type out seven words without capitalization or punctuation, and what you said, and the way you said it… it bummed me out.

              You don’t like that LLMs exist. I get it. You’re pissed off that they’re creating an endless cascade of slop, and that they’re already being used to unemploy people, and it’s just going to get worse. Hell, man, I was a theatre major in college. I wanted to do Shakespeare and Ionesco and shit. But you know, it turns out that it’s virtually impossible to do theatre and make enough money to live, seeing as how anyone can turn on their TV and see Olivier doing Hamlet, and if they don’t like that they can turn on YouTube and rewatch the sneezing panda video for the umpteenth time, so the demand for live theatre isn’t really what I thought it was when I was seventeen and I took out all those loans.

              So I got a series of jobs, and now I’m getting older, and I don’t do as much theatre as I wish that I could, but I’m trying. I’m trying to make the best of the hand that life dealt me. I’m trying to be a good person, and yeah, sometimes that means taking a shortcut, because I thought it would be fun to throw out some plausible numbers about the cost of tungsten. So I’m sorry. I’m sorry I upset you with that.

              But, man, maybe you could just take a moment to think about the fact that there’s a human being on the other side of this conversation. I’m not asking for permission to just burn the entirety of human creativity down. Fuck, the idea of how technology can devalue the arts is terrifying and enraging to me, too. But if you’re going to come at me over it, maybe you could try to treat me like a person, and not like an NPC that you can just lay into, you know?

              So anyway, I wrote all that myself. I hope that makes you happy.

              • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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                Mate, my father was a hardworking person who listed prices of tungsten alloy in dollars per gram and if he were here today he would say, “Son, if you don’t get out there and list prices of tungsten alloy like me and my father before me then I will be sorely disappointed”.

                And, lo, because of your post demonstrating the effectiveness of AI in listing prices of tungsten alloy in dollars per gram I have recently been laid off at the listing prices of tungsten alloy in dollars per gram factory.

                I, my father and his father before him are very disappointed at your single-handed destruction of our entire industry and way of life. 🫤

              • 0ops@lemm.ee
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                At least disclose when you use it from here on out. When I see llm-speak without acknowledgement that that section of text is from an llm, frankly, I’m going to write you off as a bot.

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                This is going to be harsh at first but bear with me. The reason you’re being treated like an NPC is because you’re acting like one. You copied that answer directly from ChatGPT, and from what I can tell didn’t put any original thought into it.

                You didn’t make that post, ChatGPT did and you let it use your name. I want to hear from YOU, the person who poured their effort into a post explaining themself and sharing their life experiences with us. It makes me happy that there’s other people I can connect and relate to about the struggles in life. That’s what I want from Lemmy. If I wanted pure information, I’d get an RSS reader. I want to hear how people’s thoughts and insights relate to their experiences.

                I don’t know what the role of AI should be. I recognize that AI often gets things right, but it also hallucinates with great confidence. I also have no way to prove if you or anybody else truly has a cousin that works in tungsten alloy. I do think there’s an inherent value in human anecdotes. They tell you about the person and can spark followup discussion. I could ask you about the tungsten alloy second hand market, and you might have an interesting story about how rich people love to flaunt giant blocks of tungsten, but then get bored and sell them. Those stories have value to me.

                I also recognize that AI can be a ton of fun to spit ideas with, but it’s not good on its own. Your ideas are what drives it. If you asked it for a estimate for if it was made of a titanium alloy as well, now you’ve added a bit of your own ideas to the discussion. We can build on that and discuss the merits of tungsten vs titanium. The questions you choose to ask is at least one way to express your individuality.

                The Lemmy community will gradually decide over time what the role of AI is. Right now, a lot of us fiercely attack any signs of AI in hopes of defending the human element. I’m sorry you were yelled at, and you don’t deserve to be treated like that. I respect your openness and the fact that you took time to write your reply.

                I hope you’ve found some value in my response and it connects to you on some level. I hope you continue to practice theater and it brings you joy.

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            13 days ago

            We can recycle Confederate relics and property to pay for it. Trump’s golden toilet? Turn it into gold bricks, and finance the building of lasting monuments to genuine freedom like Fred Hampton’s tombstone.

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      They wanted him dead because they want us divided. The divided states of Musk & Thiel.

      • CalipherJones@lemmy.world
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        The White government wouldn’t allow black people to integrate or create their own society. They wanted to keep black people subjugated.

        Now that race isn’t as much of an issue as it was (still is a big issue please nobody be a pedantic bitch), it’s clear that white and black has really been a fight of rich and poor the whole time.

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          And now they are trying to spin the narrative and create a new race war against anything non American.

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            13 days ago

            They’re also punishing any institution that dares suggest there is racism in the USA, either now or in the past. The USA is run by the same kinds of people who would shoot up Fred Hampton’s grave.

        • Dragonstaff@leminal.space
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          13 days ago

          No. Your words aren’t the problem, your sentiment is.

          Regardless of you trying to stave off criticism, it’s still off-putting to say “race isn’t as much of a problem” when white supremacists have taken over the government and are resegregating society. But okay, things are a little better now than in the 1960s.

          But no, white and black has not “really” been rich and poor. This is divisive nonsense. White people have attempted to keep Black people subjugated for 400 years. Class warfare is on top of that, and pretending otherwise is racist.

          History is littered with white activists who achieved their goals on the backs of Black people, then fucked off as soon as they got theirs. If we want to win the class war, whites need to stand in true solidarity with Blacks, not try to erase history.

        • madjo@feddit.nl
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          12 days ago

          It’s class warfare. The rich want the poor divided, so that they don’t rise up against the rich.

      • Denjin@lemmings.world
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        12 days ago

        I mean, this whole thing happened before Musk was even born, but the point still stands. Divide and rule.

  • MNByChoice@midwest.social
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    14 days ago

    Is there a fund or organization working to get this man a new headstone? It can be replaced annually, sp needs some organization behind it.

        • Aeao@lemmy.world
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          14 days ago

          Then find an answer to a question but warn I haven’t researched enough to know how legit it was?

          No thanks. I’m fine with my effort on a 10 min break unpaid break. how much effort did you put in?

          Complaining is easy and pointless. At least my effort wasnt “none”. Where is your ten minutes?

          As for the concept “every bullet is a badge of honor” I disagree. If the stone is unreadable there’s nothing to look into. On the other side there is extreme power in “well rebuild, Everytime. We haven’t forgotten either”

          That’s just my view. Take it or leave it.

            • Aeao@lemmy.world
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              13 days ago

              Give me one example btw? “Sometimes a lazy answer is worse than no answer”

              What are your examples? Lol. Complaining is useless. I provided answers.

              • Robert7301201@slrpnk.net
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                13 days ago

                https://xkcd.com/978/ The problem is that a lazy answer builds credibility for a source or fact. You may try to disclaim that it’s unreliable, but the mere act of suggesting an answer implies your own support for it.

                “I’ve heard there’s studies that suggest vaccines cause autism.” is a lazy answer to the question of vaccine safety that ignores the complicated nature of academic research. What it does do is build consensus. Over time, that lazy answer repeated gets you to state where a lot of people doubt the safety of vaccines.

                I realize we all live busy lives and nobody has time to research things in great depth. Some people barely research major purchase decisions. What people are trying to communicate here is that an AI answer has very low credibility along the lines of “my uncle who works at Nintendo”.

                We don’t need you to act as a human interface for ChatGPT. If you want to use ChatGPT, use it as a starting point for your own research. Ask it questions like “Where could I find information on this topic?” and go from there. Of course, that’s a lot of work; but you can always choose not to post.

                If you have life experiences that give you insight into a topic, or you did research and found a good source; please comment and share your insights. They add value to the conversation and it’s why most of us are here.

                • Aeao@lemmy.world
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                  13 days ago

                  No one else has an answer. They were interested in having answer. I found found one.

                  Don’t compare me to someone speaking nonsense about vaccines. That’s crazy talk.

                  I was clear open and honest, I even suggested people find their own information. I just offered a jumping off point.

          • Nelots@lemm.ee
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            13 days ago

            On one hand, I can appreciate you doing some work. On the other hand, an actual fundraiser was my first result upon googling “Fred Hampton gravestone fundraiser”, which is far quicker than asking ChatGPT would have been. You put in extra effort for worse results (your link has nothing to do with his grave, and instead seeks landmark status for his home). So I believe “do less next time” is a pretty apt response.

            Edit: I’ve emboldened a portion of this comment to emphasize it more. I was not intending to start a whole argument over this. It was meant to be a simple criticism of the method.

            • Lemminary@lemmy.world
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              13 days ago

              But it was about the same effort and got very similar results. I mean, you put in a whole lot more effort into your reply and yet you’re criticizing people of doing too much. I don’t get it. Does ChatGPT trigger people this much?

              • Nelots@lemm.ee
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                13 days ago

                I have no issue with ChatGPT, I simply dislike when people rely on it as their first and only source and give unhelpful answers because of it. (Edit: Not to mention ChatGPT can be quite dangerous when used this way. Its a bad habit that shouldn’t be encouraged.)

                And I wouldn’t say I put in more effort in my response considering the amount of caveats they added in theirs about how they asked chatgpt and have no idea if its real. Our responses were similar in length, mine is just all one paragraph and so looks bigger. If I had responded to the original question, I would have just dropped a link and that would have been the end of it.

                • Lemminary@lemmy.world
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                  13 days ago

                  I simply dislike it when people rely on it as their first and only source

                  But they were clear about what they did. It’s similar, but what you’re saying doesn’t apply here.

                  I’m only comparing your response to their effort asking ChatGPT. My point is that typing up a comment on Lemmy is much more effort than formulating a question for ChatGPT, which is negligible, making the entire argument around how much effort one exerts in what a bit forced. Idk, I find it unproductive when there are better points to argue about.

              • tane@lemm.ee
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                13 days ago

                It’s annoying and so are the people who defend it to death like you

                • Lemminary@lemmy.world
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                  13 days ago

                  I’m defending it to death now? Lmao ok

                  Personally, I find it more annoying when someone starts accusing others of things that have not happened but to each their own.

              • Aeao@lemmy.world
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                13 days ago

                His result was wrong. He brought up the old donation site I mentioned was now unable to accept donations. He did more work and got less results.

                • Lemminary@lemmy.world
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                  13 days ago

                  Their point was not about donating but that the fundraiser had changed focus, which was true. If it had been specifically about donating, then I’d agree.

            • Aeao@lemmy.world
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              13 days ago

              Your answer was wrong. Mine wasn’t. You provided a wrong answer with the same amount of work I put in to provide the correct answer. How is that better?

            • Aeao@lemmy.world
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              13 days ago

              Again your charity link is useless and old now. It does nothing. The closest in maintaining his child hood home. I provided the correct answer. You were wrong and prideful because you wasted more time to find less. Congratulations.

              • Nelots@lemm.ee
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                13 days ago

                Edit: I don’t actually care enough to have a full-blown argument over this. Especially not one seeping into mild personal attacks territory.

                (my original response)

                I promise I have no pride in my ability to google search four keywords. Conversely, you seem rather prideful in your ability to ask an LLM a question. Good job I guess?

                And how is yours the correct answer while mine is wrong? The link you provided about his childhood home is also an inactive fundraiser. That is to say, a completely unhelpful link. And you call me prideful lol. I would have at least linked the actual relevant old fundraiser unlike you.

                And again, I didn’t waste any more time googling four keywords and clicking the first link than you did opening ChatGPT and asking it an actual question.

                • Aeao@lemmy.world
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                  13 days ago

                  I’ve have no pride in my bones at all. I’ll admit wrong, I even said that it was a possibility in my edit

                  You claimed you found the better answer, an answer I already explained was wrong. no pride involved on my end. I was very very clear about my effort. You did worse. These are facts not pride.

        • Aeao@lemmy.world
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          13 days ago

          Even if ignoring I provides the answer… It’s pretty silly that you think my one comment on lemmy effects the Internet as a whole. Grown-up.