cac producer who has worked with Dababy, lil uzi vert, and pop smoke disrespecrs Breonna Taylor

Ish Gibor

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Strongest laaankkkkk :heh:
It’s a disrespectful opinion!

ARUN RATH, HOST:

Are most people more likely to pull the trigger of a gun if the person they're shooting at is black? A new study takes on that question. Yara Mekawi of the University of Illinois is one of the co-authors of the study. Yara, welcome to the program.

YARA MEKAWI: Thank you.

RATH: So, Yara, does race affect whether a target is more or less likely to be shot?

MEKAWI: Well, what we found is that it does. And so in our study, we found two main things. So first, people were quicker to shoot black targets with a gun, relative to white targets with a gun. And the other thing that we found was that people were more trigger-happy when shooting black targets compared to white targets. So what that means is that they had a bias or a tendency to shoot black targets more than white targets.

RATH: Your study is a meta-analysis, meaning you took the results from dozens of studies to come up with your analysis. What kind of studies were you analyzing? Were these done in a lab? What kind of conditions?

MEKAWI: Yeah, they were all conducted in the lab. And so our inclusion criteria was pretty much that they used what's called a first-person shooter task. And kind of how the task generally works is that participants are told that police officers are often put in high-stress situations where they have to make very quick shooting decisions. And so they are presented with images of targets from various races, that either have a gun or they have some kind of neutral object - so sometimes it's a soda can, other times it's something like a cell phone. And what they're told is to make the decision to shoot when they see a target with a gun. And so they are given less than a millisecond to respond, and if they don't respond quickly enough, they get a little error message saying, please make the decision faster. And that was our main inclusion criteria, it was just that the study had to include that task. They had to report data from that task. [POST-BROADCAST CORRECTION: In the audio of this story, our guest incorrectly says that participants in the studies had "less than a millisecond to respond." In fact, they had less than a second.]

RATH: Now you also found a correlation between the bias and states with more permissive gun laws. Could you explain that?

MEKAWI: So that was one of our surprising findings. And so what we did was we basically coded the cities in which the data was collected by how permissive the gun laws were. And we used the Brady Law Campaign, which gives basically states a score of either being very permissive, so this means that, you know, they don't require background checks in the same way that other more strict states might or have other kinds of limitations on who's allowed to purchase a gun. And basically what we found was that in states with relatively permissive gun laws, the shooting threshold for black targets was lower than for white targets.

RATH: The simple question that seems odd to ask maybe - but why do you think you observed this bias?

MEKAWI: Well, there's lots of different theories. A couple of them - so one theory states essentially that when people view images of black targets with a gun, it's what called stereotype consistent, which means that it's something that you expect, and so people typically respond to things more quickly when they're congruent - when they make sense to be together. So that's one theory. Another theory is that it could be something to do with threat. It could be that individuals perceive black targets as being more threatening, and so they inhibit their shooting behavior less because they're more threatened. So you can think of it as kind of a defensive response.

RATH: So talk about the implications of your findings for law enforcement.

MEKAWI: I think, generally speaking, what this highlights is that even though a person might say, I'm not racist or I'm not prejudiced, it doesn't necessarily mean that race doesn't influence their split-second decisions. One implication could be that there should be education about the fact that these biases exist and that they could be outside of one's control. So even if you think that you're not prejudiced, you're not biased that doesn't certainly mean that that's true, in terms of split-second decisions you might the real world.

RATH: Yara Mekawi of the University of Illinois. She's one of the authors of a new meta-analysis of race and trigger bias. Yara, thank you.

MEKAWI: Thank you.

*Shooters Quicker To Pull Trigger When Target Is Black, Study Finds*

Shown a realistic human target — not just a silhouette like this one — shooters were more likely to pull the trigger if the target was black, according to an analysis of 42 studies. "Even if you think that you're not prejudiced," says researcher Yara Mekawi, "that doesn't necessarily mean that that's true in terms of split-second decisions that you might make in the real world."

Shown a realistic human target — not just a silhouette like this one — shooters were more likely to pull the trigger if the target was black, according to an analysis of 42 studies. "Even if you think that you're not prejudiced," says researcher Yara Mekawi, "that doesn't necessarily mean that that's true in terms of split-second decisions that you might make in the real world."

Are most people more likely to pull the trigger of a gun if the person they're shooting at is black?

A new meta-analysis set out to answer that question. Yara Mekawi of the University of Illinois and her co-author, Konrad Bresin, drew together findings from 42 different studies on trigger bias to examine whether race affects how likely a target is to be shot.

"What we found is that it does," Mekawi tells NPR's Arun Rath. "In our study we found two main things: First, people were quicker to shoot black targets with a gun, relative to white targets with a gun. And ... people were more trigger-happy when shooting black targets compared to shooting white targets."

That is, shooters weren't just faster to fire at black targets; they were also more likely to fire at a black target.

*Interview Highlights*

*On the kinds of studies they were analyzing*

Our inclusion criteria was pretty much that they used what's called a first-person shooter task. ... Participants are generally told that police officers are often put in high-stress situations where they have to make very quick shooting decisions.

And so they are presented with images of targets from various races that either have a gun or have some kind of neutral object. So, sometimes it's a soda can; other times it's a cellphone. And what they're told is, to make the decision to shoot when they see a target with a gun.

They are given less than a millisecond to respond, and if they don't respond quickly enough, they get a little error message saying, "Please make the decision faster."

*On an additional finding: a correlation between such bias and permissive gun laws*

[We] coded the cities in which the data was collected by how permissive the gun laws were. And we used the Brady Law campaign, which gives basically states a score ... being very permissive, this means that, you know, they didn't require background checks in the same way that other, more strict states might or have other limitations on who's allowed to purchase a gun. ...


Basically, what we found was that in states that had relatively permissive gun laws, the shooting threshold for black targets was lower than for white targets.

*On theories for why this bias was evident*

One theory states, essentially, that when people view images of black targets with a gun, it's what's called "stereotype-consistent," which means that it's something that you expect. And so people typically respond to things more quickly when they're congruent, when they make sense to be together. So that's one theory.

Another theory is that it could be something to do with threat. It could be that individuals perceive black targets as being more threatening. And so they inhibit their shooting behavior less because they're more threatened. So you can think of it as kind of a threatened response.

*On the implications for law enforcement*

I think, generally speaking, what this highlights is that even though a person might say "I'm not racist" or "I'm not prejudiced," it doesn't necessarily mean that race doesn't influence their split-second decisions.


One implication could be that there should be education about the fact that these biases exist and that they could be outside of one's control. So even if you think that you're not prejudiced, you're not biased, that doesn't necessarily mean that that's true in terms of split-second decisions that you might make in the real world.

 
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Ish Gibor

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Completely insufferable.:hhh:

No sure who this JW Lucas is, but he’s wrong on multiple levels. It’s not the first time cac’s attempted to steal the origin on rap and hip hop culture.

I recall as a child Sugar Hill gang being announced on tv. And the host stated that is was a new trend.

I also recall a German documentary in the late 80s. Some German guys claimed that rap and hip hop came from them. The host corrected them on the spot.

My cousin had that on a video tape. Not sure if he still has it.

This guy seems to be problematic and holds weird views. He seems to conflate stereotypes with actual hip hop culture. I wonder what happened to rap and hip hop culture. This was not a thing before Em became popular.




 
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Ish Gibor

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It’s always these islander motherfukkers biggest c00ns
I’m not sure if it’s always the case, but this one certainly is. And it’s common, unfortunately too prevalent.

I say so, because when hip hop was in its consciousness stage a lot of “islanders” was down as well.

But I get your point.
 

Ish Gibor

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There is NO reason any black artist should associate with any Cacs. That money should be black only. Cacs shouldn’t have a voice in HipHop.

I know there have been some notable Cacs in hiphop but trust me a black man would have filled that spot if given the chance.

Notice anything in our culture there is ALWAYS a CAC commenting or trying to control it, radio, music, sports, tv everything!! We never get the reverse, show me something in white culture that black people actively comment on and make money from? I’ll wait!
Read this book, it explains how they did it and kept doing it.

“The Harvard Report: A Study of the Soul Music Environment Prepared for Columbia Group” by Dr. Logan Westbrook.

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Ish Gibor

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Watch nikkas still use him for them wack ass beats
The way the industry works is based on how the contract was signed. The arts himself or herself may disagree, but if it’s in the contract to work with whoever they say, that artist needs to do so, or will be sued.

Only very few are truly independent artists. Most are signed to labels.
 

Ish Gibor

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You can be on your feelings like a broad, or you can get some manhood training so you can affect some positive change in the legislative/judicial system....


Riddle me this graduate... if you commit a homicide you get charged right.? I ain’t talking about what you feel, I’m talking about legalities. Has Breonna’s death been ruled homicide?(yet). If not, why? If what happened to her wasn’t a homicide(legally). then what will her death get categorized as?

It ain’t gotta be justifiable homicide since you cakemix ass nigggas stuck on semantics..... but if her death isn’t ruled as a homicide, what you think these folks gon classify it as..?
It’s a bit more complicated and nuanced.

"Killings of Black Men by Whites are Far More Likely to be Ruled “Justifiable”. The disparity remains no matter the circumstances and has persisted for decades."(themarshallproject - 2017)

Killings of Black Men by Whites are Far More Likely to be Ruled “Justifiable”


Study: black people are 7 times more likely than white people to be wrongly convicted of murder
(Source: Vox)


This is a study done based on information by over 20 Universities.

I. Murder

• Judging from exonerations, innocent black people are about seven times more likely to be convicted of murder than innocent white people. A major cause of the high number of black murder exonerations is the high homicide rate in the black community—a tragedy that kills many African Americans and sends many others to prison. Innocent defendants who are falsely convicted and exonerated do not contribute to this high homicide rate. They— like the families of victims who are killed—are deeply harmed by murders committed by others.

II. Sexual Assault

• Judging from exonerations, a black prisoner serving time for sexual assault is three- and-a-half times more likely to be innocent than a white sexual assault convict. The major cause for this huge racial disparity appears to be the high danger of mistaken eyewitness identification by white victims in violent crimes with black assailants.

III. Drug Crimes

• The best national evidence on drug use shows that African Americans and whites use illegal drugs at about the same rate. Nonetheless, African Americans are about five times as likely to go to prison for drug possession as whites—and judging from exonerations, innocent black people are about 12 times more likely to be convicted of drug crimes than innocent white people.

“Since 1989, more than 1,800 defendants have been cleared in “group exonerations” that followed 15 large-scale police scandals in which officers systematically framed innocent defendants. The great majority were African-American defendants who were framed for drug crimes that never occurred. There are almost certainly many more such cases that remain hidden. pp. 21-25
[…]
"innocent black people are about 12 times more likely to be convicted of drug crimes than innocent white people. pp.16-17.
[…]
African Americans are more frequently stopped, searched, arrested, and convicted—including in cases in which they are innocent. The extreme form of this practice is systematic racial profiling in drug-law enforcement. pp. 20-21"
[…]
African-American prisoners who are convicted of murder are about 50% more likely to be innocent than other convicted murderers. Part of that disparity is tied to the race of the victim. African Americans imprisoned for murder are more likely to be innocent if they were convicted of killing white victims. Only about 15% of murders by African Americans have white victims, but 31% of innocent African-American murder exonerates were convicted of killing white people."

(Michigan State University)

 
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