bonzombiekitty
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2011
- Messages
- 1,848
Did they shoot him because he was black or did they shoot him because they thought he was a thief making a run for it?
I suspect the latter because of the former.
Did they shoot him because he was black or did they shoot him because they thought he was a thief making a run for it?
Where I have lived, serious runners tend to distinguish jogging from running. Going substantially slower than your marathon pace is jogging. As a rule, marathon pace or faster is referred to as running.
The Wikipedia article on Mary Decker Slaney attributes this factoid to a 2010 article in Sports Illustrated:
Having run with Slaney on a few occasions in the early 1990s, I suspect her jogging pace, even today, is between 8 and 10 minutes per mile.
What you have written here is consistent with my suggestion that serious runners refer to "marathon pace or faster" as running, reserving the word "jogging" for "substantially slower than your marathon pace".I am a sometime, so not serious, runner, and I rarely talk about "jogging." Training pace is a run. 5K pace is a hard run. Marathon pace is a long run. Jogging? When I slow to the point where it's not effort. I find it generally boring.
Mary Slaney uses the word "jogging" to mean "Shuffling along at seven or eight-minute mile pace."Mary Slaney said:“Before I discovered the elliptical bike I was at a point where I was able to go out jogging,” she says, looking back to 2012, when she was introduced to an outdoor elliptical bike called an ElliptiGO. “But I hate jogging. I really hate it. Shuffling along at seven or eight-minute mile pace is not satisfying. But that’s all I could do because I could not get up on my toes any more when I ran."
Mary Slaney, interviewed in 2016 by Athletics Weekly:
Mary Slaney uses the word "jogging" to mean "Shuffling along at seven or eight-minute mile pace."
In her prime, she “rarely ran slower than six-minute pace so it was always good quality training.” That was running.
Exactly.And the point to be reiterated is, "jogging" is a relative term. Mary Slaney's jogging, probably even now well past her prime, is faster than my running, so whether we say Aubery was "jogging" or "running" or how fast he was going is completely irrelevant to anything.
If this case hinges upon the difference between "running" and "jogging," then the defendants are gonna walk.
.....
"Running" is cool.
"Jogging" is not cool.
Fine he as ******* trotting. Or maybe sauntering. Ambling perhaps.
As someone who doesn't do either (God gave us wheels for a reason) I have never seen much of a distinction between the two words. But if pressed, I might see "running" as an organized sports activity, like entering a race, and "jogging" as something you do for exercise before breakfast. Nothing pejorative about either one.
And nothing Arbery should have been killed for.
Fine he as ******* trotting. Or maybe sauntering. Ambling perhaps.
Who cares?
Criminals in the actual real world do any number of things. Just as non-criminals do.Criminals run away. The only criminal known to jog away from his crime is Kyle Rittenhouse. And OJ pulled the driving equivalent of a jog, I suppose.
Did they shoot him because he was black or did they shoot him because they thought he was a thief making a run for it?
either way they had no right to shoot him and I deplore their actions. I also hope the shooters get punished to the full extent of the law.
... and now I can't remember the 3rd. All were denied.
Was he secretly a black pastor?