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		Ask for help > Pull a Ferguson?     
			
		 Pull a Ferguson? 
		
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 AL3NA
 
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							| Pull a Ferguson? 
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							| Hi everyone.  I was doing some online reading and came across this expression: “He tried to pull a Ferguson.” Does anyone know what this means?  Thanks 
 |  24 Apr 2015      
					
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 Carolinenjnc
 
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							| Hi, I believe it is a racial comment and refers to a situation that occurred in the city of Ferguson, MO. I found an article about it here:   http://www.salon.com/2014/09/05/i_wish_someone_would_pull_a_ferguson_on_them_louisiana_cop_resigns_for_racist_texts/   It probably generated from the situation around the city of Ferguson, MO where a police officer shot and killed an African American. There are many opinions around the whole case, and the fact that the whole situation around that city escalated to almost a crisis.  If you read this article, you should be able to understand this phrase from the context. |  24 Apr 2015     
					
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 Nelssa
 
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							| Pulling a Ferguson 
 In East Texas this is the act of calling into work on an excessive basis and suffering no repercussion. " I am pulling a Ferguson Monday." 
 http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Pulling%20a%20Ferguson
  Meaning that in East Texas they use this expression when they are not going to work on a short notice, and can get away with it without any consequences... Or in East Texas an employer can demand extra work, or excessive overtime, from an employee without any consequences...? |  24 Apr 2015     
					
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 Aurore
 
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							| I �ve never heard this before. I �ve read the article but I �m still none the wiser. Can anyone  explain what it means? Is it pejorative or not? |  24 Apr 2015     
					
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 redcamarocruiser
 
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							| I read the article that Carolinenjnc posted and I interpret it to mean that someone in authority who tried to pull a Ferguson attempted to intimidate or shoot a minority person without being held responsible or indicted of a crime. Wilson, the officer who shot Michael Brown dead was not indicted. |  24 Apr 2015     
					
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 seansarto
 
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							| Nelssa is most correct in the intpretation. It is a cynical phrase in a politically cynical environment, not racist. It means to overreact about something. 
 |  25 Apr 2015     
					
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