Y’all know it’s Juneteenth, the day we celebrate the end of slavery.
Here in Minnesota, we had a little warm-up party by releasing the cop who murdered Philando Castile, and we continue to celebrate by arresting people who protest that outrageous verdict.
Juneteenth dates back to 1865. It might have been a little premature.
What a Maroon, living up to the 'nym says
(Cross-posted from the political madness thread.)
In light of the acquittal of Jeronimo Yanez in the murder of Philando Castile, this article, while not exactly news, is relevant.
There are even more disturbing details in the linked article.
The trailer for the documentary is here; worth watching especially if you were starting to get warm fuzzies for Jim Comey.
cervantes says
Castile would be a cause celbre for the NRA – he had a licensed weapon in the glove box, which he appropriately disclosed. There’s just one small reason why they haven’t taken it up. Can you guess it?
Tabby Lavalamp says
Holy fuck, What a Maroon @1! Holy fuck!
What a Maroon, living up to the 'nym says
Tabby Lavalamp,
Yep, if you’re looking for fascism, that’s where you’ll find it.
The attitude of the police and the courts ought to be that the worst outcome of any police encounter is the killing of a citizen who doesn’t present a lethal threat. Unfortunately, the prevailing attitude is that the worst outcome is the death of a cop. I’m not advocating cop killing, but they ought to understand that when they sign up, they’re agreeing to forfeit their lives if necessary.
Instead you get this toxic brew of machismo, fear, and racism.
slithey tove (twas brillig (stevem)) says
re Castile:
The “incident” was damn awful disgusting. No debate.
Worse, was that a jury acquitted the killer. Training of cops can be modified to handle such encounters more reasonably.
To have 12 ordinary citizens, unanimously agree to acquit the cop for the “misdeed” is more pukeworthy.
microraptor says
What a Maroon @4:
The expectation is that cops agreed to risk their lives in order to defend civilians, but we’re increasingly seeing an attitude that it’s acceptable to sacrifice a few civilians to protect cops.
What a Maroon, living up to the 'nym says
microraptor,
Of course, the acceptability of the sacrifice is proportional to the darkness of the victim’s skin.
EigenSprocketUK says
#6 microraptor
…to protect cops from the risk of becoming fearful, when their training tells them to be fearful.