A Dead Black Man
Madison, Wisconsin — The George Floyd murder video gives the world a look at the Minneapolis Police Dept — vicious, racist, a black man suffocated to death by the sadistic Derek Chauvin, brandishing a smirk for onlookers pleading for Mr Floyd's life: Nothing can touch me.
Behind the scenes in May, Democrats worried.
Most larger cities are run by Democrat administrations, so how is it that militarized and openly racist municipal police feel free to perpetrate a slow-motion holocaust of black and brown people? Folks might be asking.
Black folks dying is the way it is and the way it should be, is the Democrat consensus. This is an outlook shared by Biden, Obama, from Kenosha, Wauwatosa, Milwaukee, Chicago, Madison and Minneapolis. That's just around here.
In my state, Wisconsin, we know how to handle Black Lives Matter and their friends who object to George Floyd and other folks getting murdered.
Throw their black asses in prison, pass laws to protect statues, harass uppity black candidates and then pontificate how protesters need to learn about proper challenge to black people getting iced.
For example, Wisconsin State Sen. Tim Carpenter (D-Milwuakee), ever more outlandish to Wisconsin Democrat Party silence, remains engaged in his crusade against two Black Lives Matter protestors, Kerida O’Reilly and Samantha Hamer, who are wrongfully accused of a violent felony by Carpenter for their work in solidarity with black folks at June protest. Carpenter knows they're wrongfully accused.
So, it comes as no surprise Democrat Minnesota State Attorney General Keith Ellison and Democrat former acting U.S. Solicitor General Neal Katyal are calling for the criminal trials of Minneapolis police to be shielded from broadcast, blocked from public view.
This is because homicidal police are Democrat creations, and what is bad for police is bad for Democrats.
Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill ordered the proceedings broadcast on video last month so the world can see and understand.
The Democrat Party since mid-November has been working feverishly to stop the 2021 trial broadcast, asking Cahill to reconsider.
Now, jurists are objecting to the ridiculous position of the Democrat Party censoring the trial of murderous human garbage.
Writes in Law and Crime:
Whatever the limitations required by the Minnesota General Rules of Practice, Ellison and his team have gotten the issue all wrong. They should not only consent, but rather enthusiastically invite cameras into this courtroom. As prosecutors, their client is the public – and few cases demand public scrutiny and access more than this one does. ...Not the time for more censorship, not the time to look away.
Without losing sight of the heartbreakingly needless loss of the man himself, the death of George Floyd has become about much more than Floyd the individual. The case sparked a national awakening, tipping public consciousness toward a new level of recognition of some unacceptable deficits woven into the fabric of our society. Sure, Black Lives Matter existed before Floyd’s death, but the BLM protests that ensued during the COVID-19 pandemic may have constituted the largest movement in U.S. history.
No comments:
Post a Comment