After reading a 34-page summary of the case, the judge made it clear he disagreed, saying that "Brelo's entire use of deadly force was a constitutionally reasonable response to an objectively reasonably perceived threat of great bodily harm from the occupants of the Malibu, Russell and Wiliams."
I wrote about this some time ago. At the time, I wondered if this would not initiate another "Death By Cop Protest".
Apparently, the local 'community' (which was unable to disuade the two felons in the car that Brelo stopped in a barrage of bullets from the hood of their car) has chosen to rise in righteous indignation.
We're not pleased here at Geek Central to learn that the prognostication was confirmed. One would prefer not to be so 100% able to forecast ghetto indignation.
On the other hand, when one identifies with a community which has historically been plagued by oppression, it's difficult to resist the urge to riot.
Would the Jews in 1938 Berlin embraced the same approach, they might have lost a few million of their families. I know, that sounds cold. But those peoples were faced with a truly oppressive armed police force, one which had the publicly espoused goal of 'resolving the Jewish Question".
I don't think we're at that point yet, now, here. But when Black citizens protest the death of their brothers and sisters at the hand of the police, they do have a point. Even if the black deceased was a criminal, engaged in violent crime, it's not a situation which they can ignore; the death of one diminishes all.
(Wish they could get past the criminal behavior which draws the attention of the police, but only the community can deal with that. Maybe they will, maybe they will not. Their choice.)
The thing is, the Jews faced racial extinction; the blacks face what they perceive to be an institutional drive on the part of the folks with the power (you know, the guys who have the guns?) to keep them down and out. Not quite on a par with racial extinction, but from the point of our black bretheren ... the distinction is vague. Who can blame them for over-reacting when the lesson of the Jews is to stomp on this oppression before it becomes "institutional"?
I don't believe that the police in major cities are consciously (or 'deliberately') trying to put down the black community. I do think that the attempt by the black community to be as high-profile as possible is their "Come To Jesus" Moment. Or at least, a way to make sure that America is not comfortable with accepting their plight.
What I DO believe is that Black People in America are determined to keep their issues right in the bitch-slapped face of What America, if only so that people of conscience will not be 'comfortable' with ignoring their issues. Do I think their situation is, today, as dire as they portray it?
No.
But their best game plan is to over-state every situation, to keep those of us (including me) on the edge of our Strat-o-Lounger Easy Chairs wondering if maybe we might be part of the problem; because it's quite clear that our comfort is no part of The Solution.
SO:
Was Michael Brelo justified in jumping on the hood of Tim Russell's Mailbu and emptying his Glock into the bodies of Russell and his friend Malissa Williams?
I don't know. I wan't there. All I know is what I read in the newspapers.\
I'm pretty sure there was some crime involved, and that Russell and Williams did not meekly surrender to police.
And the "African-American Community" (I HATE the hyphenated American terminology) is not happy. Don't much blame them; if it was me I'd be pissed, too.
(If you're looking for some wisdom, and solution to a vaguely stated problem, or something more than questions ... hey! Don't look at me; I'm as confused as everyone else is.)
1 comment:
So, for every black shot by a cop, 10 or more are shot by another black from within the community. Black lives only seem to matter when black thugs are shot by white cops. Otherwise, who cares.
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