we have come out in a way that is in conjunction with what the family has asked for. they have been peaceful in protest, but they are very, very disturbed. we re out here today because we believe that no one else should go through what tyre nichols went through. they are grateful that the video came out so now the whole world knows what happened, that he was defenseless, that he was helpless. look how they grabbed him out of the car. there was no human inside of those men. maybe we do have faith and hope that the system is going to get it right this time. i m pamela brown in washington and you are in the cnn newsroom. horrifying cruelty and the heartless disregard for a dying man. today, outraged americans are holding small and mostly peaceful protests. in memphis and several other cities protesters are making their voices heard in support of tyre nichols. his deadly beating at the hands of five memphis police officers is captured on video and released to the pu
washington and you are in the cnn newsroom. horrifying cruelty and the heartless disregard for a dying man. today, outraged americans are holding small and mostly peaceful protests. in memphis and several other cities protesters are making their voices heard in support of tyre nichols. his deadly beating at the hands of five memphis police officers is captured on video and released to the public last night. we want to warn you, the images you are about to see are deeply troubling, but critical in understanding the sheer b barbarity of his death. watch out! watch out! nichols screams for his
that this is magical space that he inhabits as an individual as opposed to the institutional structures that framed him and really shaped who he became. and there was this struggle inside the movement at the moment. absolutely. after sharpville. i think it s hard to kind of get into people s head the b barbarity. sharpville and had this profound effect. there was a struggle inside the movement about how long are we going to essentially walk into this? right. and when you talk about armed struggle, you talk about the way it s framed. michael, it was the move toward resistance, violent resistance, armed resistance, that was the thing that triggered the right to jump on the anc as terrorists. yes, it was. and i mean, look. the problem is and it s a good point that we talk about language here terrorism as a word is something that politicians and pundits have degraded so much over the past sort of 20 years and maybe even more is that we have to differentiate here.