Hes 18. Hes in city hall in beaverton, oregon. And according to him, hes high on mushrooms. So he starts a fight with some cops. They all wrestle, and then jared grabs a cops gun and shoots it. More cops jump in. It ends up taking seven cops two full minutes to restrain jared, and he makes it out alive. This is white privilege. If that idea bothers you, then lets just call it benefit of the doubt. Those cops give jared the benefit of the doubt that his life matters, that his life is worth saving, even when he takes one of their guns and shoots it. Now, of course, when youre black, we rarely get that benefit of the doubt. Cops murdered Laquan Mcdonald in less than 30 seconds. Cops killed tamir rice in less than two seconds. But jared, he got probation and a fine and just a bump on the forehead. On this episode, were talking about the difference between two minutes and a few seconds. You want to call the police on him for having a barbecue on a sunday at the lake . Yes. Youve seen the vi
he s 18. he s in city hall in beaverton, oregon. and according to him, he s high on mushrooms. so he starts a fight with some cops. they all wrestle, and then jared grabs a cop s gun and shoots it. more cops jump in. it ends up taking seven cops two full minutes to restrain jared, and he makes it out alive. this is white privilege. if that idea bothers you, then let s just call it benefit of the doubt. those cops give jared the benefit of the doubt that his life matters, that his life is worth saving, even when he takes one of their guns and shoots it. now, of course, when you re black, we rarely get that benefit of the doubt. cops murdered laquan mcdonald in less than 30 seconds. cops killed tamir rice in less than two seconds. but jared, he got probation and a fine and just a bump on the forehead. on this episode, we re talking about the difference between two minutes and a few seconds. you want to call the police on him for having a barbecue on a sunday at the lake
call it benefit of the doubt. those cops give jerry the benefit of the doubt that his life matters. that his life is worth saving. even when he takes one of their guns and shoots it. of course, when you are black, we really get the benefit of the doubt. cops murdered quan mcdonald in less than 30 seconds. cops killed tamir rice in less than two seconds. jared, he got probation and a fine, and a bump on the forehead. in this episode, we are talking about the difference between two minutes and a few seconds. you want to call the police on them for having a barbecue on a sunday at the lake? yes. you have seen the videos. i am white and i am hot. the last couple of years, they have been sweeping the nation. like a new beyonce album, they drop without warning and are all anybody can talk about for days afterward. which one is your favorite? it is illegal to have a charcoal grill in the park here. calling the police on people barbecuing in the park or a whiteley will
force, 14 shots into dontre, was justifiable. we ve heard that way too many times before. it was like, am i in a movie? and my fight, even to this day, is the truth. all i ever wanted was the truth. so i was pulled into a fight trying to get the truth. whenever a black youth or a black person is murdered by a police officer, often we see the moms step up. if we don t save our babies, they re not going to save us. maria and the mothers of eric garner, trayvon martin, jordan davis, michael brown, hadiyah pendleton, sandra bland, and tamir rice have joined forces and formed mothers of the movement to support each other and to fight for police reform. maria has also started her own group, mothers for justice united, to support all of the moms whose families have been devastated by police violence. it s an indictment of our entire country that we even need these
talk to your doctor or pharmacist about shingles prevention. while the aclu plaintiff stories weren t violent, those men stood up because they know that those same situations can end up in violence. take the story of maria hamilton s son, dontre. i feel his spirit here. i very seldom go to the cemetery because dontre s blood and life