Thrasher865
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If you just take that comment with no context, then, yes, it would seem very hypocritical. However, there was a sense of "moral justice" about the verdict, due to what was perceived as a justice system that was incredibly biased towards the white majority.
Lest we not forget though, OJ did lose the civil suit, and lost millions upon millions of dollars.
They also burnt women/witches at the stake years ago...has nothing to do with present day!!!!
i didn't say "hypocritical," i said "unbelievable."
murder is wrong. it is incomprehensible to me that anyone can argue that it is somehow "justified" in one instance or another, because of skin color or religious belief.
Feel free to arbitrarily put limits on what counts as relevant. I can play the same game. Yesterday does not count. And, come tomorrow, today will not count. If today does not count tomorrow, then it is a necessary truth that today does not count; thus, today does not count. Nothing counts.
The racist far right trying to goad folks into the race war they have always wanted.
To begin, the highly controversial Farrakhan accused Republicans of having overt racist motives in their opposition to Obama, the countrys first black president. He attacked a political process that he says is controlled by monied interests and wants to keep America white.
He said he thinks Obama and his advisers worried about the president appearing like an angry black man. The reasoning: You cant go out there and beat up on a white man. Youre going to lose the white vote.
He then turned his comments back to the president.
You arent going to win any more white votes by being kind and gracious, he said. Be a little black.
He also addressed an audience largely absent from the event: white America.
What have I done that you could hate me so? he said.
He then answered his own question with harsh words that had the arena on its feet: You cant buy me, and you cant make me into your n-----.
Farrakhan did nothing to dissuade that support, accusing the Republicans of using a strategy to defeat Obama so overtly hateful and racist in nature that it has polarized America on the basis of race.
You are not going to get an argument from me that murdering someone is "justified". It is wrong. However, in this case, there were circumstances outside the murder trial that made the verdict justifiable, even if the crime itself was reprehensible.
unbelievable
In an absolute world, probably. The act of murdering someone is wrong; that's pretty much an incontrovertible fact. However, if one is to feel that your people have been unfairly treated in the justice system, including the exoneration of many people who have been caught red handed murdering and persecuting a group simply because of one's race or religion, a new perspective might emerge. Now, for the record, I am not a fan of this style of "make-up justice", as the very definition of what the word "justice" actually means is being perverted and distorted in this case. However, it would not take a great leap of faith or logic to say that what OJ did was wrong and should be punished, but the various injustices done by the legal system over the years made the decision just and fair.
That being said, I don't think the actual jury in this trial had race on their minds in the decision, rather, OJ's legal team did a really good job proving reasonable doubt.
Let's look at a few Farrakhan quotes shall we?
And the kicker
sure, it's others that are polarizing America on the basis of race
In an absolute world, probably. The act of murdering someone is wrong; that's pretty much an incontrovertible fact. However, if one is to feel that your people have been unfairly treated in the justice system, including the exoneration of many people who have been caught red handed murdering and persecuting a group simply because of one's race or religion, a new perspective might emerge. Now, for the record, I am not a fan of this style of "make-up justice", as the very definition of what the word "justice" actually means is being perverted and distorted in this case. However, it would not take a great leap of faith or logic to say that what OJ did was wrong and should be punished, but the various injustices done by the legal system over the years made the decision just and fair.
That being said, I don't think the actual jury in this trial had race on their minds in the decision, rather, OJ's legal team did a really good job proving reasonable doubt.
realUT, i don't have a problem with anyone who says they believe that OJ is innocent based on the evidence. i don't agree, but we can agree to disagree.
i have a very big problem with the argument that murder is somehow "justified" because of skin color or religion or "perceived injustices in the past." imo, those who champion OJ on this basis are no different from the defenders of lynchings, terrorist acts, etc.
you keep saying "not a fan" when you should probably say "vehemently opposed." Justifying any outcome on anything other than the facts provided is ridiculous
also OJ's defense wasn't the reason in that case. It was the prosecution that was horrible
realUT, i don't have a problem with anyone who says they believe that OJ is innocent based on the evidence. i don't agree, but we can agree to disagree.
i have a very big problem with the argument that murder is somehow "justified" because of skin color or religion or "perceived injustices in the past." imo, those who champion OJ on this basis are no different from the defenders of lynchings, terrorist acts, etc.
