The O.J. verdict introduced
the world to social justice
Washington Examiner,
by
Tiana Lowe
Original Article
Posted By: Pluperfect,
10/7/2019 5:04:50 AM
The Los Angeles Police Department had been dispatched to the home of Nicole Brown Simpson nine times by the year that O.J. Simpson pleaded no contest to spousal abuse. Over three years passed before Nicole finally filed for divorce from the retired football star. But the cycle of abuse did not end with their marriage. Just as he had threatened, battered, and abused Nicole during their marriage, he continued to do so after their split.
O.J. had beaten his wife badly enough over the years that she wound up in the hospital, where she lied to a doctor that she'd fallen off a bike rather than expose
Reply 1 - Posted by:
MSUDoc 10/7/2019 6:55:25 AM (No. 199896)
I still remember the cheering and high-fiving amongst the black women at the hospital that I worked at at the time when the verdict was reached.
Cheering over the vicious murder of a white woman and her friend. Think about that.
Sick, sick, ghoulish culture.
29 people like this.
Reply 2 - Posted by:
Lazyman 10/7/2019 7:35:24 AM (No. 199915)
Letting a man off, who butchered his wife, did more to divide the races and create division. If this is social justice, it is no justice, just ignorance at its best.
17 people like this.
Reply 3 - Posted by:
StormCnter 10/7/2019 8:12:55 AM (No. 199946)
I'm not a fan of boycotts because I doubt they are effective, but sometimes a personal boycott can be gratifying. I have not and will not rent another Hertz vehicle because they continued to support (and pay) O.J. Simpson even after he admitted beating up his wife.
9 people like this.
Reply 4 - Posted by:
F15 Gork 10/7/2019 8:56:59 AM (No. 199986)
Loosely translated: Nicole and Ron Goldman had to pay for America’s racist past.......
7 people like this.
Reply 5 - Posted by:
JunkYardDog 10/7/2019 8:57:19 AM (No. 199989)
I watched the verdict being read live, and I remember Kim Goldman's cry of anguish, and the look of utter sadness on Fred Goldman, at hearing how the murderer of their kin got off scott-free. And I also saw the video of Rodney KIng's beating, seemingly oblivious to the raining down of blows from the nightsticks of the LAPD officers. Only someone who is dusted to the eyeballs on PCP would not feel those blows-had KIng only been drunk he would've folded at the first shot or even before. Yes, the LAPD overdid it, but if I hit a large man with a night stick in an effort to subdue him and he shrugged it off, I would hit him again. There were no winners in LA during that period, no justice for anyone. Except for the Koreans who defended their stores during the riots.
13 people like this.
Reply 6 - Posted by:
smak90 10/7/2019 9:19:21 AM (No. 200013)
I was an underwriter at an insurance company when the verdict was read. I realized at that moment that whites will never receive justice at the hand of blacks.
11 people like this.
Reply 7 - Posted by:
udanja99 10/7/2019 9:33:46 AM (No. 200032)
I didn’t watch the trial but did tune in for the verdict. It was the most stunning example of injustice and racial corruption that I had ever seen until Smidgen was elected president.
9 people like this.
Reply 8 - Posted by:
RU4us 10/7/2019 10:28:20 AM (No. 200086)
It should have also tipped everyone off to the two tiered justice system. Jesse Jackson was going around telling everyone "they were somebody" and the self-esteem movement made being born an accomplishment for the resume. They failed to reveal that celebrities were just more somebody than everyone else.
1 person likes this.
Reply 9 - Posted by:
Kate318 10/7/2019 10:35:15 AM (No. 200091)
Good article until the last paragraph. “Slavery (and its legal and social legacy) is our original sin, an intractable stain on our nation's history.” No it is not, and I refuse to accept that premise as a statement of fact. It may be a stain on humanity’s record, but the US was no different than any other country on the planet, since the earliest recorded civilization. What was extraordinary was the the US was founded upon laws and principles that allowed the abolition of slavery, less than 100 years after her birth. Some could argue that was much too long, but if you consider that span of time against thousands of years of human history, it’s a pretty notable turnaround.
10 people like this.
Reply 10 - Posted by:
JunkYardDog 10/7/2019 12:10:38 PM (No. 200186)
Re #10
“Slavery (and its legal and social legacy) is our original sin, an intractable stain on our nation's history.” You are right, sir, the US was no different at the time than any other country in the world. The reason it took 100 years to abolish it was that DEMOCRATS fought abolition tooth & nail every step of the way, culminating in a destructive Civil War. If, according to the Washington Examiner, slavery is the U.S. "original sin", what was the Civil War? People fought & died for the abolition of slavery. The South (Democrats) were defeated-and here we are today and the Democrats are taking claim for racial justice!!!! This is a deliberate attempt to escape responsibility for the sins of the Democrats-wasn't it only 60 years ago George Wallace tried to maintain racial segregation?
3 people like this.
Reply 11 - Posted by:
seamusm 10/7/2019 12:24:48 PM (No. 200208)
Why is it that whites are both accused of having invented slavery and of having sold African blacks to the seafaring slavers. Furthermore why does every white carry the stain of this sin when my ancestors had nothing to do with slavery or blacks? My forbears were trying not to starve during the Irish Potato Famine.
3 people like this.
Reply 12 - Posted by:
DVC 10/7/2019 3:30:46 PM (No. 200384)
No, it was RACIST injustice.
1 person likes this.
Below, you will find ...
Most Recent Articles posted by "Pluperfect"
and
Most Active Articles (last 48 hours)