Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey says former Houston resident George Floyd would be alive today if he were white
By Howie Katz
Big Jolly Times
May 28, 2020
Let
me be crystal clear that Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin
should not have kept his knee on George Floyd's neck when the latter
begged him to stop because he could not breathe. Actually, Chauvin
should never have knelled on Floyd's neck in the first place.
Furthermore,
videos of the arrest show that before the kneeling incident, Floyd was
removed from his car and walked away with his hands cuffed behind his
back. I do not know what happened between that time and the kneeling,
but Floyd's arrest sure looks awful lousy.
Floyd was arrested Monday night for trying to pass a counterfeit $20 bill at a grocery store.
There
were protests and rioting in Minneapolis Tuesday and Wednesday evening.
While most protesters were peaceful, mobs clashed with the police both
nights. On Wednesday, mobs set fires to an apartment building under
construction and set a number of other fires, including in an Auto Zone
store which they also looted along with a Target store. Outside the
Target, a wheelchair-bound white woman was beaten and sprayed with a
fire extinguisher when she tried to stop the looting.
A
mob protesting Floyd's death in Los Angeles closed down a freeway and
surrounded two California Highway Patrol cars, smashing in the rear
windows of both cars.
A peaceful protest was held
Tuesday in Houston's Emancipation Park. Floyd had lived in Houston
until he moved to Minneapolis six years ago. Friends described Floyd
as a good lovable person.
That good lovable person has a
long criminal history in Houston dating back to 1998 when he was busted
for aggravated robbery with a firearm. In 2007 Floyd committed another
robbery with a firearm for which he was sent to prison. When he was
released from prison in 2014, Floyd moved to Minneapolis.
Houston's
top cop could not restrain himself from getting his two cents worth in.
On Wednesday Morning, Chief Acevedo tweeted: "The death of #GeorgFloyd
should be condemned by all in law enforcement and our extended
community. His death serves as a stark reminder that when bad policing
happens, it disproportionately impacts communities of color and poor
communities." Acevedo attached a screengrab of one of his earlier
tweets in which he supported Colin Kaepernick's protest against police
brutality.
But worst of all was what the white mayor of
Minneapolis said about Floyd's death. During a Thursday interview on
CBS This Morning, Mayor Jacob Frey said: "He'd be alive today if he were white."
What an outrageous remark! That's pure race baiting of the worst
kind, something you would expect of Al Sharpton, but not from the mayor
of a big city.
As for Chief Acevedo, he already made a
complete fool out of himself with his comments on the botched Harding
Street raid. He should have been sacked then. But now, Acevedo should
be tarred and feathered, and run out of Houston on a rail for apparently
siding with Colin Kaepernick, the former NFL quarterback who is best
known for disrespecting our flag and country.
UPDATE: The Colin Kaepernick that Acevedo supports has just said it's time for a revolution
because of Floyd's death. On Thursday, Kaepernick tweeted: "When civility leads to
death, revolting is the only logical reaction. The cries for peace will
rain down, and when they do, they will land on deaf ears, because your
[police] violence has brought this resistance. We have the right to
fight back!"
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