Huffington Postさんのインスタグラム写真 - (Huffington PostInstagram)「In the weeks since police killed George Floyd in Minneapolis, nonstop protests across the U.S. have called out systemic racism and police brutality — and have already given rise to significant reckonings and policy changes in cities and companies nationwide. Here are some of the steps toward racial justice and ending police brutality that we’ve seen in just 16 days since protests began. We've listed a few examples below, but head to our link in bio for the comprehensive list. -Police are being held accountable. Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison elevated Derek Chauvin's charge to second-degree murder and charged the three other officers involved with aiding and abetting. Six police officers in Atlanta were charged, and two of them fired, after using a stun gun and dragging two young Black students from a car during protests. An officer in Brooklyn, New York, was charged for shoving a protester, who was hospitalized with a concussion. -Cities are defunding police. In Minneapolis, a veto-proof majority of city council members pledged earlier this week to “begin the process of ending” the city’s police department. In New York City, Mayor de Blasio announced a proposal to cut the police department’s budget and shift the money to programs to help “communities of color.” -Schools are cutting ties with police. In Minneapolis, the city’s public school board voted last week to cut ties with the police department. In Portland, the public school system’s superintendent said he was “discontinuing” its use of police officers in schools. -Monuments to racists are being toppled. In the past two weeks, protesters have graffitied and toppled monuments of Confederate leaders and others with racist histories across the country. Such moves have not been limited to the U.S.: In Bristol in the United Kingdom, protesters tore down the statue of a slave trader and then rolled it into a river. -The tech industry, America’s sports leagues, news media, entertainment and major American companies are all facing a reckoning. -Public opinion has shifted. Americans support the anti-racism protests by a nearly 2-to-1 margin, a HuffPost/YouGov poll found.📷 Getty」6月12日 22時50分 - huffpost

Huffington Postのインスタグラム(huffpost) - 6月12日 22時50分


In the weeks since police killed George Floyd in Minneapolis, nonstop protests across the U.S. have called out systemic racism and police brutality — and have already given rise to significant reckonings and policy changes in cities and companies nationwide. Here are some of the steps toward racial justice and ending police brutality that we’ve seen in just 16 days since protests began. We've listed a few examples below, but head to our link in bio for the comprehensive list. -Police are being held accountable. Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison elevated Derek Chauvin's charge to second-degree murder and charged the three other officers involved with aiding and abetting. Six police officers in Atlanta were charged, and two of them fired, after using a stun gun and dragging two young Black students from a car during protests. An officer in Brooklyn, New York, was charged for shoving a protester, who was hospitalized with a concussion.
-Cities are defunding police. In Minneapolis, a veto-proof majority of city council members pledged earlier this week to “begin the process of ending” the city’s police department. In New York City, Mayor de Blasio announced a proposal to cut the police department’s budget and shift the money to programs to help “communities of color.” -Schools are cutting ties with police. In Minneapolis, the city’s public school board voted last week to cut ties with the police department. In Portland, the public school system’s superintendent said he was “discontinuing” its use of police officers in schools. -Monuments to racists are being toppled. In the past two weeks, protesters have graffitied and toppled monuments of Confederate leaders and others with racist histories across the country. Such moves have not been limited to the U.S.: In Bristol in the United Kingdom, protesters tore down the statue of a slave trader and then rolled it into a river.
-The tech industry, America’s sports leagues, news media, entertainment and major American companies are all facing a reckoning.
-Public opinion has shifted. Americans support the anti-racism protests by a nearly 2-to-1 margin, a HuffPost/YouGov poll found.📷 Getty


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