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Ronald Scott, a central neighborhood resident for more than 10 years, takes a photo of the memorial mural over flowers and banners laid in the memory of George Floyd outside of Cup Foods on May 29, 2020, during the fourth day of protests over his death in Minnesota, Minneapolis, United States. Floyd, 46, a black man, was killed Monday when a white officer kneeled on his neck, despite Floyd's repeated pleas of "I can't breathe." (Photo: Steel Brooks/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
In a video message posted to Instagram on Saturday amidst days of nationwide protest in response to the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minnesota earlier this week, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez issued a plea to anyone calling for the end of the "unrest" stirred by brutality and oppression to focus on the root causes of poverty, distrust, and violence in American society.
"So if you're out here asking for an end to unrest, you better be asking for healthcare as a human right, you better be calling for accountability in our policing, you better be supporting community review boards, you better be supporting the end of housing discrimination, you better be standing up to for-profit real estate developers that are intimidating people and trying to evict them from their homes--that's what you better be calling for."
--Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY)"If you are calling for an end to this unrest... but you are not calling for the end to the conditions that created the unrest, you are a hyppocrite," Ocasio-Cortez said in the post.
"If you're trying to call for the end to unrest, but you don't believe healthcare is a human right. If you're afraid to say Black Lives Matter. If you're too scared to call out police brutality--then you aren't asking for an to unrest. You are asking for injustice to continue and for your people to continue to endure the violence of poverty, the violence of lack of housing access, the violence of police brutality and not say a damn thing. That's what you're asking for."
"So if you're out here," she continued, "asking for an end to unrest, you better be asking for healthcare as a human right, you better be calling for accountability in our policing, you better be supporting community review boards, you better be supporting the end of housing discrimination, you better be standing up to for-profit real estate developers that are intimidating people and trying to evict them from their homes--that's what you better be calling for. Because if you don't call for those things and you're asking for the end of unrest--all you're asking for is the continuation of quiet oppression."
Ocasio-Cortez said lawmakers, politicians, and anyone else making such calls must make sure that there is no demand for an end of protest that is not coupled with demands for "measures that actually liberate people in their lives from the oppression of economic and social inequity."
Watch the 6-minute video post:
Allowing people to struggle and die within unjust systems, said Ocasio-Cortez, is "just wrong" and should no longer be tolerated. She said none of her remarks are meant to condone the violence and property destruction by some people amid the protests in cities nationwide, but that her intent is to ask people to consider a more "holistic view of this moment" and recognize that only by centering justice and recognizing the broader systemic failures can peace and prosperity be shared by all.
As of this writing, the video had been viewed hundreds of thousands of times between Instagram and other social media platforms where it was shared.
\u201c.@AOC: If you're calling for an end to unrest, but not calling out police brutality, not calling for health care as a human right, not calling for an end to housing discrimination, all you're asking for is the continuation of quiet oppression.\u201d— Public Citizen (@Public Citizen) 1590858098
"We have to really examine why so many people were okay ignoring these problems until a window got broken," she said. "Why does it take that for people to pay attention? Because it shouldn't."
Instead of calls for things to simply calm down and "go back to normal," said Ocasio-Cortez, "let's create a new world--one where all people are held to the same standard of the rule of law. And one where the justice a person gets for their crimes is not dependent on who they work for or how much money they have, but by the actual deed that was done."
A world like, she concluded, "is what justice looks like."
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In a video message posted to Instagram on Saturday amidst days of nationwide protest in response to the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minnesota earlier this week, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez issued a plea to anyone calling for the end of the "unrest" stirred by brutality and oppression to focus on the root causes of poverty, distrust, and violence in American society.
"So if you're out here asking for an end to unrest, you better be asking for healthcare as a human right, you better be calling for accountability in our policing, you better be supporting community review boards, you better be supporting the end of housing discrimination, you better be standing up to for-profit real estate developers that are intimidating people and trying to evict them from their homes--that's what you better be calling for."
--Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY)"If you are calling for an end to this unrest... but you are not calling for the end to the conditions that created the unrest, you are a hyppocrite," Ocasio-Cortez said in the post.
"If you're trying to call for the end to unrest, but you don't believe healthcare is a human right. If you're afraid to say Black Lives Matter. If you're too scared to call out police brutality--then you aren't asking for an to unrest. You are asking for injustice to continue and for your people to continue to endure the violence of poverty, the violence of lack of housing access, the violence of police brutality and not say a damn thing. That's what you're asking for."
"So if you're out here," she continued, "asking for an end to unrest, you better be asking for healthcare as a human right, you better be calling for accountability in our policing, you better be supporting community review boards, you better be supporting the end of housing discrimination, you better be standing up to for-profit real estate developers that are intimidating people and trying to evict them from their homes--that's what you better be calling for. Because if you don't call for those things and you're asking for the end of unrest--all you're asking for is the continuation of quiet oppression."
Ocasio-Cortez said lawmakers, politicians, and anyone else making such calls must make sure that there is no demand for an end of protest that is not coupled with demands for "measures that actually liberate people in their lives from the oppression of economic and social inequity."
Watch the 6-minute video post:
Allowing people to struggle and die within unjust systems, said Ocasio-Cortez, is "just wrong" and should no longer be tolerated. She said none of her remarks are meant to condone the violence and property destruction by some people amid the protests in cities nationwide, but that her intent is to ask people to consider a more "holistic view of this moment" and recognize that only by centering justice and recognizing the broader systemic failures can peace and prosperity be shared by all.
As of this writing, the video had been viewed hundreds of thousands of times between Instagram and other social media platforms where it was shared.
\u201c.@AOC: If you're calling for an end to unrest, but not calling out police brutality, not calling for health care as a human right, not calling for an end to housing discrimination, all you're asking for is the continuation of quiet oppression.\u201d— Public Citizen (@Public Citizen) 1590858098
"We have to really examine why so many people were okay ignoring these problems until a window got broken," she said. "Why does it take that for people to pay attention? Because it shouldn't."
Instead of calls for things to simply calm down and "go back to normal," said Ocasio-Cortez, "let's create a new world--one where all people are held to the same standard of the rule of law. And one where the justice a person gets for their crimes is not dependent on who they work for or how much money they have, but by the actual deed that was done."
A world like, she concluded, "is what justice looks like."
In a video message posted to Instagram on Saturday amidst days of nationwide protest in response to the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minnesota earlier this week, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez issued a plea to anyone calling for the end of the "unrest" stirred by brutality and oppression to focus on the root causes of poverty, distrust, and violence in American society.
"So if you're out here asking for an end to unrest, you better be asking for healthcare as a human right, you better be calling for accountability in our policing, you better be supporting community review boards, you better be supporting the end of housing discrimination, you better be standing up to for-profit real estate developers that are intimidating people and trying to evict them from their homes--that's what you better be calling for."
--Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY)"If you are calling for an end to this unrest... but you are not calling for the end to the conditions that created the unrest, you are a hyppocrite," Ocasio-Cortez said in the post.
"If you're trying to call for the end to unrest, but you don't believe healthcare is a human right. If you're afraid to say Black Lives Matter. If you're too scared to call out police brutality--then you aren't asking for an to unrest. You are asking for injustice to continue and for your people to continue to endure the violence of poverty, the violence of lack of housing access, the violence of police brutality and not say a damn thing. That's what you're asking for."
"So if you're out here," she continued, "asking for an end to unrest, you better be asking for healthcare as a human right, you better be calling for accountability in our policing, you better be supporting community review boards, you better be supporting the end of housing discrimination, you better be standing up to for-profit real estate developers that are intimidating people and trying to evict them from their homes--that's what you better be calling for. Because if you don't call for those things and you're asking for the end of unrest--all you're asking for is the continuation of quiet oppression."
Ocasio-Cortez said lawmakers, politicians, and anyone else making such calls must make sure that there is no demand for an end of protest that is not coupled with demands for "measures that actually liberate people in their lives from the oppression of economic and social inequity."
Watch the 6-minute video post:
Allowing people to struggle and die within unjust systems, said Ocasio-Cortez, is "just wrong" and should no longer be tolerated. She said none of her remarks are meant to condone the violence and property destruction by some people amid the protests in cities nationwide, but that her intent is to ask people to consider a more "holistic view of this moment" and recognize that only by centering justice and recognizing the broader systemic failures can peace and prosperity be shared by all.
As of this writing, the video had been viewed hundreds of thousands of times between Instagram and other social media platforms where it was shared.
\u201c.@AOC: If you're calling for an end to unrest, but not calling out police brutality, not calling for health care as a human right, not calling for an end to housing discrimination, all you're asking for is the continuation of quiet oppression.\u201d— Public Citizen (@Public Citizen) 1590858098
"We have to really examine why so many people were okay ignoring these problems until a window got broken," she said. "Why does it take that for people to pay attention? Because it shouldn't."
Instead of calls for things to simply calm down and "go back to normal," said Ocasio-Cortez, "let's create a new world--one where all people are held to the same standard of the rule of law. And one where the justice a person gets for their crimes is not dependent on who they work for or how much money they have, but by the actual deed that was done."
A world like, she concluded, "is what justice looks like."