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VOL. 35, No. 23
Millennials March to Own Drum Beat
Ignited by the murder of George Floyd a millennial multicultural, multi racial culmination of peaceful protest, fury, rage and destruction has besieged America like never before.
Photos by : Zaydee Sanchez
“We declare our right on this earth...to be a human being, to be respected as a human being, to be given the rights of a human being in this society, on this earth, in this day, which we intend to bring into existence by any means necessary.” -Malcolm XBy Kenneth Miller, Publisher
Perhaps the most defining moment in American history was not Martin Luther King Jr.’s March on Washington, or any of the riots of civil unrest that has chronicled police brutality and racial oppression throughout our nation. MLK represented peace, civility and unity; the riots of 1965 and 1992 sprang from police brutality and erupted into mass destruction upon the very communities that were victimized by racial profiling.
“Burn Baby Burn” was the war cry in ’65 and we can still recall Rodney King pleading during ’92 “Can we all just get along” after the four white LAPD police officers who beat him with their nightsticks had been acquitted in a downtown Los Angeles courtroom. All of these infamous moments in our lives inspired movements of systemic change, while few can argue that some changes in the system were made. King moved the needle on segregation and won voting rights for Blacks, but
while the riots brought about massive dialogue little has changed as the still invincible police decree continues insulates every police officer in America from criminal prosecution. The murder of 46-year old George Floyd in Minnesota by rouge white police officer Derek Chauvin just might be the pin pulled from the grenade that could alter everything. “Having been in law enforcement and seeing the Rodney King incident and so many other incidents where
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there were flash points of epiphany that something is wrong with the system, I would say that this is the one that is going to change things,” Inglewood Mayor James Butts Jr. explained to KCBS sports anchor Jim Hill during a interview during the height of the recent protest. Butts was a busy man last week, appearing on MSNBC, FOX and local radio station KJLH during the most Continued on page 2
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