"Self defense is self love" - Korryn Gaines— BYP100 (@BYP_100) August 5, 2016
Art by Autumn Gavrielle Armstrong#SayHerName #KorrynGaines pic.twitter.com/977wIFokgF
Not sure if #KorrynGaines is situation to get outraged over. Pointing a gun at cops gets people killed. Not everybody every time. But plenty— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 2, 2016
#KorrynGaines could hurt #BLM movement. If you stan equally for her, Eric Garner, Mike Brown, John Crawford, Sandra Bland, Philando Castile— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 2, 2016
...rather than judging merits of very different cases on individual basis, less likely to be taken seriously.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 2, 2016
Sometimes benefit of doubt exists, other times it pretty clearly does not. Distinguish from each other rather than blanket black/white cover— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 2, 2016
There certainly are people who commit suicide by cop. And suicide by own hands. And are wrongfully killed. And are killed with fair cause.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 2, 2016
These situations are not identical to each other. Stamping #BLM hashtag on all of them equally is detrimental to cause IMHO.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 2, 2016
This video of #KorrynGaines and her 5 yo son during the police standoff makes me so sad for so many reasons.https://t.co/fD4pgMSwEh— Perez (@ThePerezHilton) August 2, 2016
Whether I judge instantly or wait for full picture to reveal itself, nobody is being brought back to life. No gun will unfire itself.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 2, 2016
Overgeneralizing and oversimplification are the enemies of progress.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 2, 2016
Progress has other enemies too, of course.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 2, 2016
Woman killed by Baltimore County police ignored pleas from boyfriend to surrender, mother says - https://t.co/14jPeZRMtt— jamalbryant (@jamalhbryant) August 3, 2016
I've seen many #sayhername tweets of solidarity over #KorrynGaines but I'm just not seeing the situation that way. A very avoidable tragedy.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 3, 2016
Was their overkill on part of cops? I wouldn't put it past them. But unlike other victims of overzealous law enforcement, it sounds to me...— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 3, 2016
...that Korryn Gaines could have survived that encounter if she wanted to. Welfare of child should have been primary objective to all.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 3, 2016
It's certainly upsetting that a beautiful young woman/mother was shot to death with child in her arms. But I don't see victim as blameless.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 3, 2016
I reserve the right to change my mind if evidence comes to point in another direction.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 3, 2016
Please don't get so caught up in hashtags and online outrage that you don't exercise caution & common sense IRL. Guns do just one thing.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 3, 2016
A cop may kill you for no good reason so definitely don't go out of your way to give them slightest cause. They just may take the bait.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 3, 2016
There's stuff that's worth dying for and stuff that just ain't. Pride usually falls in latter category.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 3, 2016
Bottom line - cops need to be better trained. Even it we can't weed out 100% of racist ones doesn't mean we can't have better trained bigots— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 3, 2016
Choose your martyrs wisely. Unfortunately there are quite a few to choose between. On sadly bright side, this means you can be selective.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 3, 2016
People want to be considered so "woke". God forbid somebody else has different opinion based on evidence. Must be a traitorous sell-out.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 4, 2016
People really need to stop doing that to each other and just agree to respectably disagree some of the time, while agreeing other times.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 4, 2016
No lone casualty represents all of em. No set of circumstances is universal. Shout tweeting/think pieceing doesn't make your opinion > valid— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 4, 2016
Thinking #KorrynGaines could have acted in a manner > protective of her child & not making him motherless is not denouncing all black women— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 4, 2016
Opinions are just that. Opinions. Not declarations of solidarity or any such nonsense.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 4, 2016
@JoshDamage I believe there was some mental instability there & cops could've handled it better but #KorryGaines was looking for a show down— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 8, 2016
@JoshDamage I'm less interested in specifics of situation than in online reaction. How quick ppl are to stamp #BLM on it & declare martyrdom— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 8, 2016
Atlanta's Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist―@mluckovichajc―isn't holding back. #BlackLivesMatter— David Harris-Gershon (@David_EHG) August 12, 2016
Witness: pic.twitter.com/rsqHpCEjwM
The questions raised by Korryn Gaines' death https://t.co/ArEZBFDBmD— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 18, 2016
Korryn Gaines May Have Been A Sovereign Citizen
Gaines Family Wins Civil Lawsuit
Judge overturns $38M verdict in lawsuit over Baltimore County police killing of Korryn Gaines https://t.co/Yw9Ecpt3hi— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) February 17, 2019
Korryn Gaines family wins $38 Million appeal in wrongful death suit. https://t.co/wpOFBFyKxm pic.twitter.com/N1tM75dqsF— Complex (@Complex) July 3, 2020
A court reinstated Korryn Gaines’ family’s civil victory today.— michaelharriot (@michaelharriot) July 3, 2020
Never forget, before kicking in her door, cops turned off their bodycams & contacted @Facebook to cut her live video.
When FB agreed, cops shot her to death with her son in her arms.
Free speech my ass.
Appeals court reinstates $38 million verdict to family of late Korryn Gaineshttps://t.co/KNEEiusTqF— The Baltimore Sun (@baltimoresun) July 1, 2020
SAGA TO BE CONTINUED: The next step will be a return to court for adjustments to the verdict and what the actual award ultimately will be. I won't try to predict the final verdict.
Here's everything we know about the Nate Parker rape case: https://t.co/Eqe8BFhbpc pic.twitter.com/BX6B0k8X1Y— Complex (@ComplexMag) August 17, 2016
The answer is simple because they don't really want the story of Nat Turner too be released....— Charlamagne Tha God (@cthagod) August 16, 2016
Black people across the country to #NateParker pic.twitter.com/CXZgW3pJtS— Styles P. Keaton (@merc80) August 17, 2016
Interesting stuff. I'm baffled by the support Parker is receiving from those who also seem to concede that he's less than totally innocent.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 15, 2016
Parker was acquitted so that is what it is. But plenty have been acquitted of crimes but not forgiven by many who feel they got away w/ it.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 15, 2016
I'd like to see some consistency. Nate Parker you're cool with but Woody Allen is the devil and R Kelly gets a mixed bag of reactions.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 15, 2016
Not saying those situations are identical, but they're close enough. You either separate art from artist or else you don't...in all cases.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 15, 2016
We are selective with our condemnation and forgiveness, that's for sure. Once opinion on someone is formed we'd rather not change it.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 15, 2016
Not until we're good and ready to do so anyway.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 15, 2016
Allowing their ideology around Blackness to trump their feminism.— IG: Sil_Lai (Abrams) (@Sil_Lai) August 15, 2016
I read the court transcripts...Fuck Nate Parker— No Relation (@TheCosby) August 15, 2016
So if y'all had saw the transcripts of Pac, Mike Tyson, and Kobe's cases would y'all have supported them? Just asking questions.— Charlamagne Tha God (@cthagod) August 17, 2016
I didn't read transcripts. I have no idea what he did/didn't do. I know his movie doesn't excuse his actions. I can respect 1 but not other.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 15, 2016
Clearly Nate Parker has just put in paperwork to try to buy NBC. https://t.co/mNfIiFlWsE— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 16, 2016
It's NBC's fault for increasing profile with Olympics. Or blame it on woman. Or blame it on the alcohol. Or racism. Anything but the accused— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 16, 2016
@abowllan @cthagod The higher the profile gets the more invasive the questions become. Whether it's Nate Parker or Donald Trump or whoever.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 16, 2016
The best way to keep skeletons in your closet is to remain largely unknown.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 17, 2016
Here's a friendly reminder that if you feel you must boycott Nate Parker's Nat Turner movie, I'm pretty sure somebody wrote a book on topic.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 16, 2016
William Styron wrote a book about Nat Turner. But he did so while being white so if that's a deal breaker, move on.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 16, 2016
@abowllan @cthagod I plan to see the movie b/c interested in topic & I don't tie art to artist. As for Nate, I neither deify nor decry him.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 16, 2016
Nate Parker’s Accuser Committed Suicide in 2012, Her Brother Speaks Out (EXCLUSIVE) https://t.co/ivc8LCzT6X— Variety (@Variety) August 16, 2016
Im not feminist, nor womanist, nor woke per 2016 standards, nor hotep. Only reason I have 4 not supporting Nate Parker film is human empathy— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 17, 2016
Might have to roll with that one because the more I learn the less I like what I hear.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 17, 2016
‘Birth Of A Nation’ Director Nate Parker Responds To Rape Accuser’s Suicide https://t.co/HsdjmYSP2B pic.twitter.com/n25nU1LlAG— Deadline Hollywood (@Deadline) August 17, 2016
When you think having women in your family and daughters somehow means you could have never raped a girl #nateparker pic.twitter.com/PDrEhoB2xL— Awkward Brown Girl (@awkwardbrowngrl) August 15, 2016
He centered himself and the "very painful moment "in HIS life. Instead of acknowledging the pain the young woman went thru...#NateParker— Jalisa Whitley (@JalisaNichole) August 15, 2016
It would have been rough for Nate Parker if the woman was alive & speaking up about what happened. Only thing worse is what came to be.— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 17, 2016
It means he's on a movie tour rather than in jail. If his conscience is clean, good for him. If it isn't, it isn't. https://t.co/OE2zrmxpZp— Roy Pickering (@AuthorofPatches) August 17, 2016
Here's an example of a TRUE HERO - IMHO
Man who wrestled gun from Waffle House shooter raises nearly $45,000 for for victims' families https://t.co/Bcw2ADs2H6 pic.twitter.com/AWiyNsbvAu— The Hill (@thehill) April 23, 2018
Saves a dozen people.— Denizcan James (@MrFilmkritik) April 23, 2018
Hurts himself, goes to hospital.
Leaves hospital, goes to church.
Leaves Church, starts a fundraiser for the victims.
This man is a HERO. https://t.co/4yGTDuruwl
And here would be another fine heroism example.
You saved your sister from an attacking dog, though you got hurt, and you knew you’d get hurt. I am so proud of you, young man. Keep on. Keep on. pic.twitter.com/wBy0fuv07L— Ray Ortlund (@rayortlund) July 14, 2020
On February 14, 2018, 15-year-old Anthony Borges was shot 5 times when he used his BODY to barricade the door of a classroom. He saved the lives of 20 of his Parkland classmates & had to have a third of his lung removed. Anthony is a HERO that will always deserve praise! pic.twitter.com/JUmJZzsAL7
— Ben Crump (@AttorneyCrump) September 23, 2021
I REPEAT. CHOOSE YOUR HEROES CAREFULLY. AND NOW FOR SOME BOOK REVIEWS.
The Lowland by Jhumpa Lahiri
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is a beautifully written novel, full of bold sorrow and muted hope. Where there is hope, no matter how cautiously one treads from the past, there is a chance of happiness. But some people cannot or will not move forward, and for them life is a continuous echo of sorrow, an eternity of regret. Those incapable of happiness because old wounds failed to heal will be cruel to those who try to love them. Whether it desires company or solitude, misery consumes whoever is nearest. Regardless of how far one travels, anguish that has been absorbed into the bones cannot be escaped. The Lowland is a story of family, a construct we are told is bonded by blood but actually is held together by love and willingly made sacrifice. It is the story of a woman who marries the love of her life, loses him, and then marries his brother whom she never comes to love while carrying the child of the man she violently lost. Leaving a country behind does little to erase memories and allow a new chance at happiness to take root. Someone who cannot love you, regardless of the ties of blood, will always be a stranger rather than family.
View all my reviews The Given Day by Dennis Lehane
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
What an incredibly eventful time period to read about. Somehow in one city in one year there is The Great Molasses Flood, the early growth stage of the NAACP in a racist climate, a Spanish Influenza pandemic, unions gaining a foothold to combat unfair labor practices and absurdly low wages, the Boston Police Strike of 1919 and resulting riots, the start of Prohibition, a relentless hunt for violent radicals who sow seeds of fear, and Babe Ruth being traded from the Red Sox to the NY Yankees where a dynasty will result. This action packed period of time in history was fascinating to learn about, with a multi-plotted page turner Dennis Lehane story line thrown into the middle of it as bonus. The more things change the more they stay the same was the thought that repeatedly came to mind as I read The Given Day. In 2016 we call the violent radicals Islamic terrorists; the medical crisis du jour is the Zika virus; protests follow questionable shootings with riots sometimes resulting when activists from the newbie #BlackLivesMatter movement face off against police officers with #BlueLivesMatter mindsets; and Kevin Durant has left Oklahoma City to form a super team in the Golden State. What's the modern day equivalent to the molasses flood? Donald Trump's presidential candidacy perhaps. Both certainly created enormous messes to deal with.
View all my reviews The Loney by Andrew Michael Hurley
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Sometimes it's necessary to carefully arrange a system of beliefs to explain the unexplainable. People love a good mystery provided it gets solved in the end. Unresolved we are left with questions that can haunt us. Religion serves the purpose of providing answers without needing to bear the burden of proof. By accepting the influence and omnipotence of a higher power, rather than wrestling with questions, people accept explanations that cannot be disproved. But even the most strongly constructed belief system can be vulnerable to harsh doses of reality and cruel twists of fate. The Loney is a place where people come to seek miracles, a private Lourdes. Maybe the miracles are gifts from God. Maybe they come from elsewhere. If you find what you seek, does the source matter? If you learn the truth, was the miracle worth the lesson? I recommend giving Andrew Michael Hurley's atmospheric debut novel a read. I've done my best to review it spoiler free. Like high tide on a desolate beach, this novel will pull you in and hold on fast.
View all my reviews
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