Kyle Rittenhouse went to an active protest with an AR because he wanted conflict. He found it, and he killed people. And because the American justice system wants people like him to be able to do things like this, he now walks free.
The #RittenhouseVerdict is the result of an entire system designed to prop up white supremacy. Starting from the moment police officers let Rittenhouse walk away from the scene, to charitable media framing, to Judge Bruce Schroeder displaying obvious bias, up to this decision.
At every point in this saga, America's systemic commitment to white supremacy has shone through.
2020 challenged America to finally meaningfully deal with its history of racism and the ways racism still dominates our present day.
The response from many has been defiance.
We've seen throughout American history how white supremacy responds to people striving towards racial justice.
Racists stoke anger leading to violence, and all too often the American justice system sides with violent vigilantes— effectively deputizing angry racists.
Of course, white supremacist violence doesn't only affect marginalized communities. It's a danger for anyone who believes in racial justice.
Rittenhouse went to Kenosha to strike against protests for racial justice. He wound up killing white people in the process.
White supremacy is a rot at the core of this country, and it impacts everyone that believes in this country's stated values. It won't go away until white people recognize that it endangers them too.
This verdict is heartbreaking but we must remember that even if Rittenhouse were found guilty, that still would not be justice. It would be accountability for one person.
Justice is when the rulebook that has codified white supremacy into every facet of our lives is rewritten.
It’s not that Rittenhouse’s acquittal is a win for white supremacy. It’s that Rittenhouse was acquitted BECAUSE white supremacy still controls the entire process.
White supremacy was behind the coverage from TV media and on social media platforms like @Meta, that framed the protests of 2020 in such a way to encourage people like Rittenhouse to show up with guns.
White supremacy is the animating force behind the actions taken by the justice system that tried Rittenhouse , and saw to it that he walks away now.
While this decision is particularly insidious, we've seen other instances where individuals have been found guilty. Those verdicts of guilt for individual people have not produced real change.
We've yet to see systemic change because we've yet to put the system itself on trial.
We've built up enough power to force the system to take these cases to trial— in the past, even this was farfetched.
We now have to build up enough power to change the rules of how those trials play out, or we’ll get more trials but not more real change.
Justice is only achieved when we've broken the entire structure that incentivizes white supremacist behavior.
From a media structure that stokes white supremacist violence, to a police force that coddles white supremacist offenders, to the justice system that reinforces it all.
Right now, nationwide bills are being written and passed into law that seek to criminalize protests.
Beyond that, laws are being passed that allow for people to violently strike protesters in the street.
Today’s decision will only embolden violent white supremacists.
Crucial now, is how the media— tech platforms and news media alike— will respond. Up until now, they've been happy to trade our safety for their viewership.
This is a test for them.
If we continue to see media parrot white supremacist talking points, and launder violent viewpoints through a false sense of neutrality, people will continue to be killed.
The people fighting on the front lines will be vulnerable to more vigilante violence.
We must continue fighting, and we must come together to protect protestors. Please sign this petition in support of racial justice protestors in Wisconsin.
Protesters have always been a key catalyst for change in America and we must protect them.
The #RittenhouseVerdict is not just wrong, it’s dangerous. Rittenhouse represents a type of violence that is only going to target more and more people over time.
Every day, movements for justice lead efforts to reduce violence — to change all the rules in society that incentivize it. But white leaders must confront the white people whose decisions create this violence.
This system was built by many people and it will take many people to dismantle and rebuild it. White leaders must step up. Everyone has a role to play — no one can say, “this is not my problem.”
I’m sitting down to watch (and live-tweet) the #Oscars, and Black talent and stories may take the night. Like a lot of things happening right now, signs of progress are also signs of just how far we have to go. (1/6)
For every #Moonlight that illuminates the breadth and depth of Black lives, and for every #JudasandtheBlackMessiah that tells the truth about racism in law enforcement and politics, there are a hundred movies and TV shows doing just the opposite. (2/6)
Tonight, I’m looking forward to celebrating Black art and artists like @ViolaDavis, #JudasAndTheBlackMessiah, and of course the late, great Chadwick Boseman. But in addition to celebrating the best, we must also challenge the rest. (3/6)
I don’t know who needs to hear this but Trump officials shouldn't be able to rehabilitate their reputations just bc they resigned two weeks before his term is over or put out a milquetoast statement.
The media has a responsibility to name them as the violent enablers they are.
Mick Mulvaney was the architect of some of the worst parts of the Trump administration, including its willfully negligent #COVID19 response, and has been using his ties to Trump to raise money for his hedge fund.
John Kelly was the DHS Sec who first enforced Trump’s #MuslimBan and is on the board of a company that runs for-profit immigrant detention centers. All of a sudden he wants to decry Trump’s conduct toward “women and minorities”? Opportunism at its lowest.
Today marks the 15th anniversary of @ColorOfChange, formed in the wake of the government's violent neglect of Black people during Hurricane Katrina. Ever since we've remained committed to fighting the barriers holding Black communities back & creating solutions to take us forward
I'm proud of what we've accomplished. We used #NoBloodMoney to get corporations to sever financial ties with white nationalists. We got COPS canceled for their "copaganda". We got Twitter to suspend David Duke and we continued working on tech accountability campaigns.
None of this would have been possible without the people who have taken action with COC, 7 million this year alone, whose activism fuels our work and have allowed us to hold elected leaders accountable with @votingwhileblk. Through it all, we've centered Black joy.
Long term, we need new rules of the road for these companies. Mark Zuckerberg has far too much power, more power than any individual should have, but especially an individual with no deep understanding or appreciation for civil rights usatoday.com/story/tech/202…
We've been working for years to get @Facebook to address their civil rights failures. The release of this civil rights audit exposes Facebook as a company that facilitates hate speech, violence, disinformation and bias while shortchanging civil rights.
We've forced @Facebook to expand its appeals process, address censorship and adopt content moderation policies against white nationalists. And through the audit, we've seen marginal progress on policing unlawful ad targeting, but it hasn't gone nearly far enough.
As the leaders of the #StopHateForProfit coalition gear up to meet @Facebook leadership tomorrow, we want to hear what they will do to deal with this problem - not a repackaging of old talking points. But first, let’s take a minute to recap how we got here:
In 2018, as we were pressuring @Facebook about the rampant voter suppression, discrimination and disinformation on the platform, @Facebook hired a PR firm to launch a negative attack campaign against us that advanced anti-Black and anti-semitic narratives. nytimes.com/2018/11/21/tec…
Afterward, we had a meeting with Sheryl Sandberg where she apologized and committed to making their civil rights audit public. Over the years FB has made steps forward but refused to enforce them when powerful people (ex: Trump) violated their own rules washingtonpost.com/technology/202…