Tuesday, March 20, 2012
WHAT TOOK YOU SO LONG, DOJ?????

Look at that face. Does he look like a thug? Does he look like he wants to shoot you?
Apparently in February of this year, George Zimmerman - clearly a racist sociopath - thought that 17 year old Trayvon Martin was a menace to society. Trayvon was walking thru the neighborhood, eating a bag of skittles and Mr. Zimmerman assumed he was up to no good.
Zimmerman gunned down Trayvon in cold blood. Zimmerman has yet to be arrested.
Today - March 20, 2012 - the Department of Justice has FINALLY decided to do something about this travesty of justice. I think it has to do with the uproar in social media (duh!)
From

From LATIMES dot com:
According to local media reports, Zimmerman took seriously his volunteer role as captain of the neighborhood watch group in the diverse community. He had aspirations of being a police officer at one point in his life, and had called 911 to report suspicious activity in the neighborhood nearly 50 times in the last year, according to the Miami Herald.
Zimmerman's father wrote a letter to the Sun Sentinel that insists that his son is neither a racist nor guilty of being the aggressor in the deadly encounter. The statement was published in full on the newspaper's website. It reads in part:
"George is a Spanish speaking minority with many black family members and friends. He would be the last to discriminate for any reason whatsoever.... The media portrayal of George as a racist could not be further from the truth."
What? What?
Monday, March 12, 2012
More on Kony
One of my favorite NOLA bloggers, Jason Calbos, has put some heart and soul into a post about the notorious Joseph Kony here His question to you doubters:
"what’s really at stake here?
The Lives of children that’s all.
Real children.
"what’s really at stake here?
The Lives of children that’s all.
Real children.
Saturday, March 10, 2012
Kony 2012
In the 1980's the outside world largely looked the other way as Uganda's north sunk into violence and deprivation. That changed in the early 2000s, when images of thousands of children taking refuge in the town of Gulu, Uganda, first hit mainstream television. Various celebrities began to speak out about the war, mostly focusing on shocking incidents associated with Kony's rebels; the Ugandan government's aggressive counterinsurgency measures, however, were shocking as well. For example, the government forced the region's population to relocate into what were effectively concentration camps. There, they were poorly protected from attacks, and faced dreadful living conditions. A study carried out under the auspices of the World Health Organization in 2005 found that there were 1000 excess deaths per week in the Acholi region.
Watch this 29 minute video to witness the atrocities happening in Uganda and see how a movement half a world away was born and is growing. Become involved.
Watch this 29 minute video to witness the atrocities happening in Uganda and see how a movement half a world away was born and is growing. Become involved.
KONY 2012 from INVISIBLE CHILDREN on Vimeo.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
