The fact is that we just don't know anything about what else was going on in his life.
Did you actually comprehend what I posted or are you like many who simply, dishonestly, label opinions you find uncomfortable to consider as racism?
I expanded on my view in post #122. I have no intention of continuing to do so.
And yes, I know there are some African Americans on this site. Those who know me and know my views don't consider me a racist and don't toss around such labels against fellow members as a debating tactic.
Now, I reviewed the story and reviewed the video and I saw very little that was truly evident about a broken American justice system but I did see a lot of black youth who spat on, kicked, stomped, and beat upon another black youth in the confines of a jail and even with a couple of jail guards trying to control the situation continued to do so. That is what I commented upon. In the context of what happened in Ferguson, what happened and is happening in Baltimore, what's happening daily in Chicago, and in other cities in America, where black on black crime is rampant, where black youth kill other black youth for sport and pleasure, and where respect for others and the property of others is often non-existent, the video in the OP and the actions of these youth said more about blacks in America than it said about the American justice system.
So, to cut to the chase, you'd prefer I simply accept your version of events and your interpretation of those events without question or counter argument. Perhaps you don't understand the concept of debate - that seems reasonable since you didn't understand the point I was making in my original post and your interpretation of my views has gone downhill ever since.
Perhaps you'd be better off if you simply expressed your own views and counter arguments and stopped trying to misinterpret other posters' thoughts and words to suit your agenda and/or straw men you'd like to attack.
Please feel free to respond, but I'm done engaging with you on this subject.
I haven't been dishonest about anything. You have though and this -
is just another racist and myopic post of yours. It only clarifies how little you know about black Americans.
You think black people kill each other for fun and sport. Really? We just go and buy guns and blow each others heads off on a hot and boring day because that's just the thing to do?
There is not a single thing in that post that is unique to black youth or people. I can match you tit for tat in white crimes- rioting, murder, property destruction, white on white crime.
If you weren't a racist then you would understand that video, if it is reflecting any grander truth, reflects the reality of inner city and low-income youth/people. Regardless of race.
It does just so happen that in comparison to any other race in this country the African American population is comprised primarily off poor citizens who live in rough and down and dirty neighborhoods. The notion bad behavior has any link to the color of one's skin is idiocy plain and simple.
If you do your research about any petty and egregious crime in any country, including those countries that are primarily white, you'll notice the demographic committing most of those crimes are poor.
Don't believe me? Hell, confine your research to the U.S.A notice that of the many petty crimes committed by white people here the vast majority of them are committed by white men and women from low-income - poor lifestyles.
We can conclude that drastic, desperate, and violent criminals are created by their environment. The color of their skin is entirely unrelated.
Get off your soapbox. You clearly didn't read what I said or the connection I made to the OP because your hell bent on finding someone to call a racist.
You're part of the problem in America. You're afraid to face, head on, what is happening in many of your larger cities and you want to make the struggles of black people in America the fault of anyone but themselves. I've said many times, in threads related to Baltimore, Ferguson, Chicago and others that the vast majority of black people in these cities are good, honest, law abiding people who support the police because those officers are all that is keeping them safe in some of the hell holes they live in. It isn't white people attacking them - it isn't police attacking them - it's the large criminal element among black youth in their own communities. The good, honest, law abiding black people in these areas know this. The people of Baltimore, in these troubled neighbourhoods, are suffering now because the police have pulled back, not wanting to be charged for simply doing their jobs. It is the good, honest, and law abiding black people who are now suffering in that city, like the poor black man, 47 I believe, with 5 children, who was simply sitting on his porch enjoying a nice spring evening and was shot dead by some cretin.
But you don't care about these people - you'd rather protect and excuse those in this video and those who rioted in Ferguson and Baltimore and those in Chicago who do indeed kill fellow black youth for sport.
You can call me a racist all you want if it makes you feel good, feel superior, and helps you ignore the truth of what's going on in your country. Means nothing to me. I have zero respect for your position because it's a position that's failed your country for too long.
What we do know is there is no record of psychological problems before he was arrested and sent to jail, he tried to kill himself in jail while in solitary, and was mentally troubled, and in and out of several mental institutions after his release. We know that solitary confinement can have lasting and debilitating effects on those who endure it. Teens are mentally vulnerable as they're minds aren't yet fully developed. We also know PTSD often lasts years - median 3-5 years, often far longer.
Of course we don't KNOW anything - maybe his mental issues are unrelated. It's not unusual for serious mental problems to first manifest around that age. But I don't see it as anything like "strained at best" to conclude that his time in jail and especially two years in solitary is the most likely primary cause of his mental problems, his suicide attempt in solitary, his multiple attempts after he was released and his eventual death.
Get off your soapbox. You clearly didn't read what I said or the connection I made to the OP because your hell bent on finding someone to call a racist.
No, I'm not. I would say you are, but you don't even live here.You're part of the problem in America.
You're afraid to face, head on, what is happening in many of your larger cities and you want to make the struggles of black people in America the fault of anyone but themselves.
I've said many times, in threads related to Baltimore, Ferguson, Chicago and others that the vast majority of black people in these cities are good, honest, law-abiding people who support the police because those officers are all that is keeping them safe in some of the hell holes they live in.
It isn't white people attacking them - it isn't police attacking them - it's the large criminal element among black youth in their own communities.
The good, honest, law abiding black people in these areas know this.
The people of Baltimore, in these troubled neighbourhoods, are suffering now because the police have pulled back, not wanting to be charged for simply doing their jobs.
It is the good, honest, and law-abiding black people who are now suffering in that city, like the poor black man, 47 I believe, with 5 children, who was simply sitting on his porch enjoying a nice spring evening and was shot dead by some cretin.
But you don't care about these people
you'd rather protect and excuse those in this video and those who rioted in Ferguson and Baltimore and those in Chicago who do indeed kill fellow black youth for sport.
You can call me a racist all you want if it makes you feel good, feel superior, and helps you ignore the truth of what's going on in your country.
I would assume that most racist don't care.Means nothing to me.
I have zero respect for your position because it's a position that's failed your country for too long.
That seems like an awful lot of hand waving. I suspect it won't be as cut and dried under cross examination.
It's not clear to me what the prosecution's legal theory is going to be. He was kept in jail legally even if it was a horrible thing to do to a kid.
Prestia, in his lawsuit, alleges “malicious prosecution,” charging that Johnson’s prosecutors were “representing to the court that they would be ‘ready’ for trial, when in fact, they never were.” Prestia said, “The million-dollar question is: When did they really know they didn’t have a witness? Did they really not know until 2013?” He suspects that, as he wrote in his complaint, they were “seeking long, undue adjournments of these cases to procure a guilty plea from plaintiff.”
June 29, 2012: People not ready, request one week.
September 28, 2012: People not ready, request two weeks.
November 2, 2012: People not ready, request one week.
December 14, 2012: People not ready, request one week.
Kalief Browder, a young man from New York City who had gained national renown in recent years as a symbol of America's broken criminal justice system, took his own life this weekend, according to a report from The New Yorker. He was 22.
The Death Of Kalief Browder Is An 'American Tragedy Almost Beyond Words'
They broke his mind keeping him in solitary. He was too young to survive such torture. RIP. They won't hurt you anymore. What can I say...I'm not afraid of ISIS, I'm not afraid of Russia, I'm not afraid of Boko Haram, I'm not afraid of parachute jump. I'm afraid of our American Justice System. There are many people responsible for this young death. Unfortunately, l doubt that any of them will ever pay a price.
If you're asking about a legal standard, then yes, it's a difficult thing to prove causality. For decades it was a tough sell under cross examination to "prove" cigarettes caused cancer.... But on a practical level, if it was someone I knew, I am very positive I'd see the cause as the detention and especially the solitary confinement, since the mental issues started at that time and never stopped.
From the story:
I'm no lawyer, but that sounds right to me. Certainly this series of events supports the claim directly:
They told the court on June 29th that they needed "one week" to prepare (after several previous "one week" delay requests), or by July 6th. But three MONTHS later, after having the case for over 24 months, they need two MORE weeks? Those don't seem like honest declarations to the court, for a case that involved one witness...
What we do know is there is no record of psychological problems before he was arrested and sent to jail, he tried to kill himself in jail while in solitary, and was mentally troubled, and in and out of several mental institutions after his release. We know that solitary confinement can have lasting and debilitating effects on those who endure it. Teens are mentally vulnerable as they're minds aren't yet fully developed. We also know PTSD often lasts years - median 3-5 years, often far longer.
Of course we don't KNOW anything - maybe his mental issues are unrelated. It's not unusual for serious mental problems to first manifest around that age. But I don't see it as anything like "strained at best" to conclude that his time in jail and especially two years in solitary is the most likely primary cause of his mental problems, his suicide attempt in solitary, his multiple attempts after he was released and his eventual death.
None of us knows very much, including what Browder's life was like before his incarceration. Perhaps he manifested mental problems, but his family thought he was just being an angsty teen. We don't know.
But don't be too quick to connect his incarceration necessarily to his subsequent mental problems unless you know (I surely don't) that there is a strong link between incarceration in solitary confinement and later psychosis. There probably is, but we don't even know what meds he was taking. The WaPo article I linked in post #190 asked, "Was it the anti-psychotic medication that exacerbated his suicidal ideation? Or had he stopped taking the drugs?"
Without answers to these questions, there is no way to come to any fair conclusion.
From a Texans point of view I have to say it's nice to see the absolute stunning hypocrisy of "Ultra Progressive NYC" on issues of crime and race. NYC people slam Texas and other states yet black American teenagers are being tortured to death in NYC prisons for stealing some rich New Yorkers backpack while NYC people lecture the rest of us on values while they sit there sipping their $15 cup of designer coffee.
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