>>10461
>holo-caust
On the same note, another jewish magic machine was used three some years ago so we should never forget the lesser holocaust (kikes call their main big one the Shoah). A slight digression from the thread's strictly judeo-centric topic.
https://today.usc.edu/media-advisory-the-real-story-of-rodney-king-emerges-through-his-daughters-eyes/
>The killing of Tyree Nichols has reignited and enraged the conflict between police and Black communities. The videotaped beating of Rodney King came to symbolize that conflict more than three decades ago.
>Now, his daughter is retelling the King story through a new interactive technology for posterity. Lora King is rewriting the first draft of history, sharing a “second draft” about a man who was a surfer, a high performing athlete and a figure who led younger members of his family through joyful journeys.
>That changed on March 3, 1991, when a bleeding King was beaten and dragged from one police station to another. Mass violence and destruction followed a year later when four officers charged in the King beating were acquitted.
>Engaging the same technology as USC Shoah Foundation uses for Holocaust survivors, Dimensions in Testimony, King presents a different side of her father, sharing a first-person account of a man who underwent a terrible change, never wanting to be a historic figure.
>Lora King’s testimony is preserved for generations to come and ensures that people will have a visible, interactive way to learn about the past, her experience and memory of her father — perhaps one of the best-known survivors of police violence. Her testimony marks the start of an archival effort by the new USC Charlotta Bass Journalism and Justice Lab at USC Annenberg to begin to educate and write a new draft of history for Black voices.
USC Annenberg?
https://annenberg.usc.edu/current-students/media-center
>USC Annenberg’s Media Center is the heartbeat of Wallis Annenberg Hall. This unique newsroom, classroom and incubator provides experiential learning so students can work as journalists on day one, ensuring they enter the industry with the multimedia skills necessary to tell stories on every platform.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wallis_Annenberg
Had the face of a tranny but what do I know.
If you listen to these people, King was one hell of a saint. Maybe an angel even, a surfer, a high performing athlete and a figure who led younger members of his family through joyful journeys.
Luckily some less biased sources insist on reminding us of who he truly was.
https://allthatsinteresting.com/rodney-king
>Born on April 2, 1965, in Sacramento, California, Rodney Glen King grew up in Altadena with his parents and four older siblings. His childhood was far from idyllic. According to a Los Angeles Times story from 2012, his father Ronald was an alcoholic who often dragged King and his brothers with him to his nightly janitorial jobs. They helped clean, while their father drank.
>As an adult, King also struggled with alcohol — and drugs — and had multiple run-ins with the law. In 1989, he was charged with attacking the owner of a market with a tire iron.
Nice.
>He later pleaded guilty to robbery and was sentenced to two years in prison. By March 1991, King was out on parole and taking construction jobs wherever he could find them.
>Rodney King might have lived the rest of his days in obscurity, but in March 1991, he had a fateful run-in with the Los Angeles Police Department. It would change his life — and the course of American history.
>Shortly after midnight on March 3, 1991, the California Highway Patrol clocked Rodney King speeding down the 210 Freeway at more than 100 miles per hour. King had spent the night drinking with friends, and when he saw flashing lights in his rear view mirror, he panicked — he knew he’d get into trouble for drunk driving and violating his parole — and so he sped away.
Typical dindu behavior.
>As LAPD cruisers and a police helicopter joined the pursuit, King attempted to escape. He led the police on an eight-mile chase before he finally pulled over near Hansen Dam Park at 12:45 a.m.
You bet they were pissed. That and the nigger being a road threat for eight miles.
>A group of LAPD officers, led by Sergeant Stacey Koon, then ordered King and his two friends to step out of the car. King’s two friends complied, but King moved more slowly and started to act erratically, taking a moment to wave at the helicopter whirring overhead, before he got down on his hands and knees.
Again, nigger gonna nig.
>Then, four Los Angeles police officers — Laurence Powell, Timothy Wind, Ted Briseno, and Roland Solano — attempted to force King down onto the ground. When King resisted, one of the officers shot him with a Taser.
Literally threatening his breathing I presume.
>Over the next nine minutes, Holliday recorded as LAPD officers beat King. After being Tased, King got up and tried to run.
Again??
>Police later alleged that he charged at Powell; King claimed that the police had shouted: “We’re going to kill you, n***er. Run!”
I guess King's attorney told him to say that. This free out-of-jail card has only gotten better for them and some other non-White communities.
>Powell then struck King with his baton, knocking him down, and as King tried to rise, Powell and Wind struck him repeatedly.
How many hits does it take to make a nigger understand the meaning of stay the fuck down?
>The beating continued even when King was lying prone on the ground. Briseno stepped on King’s upper back, then the officers proceeded to beat him with their batons and feet as Koon looked on. Finally, after being hit over 50 times and suffering broken bones, skull fractures, and permanent brain damage, King was handcuffed and an ambulance was called for him.
Sometimes someone needs a good ventin'.
This is what got the cops into trouble. Never forget what the shit they endured all day long though, that with managing a city full of niggers. I don't usually get behind cops as I consider them to be mere state bullies but I'd rather have chill cops operating in a normal way in a White city than have them become brutes after years of exposure to the worse the American culture has been able to produce.
>But even though the LAPD officers stood trial in Simi Valley in Ventura County — the trials took place outside of Los Angeles to avoid the possibility of biased jurors — the trials came to a shocking conclusion. On April 29, 1992, the jury acquitted Koon, Wind, Briseno, and Powell of all charges (save for one assault charge against Powell that ended in a hung jury).
>Hours later, Los Angeles erupted into riots.
>The L.A. riots lasted six days as anger over the acquittals exploded across the city. Rioters set fires and looted local businesses. With the police overwhelmed, many store owners — notably local Koreans — were forced to defend themselves and their business properties. In one infamous moment, a group of Black rioters pulled white trucker Reginald Denny from his truck and beat him as a news helicopter aired the assault on live TV.
Of course nobody gives a shit about the Korean shopkeepers or R. Denny.
>Ultimately, about 10,000 National Guardsmen and 2,000 federal troops were sent to Los Angeles to help restore order in the city. By May 4th, the situation had largely calmed down — but not before the riots inflicted over $1 billion in property damage and killed more than 60 people.
Chimpouts at your expense.
>But the story of Rodney King didn’t stop there.
>On April 19th, Rodney King was awarded $3.8 million in compensatory damages in a civil lawsuit against the City of Los Angeles. It was a victory, but a small one: King had asked for $56 million, which would have represented $1 million for every time the LAPD officers hit him.
>“People look at me like I should have been like Malcolm X or Martin Luther King or Rosa Parks,” he told the Los Angeles Times in April 2012. “I should have seen life like that and stay out of trouble, and don’t do this and don’t do that. But it’s hard to live up to some people’s expectations.”
>Indeed, his trouble with the law continued for most of his life. Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, King was arrested numerous times for driving while intoxicated, hit-and-run driving, use of the drug PCP, and domestic abuse involving his then-wife and daughter.
$3.8M well spent, no doubt. I suppose he didn't beat his daughter hard enough either. She forgave him, perhaps because deep down she knows it's some normal savanna behavior. I wonder if she got paid for her little stunt.
>Rodney King’s life came to a sudden end on June 17, 2012, when the 47-year-old was found unresponsive in a swimming pool at his Rialto, California home. Authorities ruled his death an “accidental drowning,” but they also noted that alcohol, cocaine, marijuana, and PCP were all found in his system and they were contributing factors to his demise.
A dead nigger in a swimming pool is a like a dead fly in a bowl of soup. Besides, since when do niggers swim?
>Though King had spoken to The Guardian about a month earlier about forgiving the police officers who’d beaten him years ago, Rodney King acknowledged the terrible pain that he had felt that night in March 1991.
>“It was like being raped, stripped of everything, being beaten near to death there on the concrete, on the asphalt,” he remembered. “I just knew how it felt to be a slave. I felt like I was in another world.”
How much of this impression was due to alcohol stewing in his brain though?
They have another interesting article about Reggie.
https://allthatsinteresting.com/reginald-denny
Lynched without reason except for being White and civilized, I guess he won't deserve a spot in that ((( holographic memorial ))).