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A Black Anti-Racism Stance

Black Men talking

Kendall Qualls, in the Federalist.com has written an article that stands as an example of calm, rational thought on the topic of racism in America. He paints a picture of America that is radically different …

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Pope Says Heresy OK?

Old Catholic Church

On sojo.net Phillip Pullella has written an article that highlights a glaring inconsistency in the Roman Catholic Church as it relates to members of the LGBTQ community. “The church teaches that LGBTQ people should be …

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Pastors and Politics

Religious congregations have found themselves increasingly divided over politics. Pastor Brandon Long hoped to keep his sermons focused on loyalty to Jesus, not politics. However, the 2020 election strained relations between him and some parishioners. …

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“Wokeism” in American Colleges

“Wokeism”, or more formally known as intersectional critical theory, is loosely defined as “embrac[ing] skepticism about classical liberal arts education grounded in traditional norms of academic debate” CURRENT is “an online journal of commentary and …

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The Year of Being Threatened by Smart Women

Women have long struggled to be heard in theological conversations. However, many women are challenging this ideology, and thereby, they are challenging the men who built it.  Baptist News Global uses succinct stories and stunning …

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Have We Seen Justice In The Trial Of Ahmaud Arbery’s Slaughterers?

YouTube Video Showing All Three Suspects Of The Ahmaud Arbery Killing Being Sentenced In Court.

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January 7, 2022, three men responsible for the February 2020 stalking and shooting death of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery were subsequently sentenced to life in prison without parole. 

Mr. Arbery was unarmed as he jogged in Satilla Shores (a neighborhood near Brunswick). He attempted to fight one of the attackers trying to subdue him but he was gunned down by suspect Travis McMichael. Sentencing came after 23 months when Father Gregory and son Travis McMichael armed themselves, stalked Arbery throughout a neighborhood in southern Georgia along with their neighbor/accomplice, William “Roddie” Bryan.

Travis McMichael, left, consults with his lawyer Jason B. Sheffield, center, during sentencing on Friday. McMichael and father Greg McMichael and neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan were all sentenced to life in prison.

Mr. Arbery was out jogging when he was profiled by the perpetrators. The three men had suspected Arbery was up to no good, so they proceeded to tail him. The men followed him in their truck with guns drawn after Arbery jogged past them. Gregory McMichael told the cops that “he thought Mr. Arbery looked like a man suspected in several break-ins in the area”.

Here’s a timeline of the incident provided by The New York Times

The McMichael’s were found guilty of several homicide infractions and are now serving life sentences without the possibility of parole. The third perpetrator, Bryan, received a life sentence with the chance of parole after serving at least 30 years imprisonment.

An underlying issue is many of these murders of Black people are simply for the reason of being black in America, numerous questions remain at large. Chief among them: “Has justice truly been done”?

Jemar Tisby writes for CNN that justice is far-fetched from where it should stand:

At its most complete level, justice would mean that Ahmaud Arbery was still alive, still breathing, still running. Justice would mean that a Black person could walk in any neighborhood and not be considered a threat by their mere presence. Justice would be dismantling the racist narratives that led three White men to track and kill a Black person.
When full justice proves elusive, however, accountability must be pursued.
Barring the death penalty, the life sentences handed down in the Arbery case are the maximum allowed; the legal system’s highest form of accountability. The penalties represent the judgment of the court that these three men committed a crime and should face the consequences of their actions.
It’s chilling to realize these men were nearly never arrested. It took 74 days for charges to even be filed. Only a shaky cell phone video, recorded by Bryan, became the difference between the killers living the rest of their lives in freedom or in prison. It was the footage, leaked after weeks of inaction by local authorities, that brought a national outcry and, eventually, charges.
In the present racial climate, it is fair to ask the question, “Do Black lives matter … without video evidence?”

Read the full article here.

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