This video from the USA says about itself:
Media Attempts To Normalize White Male Bomber Instead Of Calling Him A Terrorist
22 March 2018
The racism of the corporate media is shining brightly again this week, as accused Austin bomber Mark Conditt is being normalized by the national media, including The New York Times. Papers are calling him “nerdy and quiet”, while omitting the fact that the acts he committed would be considered “terrorism” had they been perpetrated by someone of a different race or religion. Ring of Fire’s Farron Cousins discusses this.
By Nina Golgowski in the USA:
03/29/2018 06:46 pm ET
Austin Bombings Suspect Labeled ‘Domestic Terrorist’ By City’s Police Chief
The distinction comes a week after the attacker was identified as 23-year-old Mark Anthony Conditt.
The recent deadly bombings across Austin, Texas, were acts of domestic terrorism, the city’s police chief said for the first time on Thursday.
“This is a distinction that I did want to make today”, interim Austin Police Chief Brian Manley said at a panel discussion hosted by NPR station KUT. “I actually agree now that he was a domestic terrorist for what he did to us.”
Manley’s resolve came a little more than a week after authorities said the bombing suspect, 23-year-old Austin resident Mark Anthony Conditt, blew himself up amid a confrontation with police. By that time, two people had been killed and five others had been injured in explosions that had taken place over several weeks.
Manley said he was slow to designate Conditt as a terrorist because he didn’t want to misuse the word, which has a specific legal definition.
“Now that I have taken everything into consideration, his actions along with the impact that it had on this community, I have now changed my opinion and I do believe that he was a domestic terrorist”, he said.
U.S. code defines domestic terrorism as dangerous, illegal acts that appear intended to intimidate civilians, influence the government, or affect the conduct of government. …
The panel discussion also addressed race relations within the city. Three of the victims were either black or Hispanic, sparking fears that the attacks were racially motivated. Conditt was white.
Chas Moore, leader of the Austin Justice Coalition, a local group that works toward racial equality in the justice system, said Conditt’s race likely influenced Manley’s initial response to him. The interim police chief previously called the suspect a “challenged young man.”
“Because he was white, we gave him the benefit of being a human first,” Moore said, adding that he believes racial divides within Austin are getting worse.
“Because from my perspective, what I see, a lot of the overt attacks on people of color from the past are not institutionalized”, he said. “In the past, they used to move us [out of downtown] with the barrel of a gun. Today they move us with ordinances. It’s no different. They continue to move us out and destroy our neighborhoods.” …
Law enforcement officials have been accused of more quickly labeling cases as terrorism when a Muslim person appears to be the perpetrator. …
Three members of Congress spoke out last week in support of treating the attacks in Austin as domestic terrorism. They also took issue with similar attacks not being labeled the same way.
“For too long we have focused only on certain sources of terrorism and violence while ignoring others,” Democratic Reps. Bennie Thompson (Miss.), Cedric Richmond (La.) and Sheila Jackson Lee (Texas) said in a joint statement. “To be clear, these bombings must be classified as ongoing terrorist attacks and should be investigated as such.”
Reblogged this on Die Erste Eslarner Zeitung – Aus und über Eslarn, sowie die bayerisch-tschechische Region!.
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Like all our television news, The New York Times knows that to be a terrorist, you have to be related in some way to a Muslim cause. That’s why Eric Rudolph, the Olympic Park bomber, who also bombed abortion clinics and a lesbian bar was only acting on good Christian principles, so he couldn’t have been a terrorist. …Only in the USA…
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Thanks for your comment, Daniel! Unfortunately, such prejudice exists not ‘only in the USA’, but, eg, also in several European countries.
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Important and thought- provoking story….
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Thank you, Valerie!
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