I remember when the episode came out we had study Les Miserable in school. And they had the Javert/Valjean analogy. I felt odd as I kinda always appreciated Javert. And I didn't like them calling Javert a villain in the episode
Is it that At-Shun guy?
The whole holy war against slavery thing came back into the mainstream. It's so silly how a war between two slave holding republics is about ending slavery. It is really sad if you give any deference to the South at all, you get accused of being a "Lost Causer" and are villified
It's not just anime. I was watching Sea Quest because when it originally came out I thought it looked corny. But every other episode is humans are bad. And not just subtext some character will say humans are awful.
Before that I was binging Z Nation. And that too was zombies aren't bad it's humans who are bad. And usually those bad humans were white dudes
Forgiveness is a personal thing. What is interesting to me is this continuing trend of white people denying the racial aspects of these crimes. It creates an idea that racism is greater than murder. And of course racism can only be leveled against whites.
He also claims the family of the Black suspect could be the hardest hit.
“I feel for [the suspect’s] family because now their son will end up in prison and learn that he killed someone, and he devastated and killed my son who I can never get back. It’s unfortunate for everyone involved,” he continued.
I mean there's forgiveness and then there is too forgiving.
Also there's this little nugget
According to the latest US Census reporting data, the small town that cradles Collin and Denton counties is only 52.2% White alone, down from 81% in the year 2000.
Why are you surprised? Remember the black girl who got shot while trying to stab another black girl? They made her the victim as well. Shit last week we had the retard girl with the baton hitting another runner and they made her a victim.
They still do the retarded "hands up" pose despite on camera seeing the fat fucker beating on the cop.