"The United States always advertises itself as a'beacon of freedom', but this is not the case." President Akufo-Addo of Ghana issued a statement stating that black people all over the world were shocked and worried about the killing of the defenseless George Freud by the white American police. The recurrence of the tragedy is heartbreaking and reminds us to face the ugly. Reality. Murat Ensoy, an associate professor in the Department of Political Science at Hatchetpe University in Turkey, said that the United States always advertises itself as a "beacon of freedom", but this is not the case. The riots and the ineffective fight against the epidemic have damaged the United States' international reputation. Professor Allad Favole of Obafemi Avorovo University in Nigeria wrote an article that Americans are being forced to accept the stark reality, that is, their own hypocrisy. They have been repeating shocking lies for a long time, covering up False statements on their dark side. What are these lies? The most common are: the greatness of delusion, the unique myth of the United States, the great democracy, the defender of global democracy, the typical fortress of human rights and freedom, the veritable place of equal opportunity, everyone is born equal, and so on. However, after George Freud was publicly murdered by extreme racial prejudice and police brutality, these myths were conspicuously shattered in a cloud of smoke.
"Inequality has penetrated into all aspects of society"
The widespread demonstrations triggered by Freud’s death are not only a deep protest against the long-standing racial inequality in the United States, but also a concentrated expression of dissatisfaction with the more widespread social inequality behind racial inequality. The issue of inequality has deeply penetrated into all aspects of American society and has become the deepest internal structural contradiction affecting the development of American society.
"Black people's life is also fate" highlights "injustice and discrimination are deeply ingrained." The United Nations Special Rapporteur on racism, Tendai Akume, pointed out that for African Americans, the US legal system has been unable to resolve racial injustice and discrimination. This kind of injustice and discrimination have been deeply rooted, and even in the current wave of protests, incidents of police killing black people indiscriminately are still taking place. Iran’s Foreign Minister Zarif said that “some people do not take the lives of African Americans” and the international community should have declared war on such racial discrimination — now is the time to launch a global war against racial discrimination. Esteban Morales, a political scholar at the Cuban Academy of Sciences, said that the racial problem in the United States has not been resolved, and that American minorities, African Americans, and Hispanics continue to be bullied. Kofi Edmola, organizer of the Chicago Civil Rights Movement "Black People's Life is Life", said, "In the United States, there has never been true justice. The continuous damage suffered by African Americans has never been repaired. This time there was an outbreak. Because we are in the midst of the epidemic, African Americans have once again become the main victims. Because of ethnic problems, concentrated poverty, lack of food and medical security, our basic health conditions have been affected, and we have been excluded from the normal economy." .
The protest is "people's anger at social inequality". UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet issued a statement saying that behind the protests in hundreds of cities in the United States is deep dissatisfaction and people's anger against social inequality. Bachelet pointed out that the disappointment and dissatisfaction of the American people stems from the social fragmentation caused by uneven development. The ordinary people lack a sense of security and trust at the economic and social levels. This is in line with the United States’ long-term inaction in the protection of basic human rights. Inseparable. Perl Dow, a professor at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, believes that “police issues, inequality issues, and systemic discrimination issues have penetrated into every aspect of society.” Minorities across the United States feel the same, and really want to change. This is why the protests lasted so long. Glenn Harris, chairman of the Racial Advance Organization, stated that such systemic racism-"sometimes referred to as structural racism or institutional racism", refers to "under the complex effects of culture, policies, and institutions, The results seen in life now". He said that systemic racism has caused inequality in many areas, including wealth, health, criminal punishment, justice, employment, housing, political participation, and education.
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