I was surprised by the Chauvin verdict.

As I said on April 1, I thought there was a good chance that he would not be convicted of all three, if any, of the charges against him.

I don’t know what was in Chauvin’s heart when he put his knee down on George Floyd’s neck. Was he hateful? Was he racist? Was he scared?

What I feel more certain about is that if he had been exonerated of all three charges, it would have lit a fire among BLM and Antifa activists and supporters.

So now we this high profile conviction, which will surely give many police officers pause. If I were a cop, I’d definitely think about it. But what will come of it? Will cops, in the execution of arrests, no longer feel that they are immune to charges of brutality and even murder? That would be a good thing.

Will there be less thuggishness in the treatment of the public? And in the treatment of Black Americans in particular?

Will it change policing generally?

And if so, how?

 

3 Facts About Police Killings in the US 

* Since 2005, there have been about 1,000 fatal police shootings each year.

* During that same time period, a total of 139 police officers were arrested for murder or manslaughter due to an on-duty killing. That = about 9 per year or an arrest record of about 1%.

* Of those 139 cases, 42 are still pending. Of those adjudicated 44 were convicted. So that’s 44 convictions out of 98 cases. That is a conviction rate of about 45%.

Continue Reading

Charges, No Charges –  You Decide 

Charges: 

An officer involved in a fatal shooting in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, will face charges of second-degree manslaughter, prosecutors announced. Twenty-year-old Daunte Wright, a Black resident of the Minneapolis suburb, was killed by officer Kim Potter during a traffic stop Sunday afternoon, April 11. Potter, a 26-year veteran of the force, claims she mistakenly pulled her gun instead of her taser as Wright attempted to flee. Experts say such mistakes are rare, with documented instances occurring about once a year.

No Charges:

The US Capitol Police officer who shot dead an Air Force veteran during the tumultuous events on January 6 will not be charged, the Department of Justice announced. Mark Schamel, a lawyer representing the officer, told The Epoch Times in an emailed statement: “This is the only correct conclusion following the events of January 6. The lieutenant exercised professionalism and fantastic restraint in defending and protecting members of Congress.” Terrell Roberts, an attorney for the family, said, “I find it to be baffling given the circumstances that it’s a clear case of shooting an unarmed person without any legal justification, but I have no idea what went into their decision.”

Continue Reading

What I Believe 

* It’s not easy to succeed. That’s because success is defined as achieving that which is difficult for most people to do.

* Some people fail despite great effort. But most people fail to succeed simply because they aren’t willing to put in the effort required.

* Success is not directly correlated to happiness. In fact, striving for success is a primary cause of unhappiness.

Continue Reading

From Letters of Note… 

I’ve never read Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring, perhaps the most important environmental book published in the second half of the 20th century. After reading this heartbreaking letter that she wrote to a friend seven months before she died from cancer, I bought a copy.

September 10, 1963

Dear One,

This is a postscript to our morning at Newagen, something I think I can write better than say. For me it was one of the loveliest of the summer’s hours, and all the details will remain in my memory: that blue September sky, the sounds of the wind in the spruces and surf on the rocks, the gulls busy with their foraging, alighting with deliberate grace, the distant views of Griffiths Head and Todd Point, today so clearly etched, though once half seen in swirling fog. But most of all I shall remember the monarchs, that unhurried westward drift of one small winged form after another, each drawn by some invisible force. We talked a little about their migration, their life history. Did they return? We thought not; for most, at least, this was the closing journey of their lives.

But it occurred to me this afternoon, remembering, that it had been a happy spectacle, that we had felt no sadness when we spoke of the fact that there would be no return. And rightly – for when any living thing has come to the end of its life cycle we accept that end as natural.

For the monarch, that cycle is measured in a known span of months. For ourselves, the measure is something else, the span of which we cannot know. But the thought is the same: when that intangible cycle has run its course it is a natural and not unhappy thing that a life comes to an end.

That is what those brightly fluttering bits of life taught me this morning. I found a deep happiness in it – so I hope, may you. Thank you for this morning.

Rachel

Continue Reading

An email from DP:

I feel like I’m re-living many of your stories that I have studied voraciously in your books and blog posts. Thank you for being the mentor to so many that you never knew.

Continue Reading

We were on a 4-hour layover in Seoul, Korea. Someone suggested we should take a taxi into town. We did. There were six of us, three each in two little cabs. When I have more time, I’ll tell you the full story, but suffice it to say that there was a language barrier that had us almost three hours away from the airport by the time we could get our driver to understand we needed to be back in just over an hour. Anywhere but Asia, that would have been impossible. Our two drivers accomplished it by driving their cabs just the way you see these motorcycles driving here.

But our guys were even crazier. They were doing this in the opposite lanes – against traffic!

 When I came across this video today, it brought back memories…

Continue Reading