Gianno Caldwell: 'None of us can be quiet,' the country must unite against injustice
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America must unite and speak out loudly against systemic racial injustice or "we're not going to have a country to unite in," Fox News political analyst Gianno Caldwell urged Friday.
Appearing on "America's Newsroom" with host Sandra Smith, Caldwell said that nationwide protests over the death of yet another unarmed black man – 46-year-old George Floyd – at the hands of law enforcement indicate that "for many African-Americans the pressure cooker hasn't just spilled over; the top is shattered in a thousand pieces."
MINNEAPOLIS COP WHO KNELT ON HANDCUFFED BLACK MAN ARRESTED
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"I’ve got to be honest: for a lot of African-Americans in this country, they feel that being black is a curse," he remarked. "It's a curse because before you know my name, before you know the content of my character, before you know my moral compass, I'm already considered a threat to you — to so many Americans. And, I'm telling you, a threat when I'm jogging, a threat when you have your knee on my neck and I'm screaming ‘I can't breathe,’ a threat when you are in the park walking your dog. This reality that has gone on for decades must come to an end."
On Thursday evening, riots led to the burning of a police precinct in Minneapolis, Minn. and the arrest of more than four dozen people in New York City.
In Louisville, Ky., at least seven people were shot after between 500 and 600 protesters took to the streets over the fatal shooting of 26-year-old EMT Breonna Taylor. Taylor was shot by narcotics detectives after they entered her apartment with a “no-knock” search warrant. No drugs were found in the home. Louisville Metro Police said officers were returning fire after Taylor’s boyfriend shot at them.
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On Friday, Minnesota Department of Public Safety Commissioner John Harrington announced that Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin, the man seen kneeling on Floyd's neck in several videos, had been arrested and taken into custody.
According to the Minneapolis Police Department's Internal Affairs, 44-year-old Chauvin already had almost two dozen prior complaints filed against him.
"It reminds me of when the 13th Amendment was ratified and slavery was abolished and a lot of the Confederate soldiers became police officers and judges, thereby disenfranchising African-Americans from true justice," Caldwell pointed out. "This is another situation which reminds a lot of us of that same trauma back then."
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"I had an opportunity to speak to my grandfather today: James Earl Williams. It's his…76th birthday. He grew up in Helena, Arkansas, and he got into many altercations with the Klan there. That same trauma that he experienced many years ago flows through my blood as well," he told Smith.
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"I know there [are] a lot of great people who aren’t bigoted, they’re not racists who are watching right now," he directed to viewers. "And, I want to tell you: you have to use your platform. You have to speak out against these injustices. None of us can be quiet while this is going on."
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"If we don’t unite today, we’re not going to have a country to unite in," Caldwell concluded. "We have to bring justice to this situation and it must be swift."