When Charlie Kirk was killed in September 2025, a coordinated campaign backed by government officials led to over 150 people being targeted for termination within nine days—some fired within hours for merely quoting Kirk's own words. Five years earlier, when George Floyd was killed by police, his death became fodder for Halloween costumes, TikTok reenactments, and memes that circulated widely with scattered, inconsistent consequences. This investigation documents the stark disparity in institutional response: who receives martyrdom versus mockery, whose dignity merits protection, and how systemic racism operates through selective empathy. Drawing on court documents, employment records, and government statements, the article reveals how power—not principle—determines whose death America mourns and whose it tolerates as entertainment.
Tag: Black Lives Matter
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May 13, 2024October 21, 2025America, Conspiracy, Disinformation, Equality, History, Politics, Racism, Rights, Separatism
The 1985 MOVE Bombing: An Examination of State Violence, Race, and Urban Life in America
The 1985 MOVE bombing in Philadelphia stands as a stark example of the intersection between race, state violence, and urban policy in the United States. When the city dropped a military-grade bomb on the home of the Black liberation group MOVE, killing 11 people, including five children, and destroying 61 homes, it revealed the devastating consequences of police militarization and systemic racism. This event, which still resonates in the era of Black Lives Matter, highlights the ongoing struggles for police reform, racial justice, and governmental accountability in marginalized communities.
