USAToday screenshot |
Pres. Trump walked from the White House, across Lafayette Park, to the historic St. John’s Church Monday night. In front of the boarded up building, damaged in protests sparked by the death of George Floyd, Pres. Trump held a bible in hand and posed for a photo with staff. pic.twitter.com/X40Re3Zori— CBS Evening News (@CBSEveningNews) June 2, 2020
There were protests again on Monday across the country, and again there were violent incidents at some of them. A vehicle drove through a group of police in Buffalo, New York, injuring two of them, and looters smashed windows and grabbed merchandise in midtown Manhattan in New York City. Tear gas was fired at a crowd in Louisville, Kentucky, hours after the city's police chief was fired over a fatal shooting by law enforcement of a barbecue restaurant owner early in the morning. Police said they and National Guard soldiers were responding to gunfire from a crowd as they were enforcing a curfew when David McAtee was fatally hit by their gunfire. Mayor Greg Fischer announced the firing of the police chief, and said none of the officers involved in the shooting had activated their body cameras.
Claimed Antifa Twitter Account was White Nationalists: Twitter said Monday that an account claiming to be part of a national antifa organization that was tweeting violent rhetoric related to the protests was in reality linked to the white nationalist group Identity Evropa. The account was suspended after a tweet incited violence. The newly-created account, which called itself @ANTIFA_US, tweeted Sunday night, "Tonight's the night, Comrades," with a brown raised fist emoji, and "Tonight we say 'F**k The City' and we move into the residential areas... the white hoods.... and we take what's ours …" Trump and Attorney General Bill Barr have claimed antifa and far-left extremists have been behind the violence and vandalism at some protests. However, federal and state officials are looking into evidence that both far-left and far-right groups may be infiltrating the protests with the aim of turning them violent.
Floyd's Brother Calls for Peace: George Floyd's brother, Terrence Floyd, went yesterday to the site on a Minneapolis street where his brother died, and made an emotional plea for peace, saying violence and destruction is, quote, "not going to bring my brother back." Floyd said, "Let’s switch it up, y’all. Let’s switch it up. Do this peacefully, please." He urged people to use their power at the ballot box and vote.
Two Autopsies Call Floyd's Death Homicide: The Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office on Monday classified George Floyd's death as a homicide, saying his heart stopped as police restrained him and compressed his neck. The report said Floyd had heart disease and hypertension, and listed fentanyl intoxication and recent methamphetamine use, but they were not included under cause of death. A separate private autopsy commissioned for Floyd’s family also called his death a homicide, saying he died of asphyxiation due to neck and back compression. The family's autopsy found no evidence of heart disease. Former Officer Derek Chauvin, who was fired the day after Floyd's death, has been charged with third-degree murder, after he was seen on video with his knee on Floyd's neck for more than eight minutes as he repeatedly cried out that he couldn't breathe and eventually became unresponsive.
➤REPORT: AT LEAST ONE-QUARTER OF U.S. CORONAVIRUS DEATHS IN NURSING HOMES: At least one-quarter of the coronavirus deaths in the U.S. have been among nursing home residents, according to a new report Monday prepared for the nation's governors by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It said that nearly 26,000 people who lived in nursing homes died from the virus, and that is a partial number, since it was based on reports from about 80 percent of the country's nursing homes as of May 24th.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo added his voice to those who are concerned that the week of protests sweeping the nation over George Floyd's death could lead to a resurgence of the coronavirus in his state, which was hit hard initially and managed over weeks to greatly reduce the numbers. He said, "You turn on the TV and you see these mass gatherings that could potentially be infecting hundreds and hundreds of people after everything that we have done. We have to take a minute and ask ourselves: ’What are we doing here?"
There have been more than 105,100 deaths in the U.S. as of last night, according to the Johns Hopkins University count, and more than 1,811,00 confirmed cases.
Robert Johnson |
When asked in a Fox News interview about who would pay for it and how the U.S. can afford it right now, Johnson said, "The taxpayers will pay for this because for two reasons, particularly. One, it is an atonement for 200-plus years of slavery, segregation, Jim Crowism, and the denial of people opportunity rights. But, the result of that payment would be to bring African-Americans equal to white Americans in terms of opportunity, wealth and income. Instead of looking at it as a payment, look at it as an investment in 40 million African-Americans who deserve equal treatment and equal opportunity." He also said the return on the investment would include more African-Americans, quote, "taking responsibility to build their communities [and] families [and] to become successful businesspeople and entrepreneurs who pay taxes and contribute to society."
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