If I was to try to write a spoof position for a satirical comedy, maybe something Chris Morris or Armando Iannucci might write, I could scarcely come up with something better than this.
The problem is that a lot of racism is not out-and-out, flag-waving, self-confessed racism. A lot of racism consists of subconscious prejudices and unconscious biases. A lot of people who do not view themselves as racist-- or genuinely believe themselves not to be-- would still be likely to judge a black person more harshly than a white person, even if all other circumstances of the situation were the same.
Study after study have shown unconscious bias to be both real and widespread. Recall those instances of research bodies sending identical job applications to institutions: one with a typically white-European name, and one with an Afro- or Caribbean-sounding name. The former receiving a lot more invitations for interview.
Those institutions would not believe themselves to be racist. They might well consciously hold disdain for racism, and fully consciously intend to be act in non-racist ways. But the stats would show that subliminal biases persist.
Fuck this disgusting piece-of-shit sentence. What a despicable fucking accusation, without a shred of anything to back it up.
Getting shot in the back doesn't mean it's murder for several reasons that I stated regardless how realistic or unrealistic they were. Your point that a fatal shot to the back means murder is completely ridiculous for many reasons.
And how is that study tied to black people getting worse convictions. Subconsciously or consciously wanting to be with similar people (whether employees or neighbors) and sending someone to jail because they're different than you are 2 completely different things. The cop in my trial of police brutality was latino and the plaintiff was white, nobody on the jury cared about that the plaintiff was white and the cop a minority, and the cop was acquitted. Sure, if the jurors are on the fence about guilty / not guilty, race may come into play, but at the same time if you're on that fence, that should be reasonable doubt right there, and it's hard for anyone to send someone to jail even if they have "normal" racial tendencies.
You were the one saying Kyle looking for trouble and shouldn't of have been there should be part of the decision to convict. You can say the same about tons of black cases too; out when they shouldn't be, not in their neighborhood (even though Kyle's dad lives there), going to a dangerous place with a gun. And if you're going to say those things should be considered, then you'll be convicting black people at high rates too. I don't care about those things because those things don't matter regardless if it's Rittenhouse or anyone else. Sure, Kyle or anyone in such a situation might blame themselves throughout their lives for what happened but that doesn't deem it a criminal offense. You can't have your cake and eat it too.
@1:25, the prosecutor starts noting that this is the 1st time Kyle has spoken up and goes on, outrageously, from there. The prosecutor's very statement is entering into the offical record Kyle's silence.
I do agree with the prosecutor's logic and argument there. Being able to hear all testimony and evidence, you can then alter your testimony to align with certain things better. Though that is obviously against the law to use as an argument. That is an issue with the structure of court and not anything that should be levied against anyone though. Kyle's testimony didn't mean anything though because there was no evidence that pointed to murder that he had to explain anyway.