I would not be a bit surprised as the Klan was all about protecting white women from black men. The majority of lynchings of black men were the result of 'believe all women' when it came to accusations of sexual impropriety, no matter how slight.
Feminists heads explode when you point this out, but what happened to Emmett Till is exactly what they are pushing for except that they want it to be legal and extended to all men.
The story of Till has been grossly rewritten by essentially the same people who support feminism. The more you look into the case and Till, the more you will see why a lynch gang - almost half of whom were black - would kill Till.
As famous as this story is, you'd think more people would know that Till's father was executed by the military for 2 counts of rape and 1 of murder, and that he had only enlisted to avoid jail for domestic abuse. One has to wonder how far that apple fell from that tree.
I just looked into this story and the accussers could NOT identify the senior Till as the suspect because they were attacked in darkness. None of this justifies vigilante justice.
Ok, this was something I googled, maybe it was a real crime, anyway I see the death penalty as vigilante justice even if the person is guilty. Once someone is incarcerated they are neutralized and are no longer a threat to society.
Senior Till's hanging was not a vigilante act, it was a sentence imposed during a military court martial.
During that court martial, two soldiers who participated in the home invasion, one of whom alleged that Till threatened to kill them if they didn't, testified that Till raped both women and then shot one of them while they begged him not to.
One of the soldiers was given immunity for his testimony. The other one, Fred McMurray, left physical evidence, in the form of an envelope addressed to him, at the scene.
So his accusers, his fellow soldiers, did positively identify him. Of the two victims, one of them couldn't identify him because he killed her. I don't know if the other one could identify him or not, but there was plenty of other evidence.
Why not? It's well known that sexual violence is generational. What are the odds that Emmitt, whose father chose going to war over doing prison time for domestic violence and then was hanged for 2 rapes and 1 murder, had an idyllic childhood involving a strict moral upbringing?
'Sexual violence' LOL... NO SUCH THING! That's a buzz phrase for turning consensual sex into rape during intercourse. Anytime I've heard the phrase 'sexual violence' it was a dog whistle to wo-MEN who would claim rape at ANY stage DURING INTERCOURSE. Real rape, needs forensic evidence of a life & death struggle, imop or else it's a LIE. My Father was in construction & I hate psysical labor. My Father (out of love) slapped me around yet I don't believe in that method. So while I get that genes are passed down, I don't think it's fair to see the sins of the father as evidence against the son
"Nothing that boy did could ever justify what happened to him" Carolyn Bryant Donham admitted to fabricating testimony against Till. So please do educate me as to what you are saying?
The more you look into the case and Cosby, the more you will see why a lynch gang - almost half of whom were black - would FRAME Cosby. Ever hear of the pound cake speech?
To kill a mocking bird is a book we "did" at school. It is interesting because the actual story is about an inocent man being accused of rape, being convicted solely on accusation and prejudice and being killed while "escaping". Much more recently I found on line a list of hundreds of cases of "extra judicial" killings and beatings. To be honest I was surprised to find 80% were cases of an accusation, from rape to looking at women in the "wrong" way. If one ignored the race it was a litany familiar in "rape culture". A classic of getting men to to terrible things in "protection" of defenseless women. It was as though feminism was copying this Strategy just extending it from black men to all men.
If you liked this you should read Women of the Klan.
The WKKK was worse than the men's.
I would not be a bit surprised as the Klan was all about protecting white women from black men. The majority of lynchings of black men were the result of 'believe all women' when it came to accusations of sexual impropriety, no matter how slight.
Feminists heads explode when you point this out, but what happened to Emmett Till is exactly what they are pushing for except that they want it to be legal and extended to all men.
The story of Till has been grossly rewritten by essentially the same people who support feminism. The more you look into the case and Till, the more you will see why a lynch gang - almost half of whom were black - would kill Till.
As famous as this story is, you'd think more people would know that Till's father was executed by the military for 2 counts of rape and 1 of murder, and that he had only enlisted to avoid jail for domestic abuse. One has to wonder how far that apple fell from that tree.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Till#:~:text=Louis%20Till%20was%20the%20father,son%27s%20murderers%20ten%20years%20later.
I just looked into this story and the accussers could NOT identify the senior Till as the suspect because they were attacked in darkness. None of this justifies vigilante justice.
You'll have to show this to those of us who don't believe you.
I do believe you read someone else claiming this, but I don't believe you saw the Italian documents.
Ok, this was something I googled, maybe it was a real crime, anyway I see the death penalty as vigilante justice even if the person is guilty. Once someone is incarcerated they are neutralized and are no longer a threat to society.
Senior Till's hanging was not a vigilante act, it was a sentence imposed during a military court martial.
During that court martial, two soldiers who participated in the home invasion, one of whom alleged that Till threatened to kill them if they didn't, testified that Till raped both women and then shot one of them while they begged him not to.
One of the soldiers was given immunity for his testimony. The other one, Fred McMurray, left physical evidence, in the form of an envelope addressed to him, at the scene.
So his accusers, his fellow soldiers, did positively identify him. Of the two victims, one of them couldn't identify him because he killed her. I don't know if the other one could identify him or not, but there was plenty of other evidence.
What the Father did is not a reflection or indictment of the son
Why not? It's well known that sexual violence is generational. What are the odds that Emmitt, whose father chose going to war over doing prison time for domestic violence and then was hanged for 2 rapes and 1 murder, had an idyllic childhood involving a strict moral upbringing?
'Sexual violence' LOL... NO SUCH THING! That's a buzz phrase for turning consensual sex into rape during intercourse. Anytime I've heard the phrase 'sexual violence' it was a dog whistle to wo-MEN who would claim rape at ANY stage DURING INTERCOURSE. Real rape, needs forensic evidence of a life & death struggle, imop or else it's a LIE. My Father was in construction & I hate psysical labor. My Father (out of love) slapped me around yet I don't believe in that method. So while I get that genes are passed down, I don't think it's fair to see the sins of the father as evidence against the son
"Nothing that boy did could ever justify what happened to him" Carolyn Bryant Donham admitted to fabricating testimony against Till. So please do educate me as to what you are saying?
No. She didn't. A journalist claimed she did.
The more you look into the case and Cosby, the more you will see why a lynch gang - almost half of whom were black - would FRAME Cosby. Ever hear of the pound cake speech?
To kill a mocking bird is a book we "did" at school. It is interesting because the actual story is about an inocent man being accused of rape, being convicted solely on accusation and prejudice and being killed while "escaping". Much more recently I found on line a list of hundreds of cases of "extra judicial" killings and beatings. To be honest I was surprised to find 80% were cases of an accusation, from rape to looking at women in the "wrong" way. If one ignored the race it was a litany familiar in "rape culture". A classic of getting men to to terrible things in "protection" of defenseless women. It was as though feminism was copying this Strategy just extending it from black men to all men.
Thanks for the reference. A little pricey, $17 for Kindle, though that's not a surprise since it was probably never a best seller.