#SayHisName: Americans react to videos of police killings
Activists are demanding justice for black victims Alton Sterling and Philando Castile
The videos are horrifying to watch.
Less than 24 hours after the public watched video ofpolice killing Alton Sterling outside a convenience store in Baton Rouge, La., a Facebook Live video recorded by Diamond Reynolds shows her boyfriend bleeding from gunshot wounds whileanofficer points a gun through the window of their car.
Reynolds's four-year-old daughter is in the backseat while Philando Castile sits drenched in his blood.
The videowas temporarily removed for nearly an hour and reactivated with a warning about its graphic content. A Facebook spokespersontoldTechCrunch it was "due to a technicalglitch."
Say his name
Millions of people have now viewed the video and many turned to Twitter to express their outrage. Users latched onto the #SayHisName hashtag to call attention to the number of black men dying at the hands of police.
His name was Philander Castile. He was 32. Licensed to carry, complied with officer commands. #SayHisName #FalconHeightsShooting
—@goldietaylor
His girlfriends prayer, her weeping. The voice of his scared 4yro daughter. I have no words. I'm shocked. #sayhisname #PhilandoCastile
—@RafaelaLiz_
The most heartbreaking thing to me is the amount of people of color who can personally relate to the murder of #AltonSterling #SayhisName
—@kendrick38
The#SayHisName and #SayHerNamehashtags first emerged after singer Janelle Monae and Wondaland Recordsreleased a protest song titledHell You Talmboutin August of last year.
In the song, theychantthe names of black citizens killed by police, including Michael Brown,Aiyana Jones, Eric Garnerand others. The artists sing, "Walter Scott, say his name / Walter Scott, won't you say his name?"
The release coincided withMonaeand herWondalandartists leading a Black Lives Matter protest in Philadelphia.
No morewords
Many Twitter users found themselves at a loss for words after witnessing these consecutive tragedies, tweetingtheir emotional reactions.
#SayHisName #PhilandoCastile
I don't have any more words ya'll. I have swollen eyes, an upset stomach and endless pic.twitter.com/XumLmHZU5k
—@allisonrhone
I just watched the #philandocastile video. Shaking. And she's still calling this "officer" sir the whole time. https://t.co/fotX2Uh5ay
—@TalibKweli
Went to bed and it's #AltonSterling. Woke up and it's #PhilandoCastile. I just can't put a word to how I feel...
—@SkyDigg4
NRA silence
Reynolds says Castile told the officer,who pulled him over for a broken taillight, that he had a gun in the car and a licence for it.Carrying a weapon is legal inMinnesotaif you have apermit.
Some Twitter users say the NationalRifle Association's silence on the shooting isa result of the group's inherentracism.
Dear, @NRA. A man was killed for having a licensed firearm yesterday. Any particular reason you're silent on this matter? #PhilandoCastile
—@TheNotoriousLEX
Interesting how Republicans care about 2nd amendment rights until its nonwhite people carrying #PhilandoCastille #SayHisName
—@rylieuribe
More cameras, but change elusive
The videos are evidence that social networks and livestreaming can play a significant role in calling attention to injustices, but things don't seem to change.
Roxane Gay, author and an associate professor at Purdue University, wrote an op-ed for the New York Timesdescribingthe frustration.
"I don't think any of us could have imagined how tiny cameras would allow us to see, time and again, injustices perpetrated, mostly against black people, by police officers," Gay writes."I don't think we could have imagined that video of police brutality would not translate into justice, and I don't think we could have imagined how easy it is to see too much, to become numb. And now, here we are."
"It is a bitter reality that there will always be a new name to that list. Black lives matter, and then in an instant, they don't."