Kadir Nelson's illustration 'Say Their Names,' for the New Yorker, represents the violence against African Americans across the centuries.
Nelson described the cover as a “memorial to all of the African Americans who were and continue to be victimized by the long shadow cast by racism in America and around the globe.”
Choosing a heavy palette of shadows and muted tones, Nelson said his “weighted portrait of George Floyd” includes 18 other “African American souls who were murdered by law enforcement officers, while providing a visual context of historical institutionalized racism and discrimination against African Americans.”“We all need to know this; we all have to know what black Americans are dealing with every single day,” said New Yorker art editor Françoise Mouly.
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New Video of George Floyd Murder Shows Cop Ignoring Bystanders' PleasThe attorney for George Floyd's family just released a video of the murder, and this clearly shows bystanders begging former officer Tou Thao to take some action and save the man who was dying before his eyes.
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Japan, New Zealand march to mourn George Floyd, seek changeHolding handmade signs that read “Black Lives Matter,” hundreds of people marched peacefully at a Tokyo park, highlighting the outrage over the death of George Floyd even in a country often perceived as homogeneous and untouched by racial issues
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Chilling New Footage Shows Police Officer Ignoring Pleas To Help George FloydOfficer Tou Thao does not respond or react to a group of people demanding that he help George Floyd, who was later pronounced dead.
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