The British Guardian newspaper described the protests that have spread about forty American cities over the past six days, after the brutal suffocation of a defenseless black man in Minneapolis, that it could be a turning point in America's racist policy.

The newspaper pointed out in its editorial to the words of the brother of the deceased George Floyd, during a phone call last week with Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden, "I do not want to see his picture on a shirt like other youth."

She said that every African American would immediately know what Philones meant by saying it. She mentioned some names like Trevon Martin, Eric Garner, Michael Brown and Walter Scott, and mentioned that these people are a group of black men who died as a result of a confrontation with the wrong-time law officer like Floyd. She added that the list will continue to increase.

The newspaper added that last week proved that it is still possible in America that a police officer pressed his knee for about nine minutes on Floyd's defenseless throat, in broad daylight, silencing his breath and taking his soul.

It went on to say that the attempts to consider these protesters merely as rioters or "messy" outlaws - as President Trump put it - are a deliberate distortion of what was a social expression of disgust and anger.

She saw the unfortunate misfortune of the United States at a time like this, be led by a president who sends the squad as a political strategic issue, and cited his defense of the far-right protesters in Charlottesville against offending black soccer players who refuse to stand for the national anthem, asserting that Trump with such actions worsened Apartheid and exploited it to support its white voter base.

The newspaper added that between now and next November - the date of the elections - there is a danger that the president will try to act on the tyrannical implications of his inaugural speech in 2017 when he spoke of suppressing "American chaos" in the country's inner cities.

She concluded that Americans should hope that protesters throughout the United States during these days will not respond to any kind of provocation, and that their approach is to confront prosecutors, mayors, police chiefs, and vice-presidents in the voting room and challenge the local structures of the judicial and civil authority where racism remains Regulars are thriving.

A new generation of politicians armed with a culture and visions of movements - such as the "Important Black Spirits" movement that formed after the teenager Martin was murdered by a Florida community watchdog and whose jury acquitted him - will have to successfully follow this strategy.