Recently, a video of three African-American conversations has become a hot topic on social networks.

  In the video, a 45-year-old man who participated in the demonstration was emotional and accused of the status of discrimination against black people; another 31-year-old man brought a 16-year-old boy who participated in the protest to shout-"You see Everything you get may happen 10 years later, when you are 26! We are all very angry, but what we do now is useless!"

At the scene of a protest in the United States, a 31-year-old black man told a black teenager that everything you see now may happen 10 years later. Image source: social media screenshots.

  "Don't put yourself in danger, you are only 16 years old," the 31-year-old man said with tears in his emotions.

  He choked on the slightly ignorant 16-year-old and said, "You have to find a better way! Because we (African Americans) have not made any progress so far (on this road of struggle). 4 years ago, I They are doing the same thing, but nothing has changed." The young man listened to the man in silence and seriously.

At the scene of the protest, two black men were emotional and could not hide their anger. Image source: social media screenshots.

  This is the scene of the anti-racial discrimination protest in the United States after the death of African American Freud by violent law enforcement.

  Witnessing the video, many netizens left "heartbreak" and "tears" expressions on social media.

Netizen Bostic said, "My eyes are full of tears." Image source: Social media screenshots.

Netizen Fennel said, "This makes me cry, which is too contagious." Image source: Screenshots on social media.

"Our voice is not loud enough"

  This fight against racial discrimination continues.

  In Washington, DC, protesters lay on the street, shouting Freud's last words-"I can't breathe".

  Near Times Square in New York, thousands of people demonstrated. They waved placards and shouted, "The life of a black man is also a life."

Since the violent law enforcement of the United States police led to the death of African-American George Freud and triggered a wave of demonstrations across the United States, New York has seen several consecutive demonstrations and violent demonstrations. The picture shows the people holding a rally in Times Square.

  In Portland, Oregon, thousands of demonstrators blocked the bridge and lay prone on the ground with their hands behind their backs, imitating Freud’s posture during violent law enforcement.

  People gathered in front of the Idaho State Capitol. Whenever the protester pronounced the name of an African American who was thought to have been unjustly killed, the people around him repeated their names and expressed their silence...

  "Obviously, our voice is not loud enough. We came here to protest, just to make people think that our lives are important... This is not just a matter of the past few years, this has always been the case." Braham, who participated in the protest Say. Her great-grandmother was a slave in South Carolina.

On June 2, local time, Minnesota, United States, Freud’s family attended a press conference, and Freud’s daughter’s mother gave a speech about her death and wept. Freud's 6-year-old daughter Jaina hugged her mother at the press conference.

"Systemic racism"

  Tragedy is also producing more tragedies. According to incomplete statistics from Los Angeles KTLA TV station, as of now, at least 11 people have died in the protest, mostly of African descent.

  In California, the 53-year-old black man Underwood was killed; in Kentucky, the barbeque owner and black McCarty was shot by the police, and he often provided free lunch to the police during his lifetime.

  The four police officers involved in the Freud case have all been charged. Among them, Xiao Wan, a white policeman who pressed Freud's neck to kill him, was escalated to a second-degree murder.

  But Minnesota Attorney General Ellison said that bringing a lawsuit against the police is always full of challenges, "It will be very difficult to win a conviction."

  Sao Paulo Police Chief Axel said frankly, not just in the US police department, "almost everything in this country has systematic racism."

Protesters in Lafayette Park on the north side of the White House. China News Agency reporter Chen Meng Tongshe

  What worries the American people even more is that in recent years, American racism is on the rise.

  Statistics from the American Anti-Defamation League show that since the violence in Charlottesville in August 2017, white supremacists have produced at least 73 fatal incidents in the following two years.

  Atlanta Mayor Burtons pointed out that the White House’s long-standing remarks about immigration and white supremacism have indulged people with racist tendencies. Since US President Trump took office, he has continued to act on the issue of building a US-Mexico border separation wall and rejecting illegal immigrants, which has also deepened the prejudice of many Americans against black people.

On May 29, local time, in San Jose, USA, a protester wearing a mask kneeled down on one knee facing the police.

Anger, has been brewing for more than 400 years

  In response to the Freud incident, Minneapolis Mayor Frey once said, "The anger of African Americans has been brewing for more than 400 years."

  When the first black slaves were sold to Virginia in 1619, African Americans began the road of continuous blood and tears. They had the resistance during the Civil War and Martin Luther King's "I have a dream" cry.

  However, despite the dust of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, declaring that the rights of black people were protected, until 2020, racism and "implicit discrimination" in the United States still exist.

  The New York Times commented that “the policies that discriminate against people of color remain unresolved.” In the fields of education, medical care, and work, black people are suffering from a more difficult situation than white people.

Anti-racial discrimination protests continue in Washington, the capital of the United States.

  According to the latest data from McKinsey & Company, the income of black Americans is $1 million less than that of white Americans. The median wealth of African-American families is even more disparate than that of white families.

  This gap between the rich and the poor across the ethnic divide has prevented many black people from receiving a better education.

  Without a good education, you cannot get a good job, nor can you fight for a better chance of survival for your family. This vicious circle is repeated again and again in many African Americans.

  The French newspaper Le Monde pointed out that Freud was not an "isolated victim." "African Americans" are often victims of police violence when dealing with poorly performing police officers; they are also victims of this country (the United States), where guns are usually carried as accessories and fired when they are happy Or purely racism."

  According to African American reporter Raffles, "(racial discrimination) has been rooted in history. Every time I see this violent picture, I will fall into a brief depression. I doubt whether my work has played a role. ."

  Author: Dong Hanyang sweet