<Anchor> In the

United States, protests against racism are raging every day as police shoot guns at black people with their young children. The protests spread across the country, and the state of Wisconsin, where the incident took place, has declared a state of emergency.

This is New York correspondent Kim Jong-won.

<Reporter> The

city ​​center has become a battlefield.

Police respond with tear gas to protesters throwing firecrackers and water bottles.

In the third day of violent protests, arson and looting have not ceased, and the city center has already been swamped. Today, a man fired a gun at the protesters, killing two people and injuring one.

In the state of Wisconsin where the protests began, an emergency has been declared.

But protests are spreading across the United States, including Los Angeles, Seattle and Atlanta.

The protests against black racism, which we wanted to hold back for a moment, are starting again here in Manhattan, New York, with the Blake incident.

Jacob Blake, a black man in serious condition from a police shooting, is paralyzed from a spine injury.

[Attorney Ben Crump/Blake: The current medical diagnosis is paraplegia. Jacob Blake needs a miracle to walk again.] In an

interview today, Blake's parents appealed to refrain from violent protests.

[Julia Jackson/Blake Mother: If Jacob had known the violence and vandalism going on, he would not have been happy.]

Democratic presidential candidate Biden is calling for a thorough investigation, and analysis is suggesting that protests against racial discrimination intensified again will affect the presidential election.

(Video coverage: Lee Sang-wook, video editing: Jang Hyun-ki)