lax202 wrote:I should stop watching only the History Channel and Food Network.
Just keep watching for the June debut of the new "History of Food" network.
BY JASON WHITLOCK
Kansas City Star
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - If the Duke lacrosse players were black and the accuser were white, everyone would easily see the similarities between this case and the alleged crimes that often left black men hanging from trees in the early 1900s.
That is not written to exonerate the lacrosse players of the rape allegations they face. I don't know what happened inside that house.
But I do know that the investigation, the posturing by black activists and the political gains by the district attorney - Mike Nifong won his democratic re-election bid on Tuesday - make me uncomfortable.
Seriously, this case seems like an updated re-enactment of "To Kill a Mockingbird."
Just imagine it is 1940 (or 2006), and two white escorts/strippers with criminal records have a run-in with a group of drunken black college students. One of the strippers calls the police - with the other stripper present - and complains that the drunken black college students called her names. Ninety minutes later, without further interaction with the college students, the second stripper tells police that three of the students raped her.
Immediately, the district attorney announces that the college boys - who all probably vote well outside the DA's district or don't have the right to vote - are guilty and they have a history of rowdy behavior.
If this were 1940, an angry white lynch mob would then gather at the scene of the alleged crime and promise to dole out justice to anyone they suspected of playing a role in the crime. In 2006, mixed-race prayer vigils and protests were held, and black community activists pressured the district attorney to dole out justice to anyone they suspected played a role in the alleged crime.
Brent Burns wrote:I believe most of you may have received an email from US Lacrosse yesterday about providing information and educating the media at:
http://www.uslacrosse.org/media
On your right, you will find the articles that we have already heard and read about. US Lacrosse also has the link to its statement about the Duke investigation.
"I guess there is such a thing as bad publicity," Coach Danny Hogan said.
If you go, you'll see there's a lot to like. It's basically hockey on grass, only you can see the ball go in the net. Like hockey, there is a code of respect for opponents and the game.
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