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OJ Simpson personified the “two Americas” but denied reality… until his historic trial

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Opponents of Black history attempt to whitewash our existence and minimize our contributions, but accurate reporting of America’s past is unimaginable without us.

Haters must select which Black people they wish to acknowledge and single out, preferably those that have achieved the so-called American Dream without making white people feel uncomfortable. The first person to die in the American Revolution, Curly attacks he’s an excellent black man price honoring. So there it’s Booker T. Washingtonwhose agrarian brand of racial progress has all the time seemed less threatening than the scientific version WWW Du Bois married.

The sports world is stuffed with black heroes that historians cannot ignore, even though it helps when an athlete ignores social conditions. It’s best if athletes give attention to the void – on the field or court – and never on the racism that afflicts their non-sporting relatives. Excluded from mainstream skilled sports leagues well into the twentieth century, we began covering the landscape before the height of the civil rights era. Jackie Robinson broke the color line in Major League Baseball in 1947.

Three months later, Orenthal James Simpson was born.

He died on Wednesday at the age of 76, leaving an indelible mark on culture. Although he became famous as a legendary football player. Simpson is taken into account the best sports example of “two Americas

OJ they ignored racial reality for the first 47 years, running from USC to the NFL, jumping from TV commercials to Hollywood, avoiding our fight for justice. When he finally got here to grips with the color line, it was not immediately revealed that it was a black and white problem.

Its border was on the calendar, the date being June 1994, the day before and after the murder of Nicole Brown Simpson.

OJ was considered one of America’s all-time favorite black athletes until his ex-wife and her friend Ronald Goldman were stabbed to death in Los Angeles. He was definitely more polite than Jim Brown, the great NFL middle linebacker who retired in 1966, three years before Simpson’s debut season. Brown seemed indignant and surly – the curse of the white embrace – and distanced himself much more, becoming… social activist.

Athletes and celebrities don’t have any obligation to make use of their platforms to fight for causes, especially against racism. Condemn domestic violence and sexual assault? I even have. Preventing drug use and driving under the influence of alcohol? Bright. Do you condemn animal abuse and mistreatment? APPROX.

But only a few stars have what it takes – the will and the skills – to challenge unjust laws, police brutality, discriminatory policies and the like. Simpson was not alone on this. He just did every thing he could not seeing color, winning over gaslighters who insisted that race was not a difficulty. From their perspective, Simpson’s acting profession and second marriage were proof of America’s greatness and lack of hostility towards black people.

Simpson was black, but not in a foul way. He was considered one of them – like Clarence Thomas, Herschel Walker and Tim Scott – having fun with the fruits of his labor in the land of opportunity without complaining about the barriers and obstacles designed to make life difficult for non-whites. Athletes like Brown, Muhammad Ali, Arthur Ashe and others were malcontents, instigators and race baiters; Simpson was a superb old boy.

But when he was accused of killing his blonde-haired, blue-eyed ex-wife, every thing ended. The white people were already done, leaving him no alternative but to acknowledge and accept his blackness.

News reports say the Simpson murder trial exposed divisions over race and policing. It’s funny in our community because the divisions have been visible for 400 years. The difference on this case was Simpson’s fame. Based on this much evidence, Orenthal Smith or James Johnson, a black man, would likely have been convicted – with or without police abuse.

If Simpson didn’t think he was black before the murders, he was sure of it before the trial began.

“The system forced me to look at things racially.” he heard the declaration ON Oscar-winning documentary, “OJ: Made in America.” One scene in five-part document shows how Simpson’s legal team rearranged his home to extend his melanin quotient, in contrast to black homeowners who remove distinctive signs receive a good assessment.

He didn’t cheat us, but we didn’t care.

After centuries of trumped-up charges and wrongful convictions (when no lynching occurred first), after suffering at the hands of dirty cops, sleazy prosecutors, and racist judges, we wanted victory in any respect costs. No, OJ and I didn’t really go crazy like that. But since 1619, the system has cornered so many innocent brothers that its acquittal has grow to be our victory, whether we’re guilty or not.

Barack Obama he apparently said many Donald Trump supporters may feel: “Trump is to many white people what OJ’s acquittal was to many black people – I know it’s bad, but it feels good.” We knew that murder victims weren’t the responsibility of the LAPD historical abuse Black, but the scoreboard was too uneven.

For once, our side got a taste of the other side, where the guilty routinely go unpunished after Black lives have been lost. Simpson went from an exemplary black man to an unrepentant murderer. Along the way, he was plucked from his flooded place and transported to the real world, exposed to the two Americas that Martin Luther King Jr. described.

Simpson acted like there was just one… until he was charged with murder. He then admitted his mistake and set each side on fire, etching his name in hearts and minds. His name was recorded in the annals of time.

Haters could also be crazy, but Black history can’t be erased.

This is the L they must live with.


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