The Price of Life - Injustice in Justice

What does $20 mean to you?
To us Brits, that’s about £14.16. So what does that mean to us? Maybe a large pizza and some chips for a quiet night in? The first round at the pub? Perhaps over the last year we have forgotten the exact value of such an inconsequential amount of money, but on the 25th of May 2020 $20 cost George Floyd his life.
Unknowingly or not, using counterfeit money is a crime and will lead to up to 20 years imprisonment in the most extreme cases. But even that is favourable over the death sentence that Derek Chauvin gave George Floyd after a grocery store employee called the Police, suspecting that Floyd had given a counterfeit $20 bill.
“I can’t breathe.”
The final words of George Floyd, a black man under a white man’s knee after being forced out of his car, handcuffed and pushed to the ground face-down, restrained further by two other white officers. 9 minutes and 29 seconds this scene occurred for and two minutes longer than necessary, as George Floyd was dead for those final two minutes. The death penalty has not been legally issued since 1906 in Minnesota, where Floyd was murdered.
A year on from the media blackouts, the protests and the hashtags we find ourselves asking: What’s really changed? If you’ve been keeping up with the British news, perhaps not a lot. We are still in lockdown with a thinly veiled plan to get us out, the weather still rains more days than not and oh, just two days ago Black Lives Matter activist Sacha Johnson was shot in the head.
Her condition remains critical and full details are yet to be released, but we have to find ourselves wondering: Is this the price of life, specifically black lives? Today we kneel for the endless battle of injustice for black lives in our justice system.
The biggest crime that most of us face every day, arguably, is a lack of education. Our unfiltered and underqualified tongues are getting us into trouble, and whether we realise it or not we are causing injustice in this world and collectively oppressing people. Homophobia, Racism, Sexism, Ableism and Ageism are inadvertently encouraged every day by old-fashioned beliefs ingrained in our society that we’ve become blind to, but it’s time to look upon the world with a fresh pair of eyes and start really fighting the underlying quicksand that is preventing our society from evolving into the just world we paint in our minds.
Here are a few simple ways we can help tackle inequality:
- Challenge it, no matter how small. Don’t let phrases like “That’s gay!” Or “Coloured people” or “You’re too young/old!” become part of the accepted language used in every day life. Whether or not it offends you, it is your responsibility to challenge and correct it.
- Educate yourself. It’s okay to not know political correctness, especially if you’ve never been taught it, but we live in a world where most of us have quick and easy access to the internet. If you don’t want to ask someone directly about pronouns or identification factors, then try googling it.
- Report it. If you’re in an educational or working environment and you hear/see something that is discriminatory or prejudiced but you’re too afraid to confront it yourself, report it to your manager or teacher or whoever may be in charge. They should be able to use their authority to get the situation dealt with.
- Educate others. All these big ‘-ism’ words have been greatly overused and as a result, the core meanings have been lost on some people. But the bottom line to remind people is that all of these campaigners want equality. They do not want to be better than you, they just want to be your equal and they deserve to be it.
- Be open. None of us are as educated as we’d like to be when it comes to marginalised groups of people, but what’s important is that we acknowledge this and we are honest about it so that we can then get ourselves better informed. Most people are happy to be asked questions from people who are willing to learn and we should create environments that are open for reasonable Q&A’s.
be the change you wish to see in the world....









