Fans On Colin Kaepernick’s Statement That Modern Police Forces Derive from Slave Patrols: He’s Right!

Michael B. Jordan (left) and Colin Kaepernick have spoken out against the Philando Castile verdict. (Edward Berthelot/Getty Images/(Scott Cunningham/Getty Images Sport)

Amid news that a Minnesota police officer was acquitted of manslaughter in the killing of Philando Castile, actor Michael B. Jordan and free-agent NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick have weighed in — and the latter has made a damning declaration.

Jordan posted on Instagram a list of several Black men and women who have been killed at the hands of police without a conviction.

“They want us to feel helpless & right now I feel it,” he wrote Saturday, June 17, before posting a list of questions wondering how to tackle the issue. “I know I’m going to be a part of the change, and not just today, every day until we see real change … I am Philando Castile.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/BVddgPNBosX/

Castile’s girlfriend streamed the aftermath of Officer Jeronimo Yanez shooting the motorist after he reached to show Yanez his gun registration. Castile bled out in front of his girlfriend and her daughter and outrage poured in from around the nation.

Kaepernick looked at the historical implications of yet another police officer being acquitted over the killing of a Black person, comparing present-day cops to the slave patrols first developed in Carolina colony in 1704, according to Victor E. Kappeler, Ph.D. professor at Eastern Kentucky University’s College of Justice and Safety.

Kaepernick’s tweet drew some opposition.

Others backed the former San Francisco 49er and one provided evidence of the slave patrol’s existence.

https://twitter.com/RicheyxCollazo/status/876910890460762113

https://twitter.com/CFPetrella/status/876485235327864832

https://twitter.com/CFPetrella/status/876559615865090048

https://twitter.com/CFPetrella/status/876566220396429313

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