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George Floyd (October 14, 1973 – May 25, 2020) was an American citizen of African decent who was active in his church, within the community, a hip-hop artist, security guard and a truck driver. His death at the hands of police resulted in the largest public protests seen in the US and globally for human rights since the 1960s. The results of these protests have changed attitudes and policies regarding race and racism, police policy and how people view human rights, not just in the US, but in multiple countries. George Floyd Day marks the anniversary of his death, May 25, 2020.
How Floyd Died
Roughly 1,000 people are shot and killed by police in the United States each year and as a percent of the population, people of color are nearly twice as likely to be killed then white people.
Memorial Day 2020, George Floyd walked into a convenience store and purchased a pack of cigarettes. The clerk believed the bill he used was counterfeit and thus left the store with another employee and walked out to Floyd’s truck to demand the cigarettes be returned. He refused. The employee then called the police on him.
Officers arrived and Floyd complied with their requests, though did struggle momentarily. He was seated on a curb. Floyd was told he was being arrested, handcuffed and led across the street.
At this point, anxious of closed spaces, Floyd fell to the ground and asked not to be seated in the car. Struggles ensued and officer Chauvin eventually began kneeling on Floyd’s neck as he pleaded stating he could not breath and begging not to be killed. Chauvin did not relent, leaving his knee on Floyd’s neck nearly 9 minutes, killing Floyd. The lack of compassion shown by the police as Floyd begged to be able to breath angered people worldwide, particularly since this wasn't the first time a black man had been killed by police as he begged to be able to breath. People had enough and took to the streets. The police officers involved were arrested and charged with murder and lessor crimes.
The series of events were captured on camera (security, body cam and bystanders) and incensed people worldwide. Protests broke out in over 200 US cities and in countries around the world and continued for weeks. These protests continue as of this writing on Juneteenth, 2020.
George Floyd will be remembered as a martyr, as the spark that changed how police interact with people and a pivotal influence in how Americans view race.
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