this post was submitted on 29 Dec 2023
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I'm sure people will downvote me for this, but...
I remember my parents glued to the TV at the time and I, at 16, said, "who gives a shit? It's just a football player." And then there was the trial and my parents watched it every day and laughed at the Dancing Judge Itos on Leno and I said, "who gives a shit? It's just a football player." I mean yes, it's a miscarriage of justice that he got let off when he was so obviously guilty, but that's what happens when you can afford really expensive lawyers.
I have never understood why people are so obsessed with it. The only time I ever even think of it is when someone claims that "X is innocent because the court found him innocent" and I ask the person if that means OJ is innocent.
I lived in a mostly black neighborhood during this time, this was being looked at as Rodney king 2.0 and if he was guilty there were going to be riots, kinda hard to conceptionilize what it was like during that time period.
From the BBC (2016):
I'd like to read the whole thing, because I would say the first two were more brought into the American consciousness by the L.A. riots. The other two- I can see domestic violence and I already mentioned the effects of money on the justice system.
In fact, I would say the fact that he was able to buy his way out of it says very little about the plight of the average black person in the justice system.