No Forgiveness for Michael’s Killer

On the one-year anniversary of the death of a 18-year-old black teenager named Michael Brown by a (now confessed racist) white police officer named Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Missouri, Brown’s mother, Lezley McSpadden, was asked if she forgave Darren Wilson for his cruel and wanton act of legal murder. She told Al Jazeera that she will “never forgive” Darren Wilson and that “he’s evil, his acts were devilish.”

Good for her! And anybody who would have preferred to hear that yes, she forgives is an idiot.

Even at the Oxford conference people almost drove me to a fit of rage with their suggestions that forgiving Wilson is some sort of a heroic and superior act.

8 thoughts on “No Forgiveness for Michael’s Killer

  1. I wonder what purpose is served by asking someone if they forgive their child’s killer.

    What is the need this ritual serves?

    Why do other unrelated people need or want an answer to this question? Forget, “I don’t/do forgive”, why ask this question at all?

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    1. I find it creepy in the extreme. But I’ve observed people talk about it with nearly physical enjoyment. It’s like their seeking absolution for themselves in a strangely vicarious fashion.

      I don’t get it either.

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          1. After reading things on Internet for years, I got the impression that quite a few people in America would be capable of asking Holocaust survivors but not Osama’s victims.

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      1. Are they seeking vicarious absolution or is it a demonstration of their power?

        What would happen if somebody turned that question back on the person who asked it? Or just refused to answer it. Would it provoke fear or rage? I want to see this.

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