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Tony Camilleri's avatar

I've experienced police violence myself. I've known other people who have experienced it. In my case I'm pretty white (mediteranean) and the others I know have copped it were white.

And I know this country in a million ways treats black people and their culture and their rights as far less valuable than mine. So I don't feel any kind of surprise when I hear another story of what police have done to blackfellas including the stories in this article https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/thrown-punched-in-the-head-doctor-who-tried-to-help-bleeding-man-claims-police-turned-on-her-20190121-p50sn0.html

They only got covered because a white middle class doctor got hurt.

People who think the system will prosecute police are naive. The Integrity commissions are a scam. The onus is on victims to push hard for justice and when you don't have the resources nothing happens.

All I feel I can do is try and argue that we need proper oversight and real prosecution of police who commit crimes of assault and murder but I feel like I am arguing to the converted amongst those I know.

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bc's avatar

I'm going to admit I didn't know about Joyce Clarke until this article, and that both shames me and highlights the issue of getting the information out there. Deaths thousands of kilometres away with little to no reporting and a behind-closed-doors legal system makes it very difficult to even be aware of what is happening. Taking 2 US examples of Rodney King & George Floyd, it was the recording & public dissemination of the acts that triggered the responses. As you've pointed out, we have little evidence to show, and that makes it harder still. The violence may be normalised in a subset of our society, but don't write us all off just yet.

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