1920 vs 2020. pic.twitter.com/afnH0tLIBi— isaiah (@isaiahjhillrd) June 14, 2020
Omg. Black woman officer in Buffalo was one year short of her pension. Got fired because she stopped a white officer from choking someone while making an arrest — and they fired her because that supposedly “put the other officer at risk” https://t.co/Wd85cCmbrR— chris evans (@notcapnamerica) June 15, 2020
Say her name.— Gorilla Grip Super Soaker (@kimbaakop3) June 15, 2020
Oluwatoyin Salau
None of us are free until we are all free, none of us are safe until we are all safe. In her last days a man took advantage of her, days later she was found dead by the Roadside.
Until I stop breathing I will never stop fighting for women. RIP pic.twitter.com/G3V8gmUK3E
— Matthew A. Cherry (@MatthewACherry) June 15, 2020
for oluwatoyin to have been failed this much at just 19—by her abusive family, trying to profit from her death now; by the men she marched for, becoming her violator; by the police she cried for help to, failing to protect her. painful isn't the word #JusticeForToyin— no (@miskeencore) June 15, 2020
Say Her Name was started because Black women are left out of conversations about police brutality and act like Black men are the only ones killed by cops. So to see people saying “Say His Name” or “Say Their Names” is even more erasure of Black women, especially trans women.— Camryn Garrett (@dancingofpens) June 14, 2020
Please don’t frame the murder of Black women as a “teachable moment”. Don’t instrumentalise us so that others can “learn”. Toyin should be alive right now. Her loved ones are mourning and dealing with this grief publicly. How we show care to BW matters both in life and in death.— jade (@divanificent) June 15, 2020
You can support Black women when we are living, working, fighting, breathing, creating, blossoming, teaching, protecting, breaking boundaries, constantly giving and not just feeling bad about it when we're fucking dead.— Jeen Greh (@JeanGreasy) June 15, 2020
You can do that.
Black women are fighting so many different wars.— Gennette Cordova (@GNCordova) June 15, 2020
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