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niyad

(113,305 posts)
Wed Dec 31, 2014, 01:13 PM Dec 2014

why is no one talking about the nypd shooter's other victim?

Why Is No One Talking About the NYPD Shooter’s Other Target?




. . . . .


What’s equally predictable and disappointing is the near-erasure of Shaneka Thompson from the story of Ismaaiyl Brinsley’s shooting spree. Thompson is the 29-year-old ex-girlfriend whose Maryland apartment Brinsley entered before shooting her in the stomach and leaving her to scream for help. “I can’t die like this. Please, please help me,” she is reported to have shouted as she banged on a neighbor’s door. According to news reports, Thompson is a health insurance specialist with the Veterans Administration and an Air Force reservist. Brinsley took her phone with him as he headed north to New York, using it to post self-incriminating rants to Instagram before killing Officers Ramos and Liu and, finally, himself.

Thompson is hospitalized and was, as of Sunday, in critical but stable condition. She is also the latest in a series of women who have been brutalized by men whose violence only became notable when they took on targets deemed more important, more relevant to a national or international debate already in play. On Monday Muna Mire, a former Nation intern, noted on Facebook similarities between Thompson and Noleen Hayson Pal, slain ex-wife of Man Haron Monis. Monis is the gunman behind the sixteen-hour standoff in an Australian café that earlier this month left three people (including him) dead. He had a history of violence against women and at the time of the café attack was out on bail on charges including dozens of counts of sexual assault. He had also been charged with being an accessory to the murder of his ex-wife, with whom he had a custody dispute. He allegedly conspired with a girlfriend, who then set Pal on fire and stabbed her eighteen times. To frame that hostage crisis as one simply driven by religious fanaticism leaves out a key element: Monis seems to have been quite sick and is alleged to have used women’s bodies as a place to target that sickness. Monis had been charged with these crimes recently, but he wasn’t due back in court until February. This past weekend, Baltimore police started tracking Shaneka Thompson’s phone, which Brinsley had in his possession, around 6:30 am, less than an hour after she was shot. According to The New York Times, they knew Brinsley’s whereabouts, but didn’t contact New York police until after noon. They faxed a wanted poster to a Brooklyn precinct just after 2 pm.


There may well be legitimate reasons why law enforcement could not have apprehended Brinsley earlier, even though they knew his whereabouts as he traveled north from Baltimore to New York. But in both this case and the Sydney incident, there seem to have been assumptions that public safety was not at risk despite the allegations and evidence of violence against women. Why does the threat level and stoking of public fear skyrocket when a madman is thought to be tied to an ideology that’s generally hated in the mainstream—anti-police sentiment or Islamic fundamentalism—but not when that madness has threatened a woman’s life or safety?

Salamishah Tillett raised a similar question during the trial of George Zimmerman, who had been accused of molesting a cousin as a child and of abusing a former fiancée before killing Trayvon Martin. As Tillett wrote, “Zimmerman’s attorneys successfully argued that those acts were inadmissible or irrelevant. But these accusations offer us other truths: that violence against girls and women is often an overlooked and unchecked indicator of future violence.”

. . .

http://www.thenation.com/blog/193577/why-no-one-talking-about-nypd-shooters-other-target

8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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why is no one talking about the nypd shooter's other victim? (Original Post) niyad Dec 2014 OP
Violence against women is the gateway "violence drug" Dont call me Shirley Dec 2014 #1
so true niyad Dec 2014 #2
An individual woman's life doesn't constitute "public safety", evidently Demeter Dec 2014 #3
even many women's lives don't count. niyad Dec 2014 #4
Yet worldwide we are the majority. We must train our girls in the art of discernment, then they Dont call me Shirley Dec 2014 #5
you are correct. niyad Jan 2015 #7
Because it's SSDD. Gormy Cuss Jan 2015 #6
and that is one of the sad truths of our time. niyad Jan 2015 #8

Dont call me Shirley

(10,998 posts)
5. Yet worldwide we are the majority. We must train our girls in the art of discernment, then they
Wed Dec 31, 2014, 06:50 PM
Dec 2014

will know the difference between trickery and genuine, subtle violence and authenticity, abuser and real man.

Gormy Cuss

(30,884 posts)
6. Because it's SSDD.
Thu Jan 1, 2015, 07:20 PM
Jan 2015

It's not news when someone shoots a domestic partner. It's only news when others are shot at the same time and place.

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