Anonymous wrote:Even black people knew he did it. They just cheered that he beat the system. Sorta twisted but that was the mentality.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know anywho who thinks he is innocent!
Anonymous wrote:I've never met someone that thought OJ was innocent.
Anonymous wrote:There was enough reasonable doubt in the evidence to drive a truck through. Accordingly, he was found not guilty as he should have been.
That said, the case was about race more than it was about the murder. That’s just the reality of those times. It’s also obvious that most white people don’t understand this, which is why I try to not discuss this case with them.
My personal opinion is that I don’t know if OJ did it or not. I most definitely believe that he was an abusive, insensitive psycho (at best), but I also know that 1990’s LAPD cannot be trusted.
[Black woman who was in college during the murder and trial.]
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My whole family (white) thought he was guilty. I was working part time at an Association in DC while in grad school and they rolled a tv into the conference room for the whole staff to watch the verdict. It was fascinating! The white staff members gasped and the black staff members cheered. Given this country’s racist history I understand where many in the black community were coming from but to me the verdict was more of an example of how domestic violence is not taken seriously, even when a woman is killed. So depressing
Same experience here. Was working at a DC association with a lot of Black employees and we watched the verdict on a TV in our reception area. All the White staff gasped and some of the Black staff cheered. At the time, I noticed that the Black staff that cheered tended to be less educated than the ones that stayed silent, so there may be a class--not just a race--element to individual reactions. I remember feeling betrayed as a woman, not as a White, because of the disregard for the killing of a woman (and her friend) by a powerful, wealthy man. I remember thinking to myself: you can get away with anything if you're a man and have enough money, regardless of race. With the exception of the insanity and division of the Trump era (which we're still in), I had never before felt so alienated from such a large segment of our society.