Event JSON
{
"id": "c3a7beb8cc56270e5b74226496794a36bffa1835ecdf8f8592467258ae27a3b4",
"pubkey": "6a36d605dec02d5f617cf9cb30e36295d4f4f3d647e239c2fb18a46b9259b603",
"created_at": 1694180042,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
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],
[
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[
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[
"content-warning",
"Police brutality"
],
[
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"https://newsie.social/users/queenofnewyork/statuses/111029783261456752",
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],
"content": "nostr:npub1ht0rq2ej339cv0nz4m260llgdq8mz05fwpz4zjc8s7lmtduzq8hq60dyc3 Filming the arrest was helping. Police brutality has so often been ignored because it ends up being the cop’s word vs the arrested person, and we are primed to believe the cop. But with video, that is no longer the case. Interfering with an arrest is typically a crime, so recording it is the safest way to help. This is exactly what played out with George Floyd: the officers ended up convicted because of bystanders with phones.",
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}