David Dorn, a retired St. Louis police captain, was shot and killed last night while trying to protect a local store from looters.
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The White House • June 3, 2020
** More violence is met with more silence
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David Dorn, a retired St. Louis police captain, was shot and killed last night ([link removed]) while trying to protect a local store from looters. Horrific video footage showed that he died in front of Lee’s Pawn & Jewelry on Martin Luther King Drive.
President Trump: “Our highest respect to the family of David Dorn” ([link removed])
It’s popular right now among many celebrities, Democrat politicians, and media personalities to excuse, ignore, and sometimes outright glorify the violence happening on our streets. To them, it isn’t real life—it’s a movie playing out in somebody else’s backyard.
The people who live in these communities don’t want violence. George Floyd’s own family, grieving the unjust death of their loved one, pleaded with protesters to be peaceful. “Don’t tear up your town. All of this is not necessary because if his own family and blood is not doing it, then why are you?” Floyd’s brother said ([link removed]) .
“My brother wasn’t about that. My brother was about peace.”
Now is the time for all of us to listen. It is the stories from outside Washington, from American communities, that go untold amid the cable TV feuds and misleading headlines.
Here are just a few of those stories:
* Minneapolis woman with a disability in tears ([link removed]) after seeing her community torn apart
* African-American store owner condemns ([link removed]) rioters in New York, saying “look what they did to my store”
* NYPD officers being attacked ([link removed]) openly on the streets
* Local mom-and-pop shop destroyed ([link removed]) in the Bronx, crushing a family’s years’ worth of work in just minutes
* Multiple black-owned businesses destroyed ([link removed]) in Philadelphia
* Molotov cocktail thrown ([link removed]) into an NYPD vehicle
Innocent people getting hurt or killed should matter to everyone. So should the small businesses and neighborhoods that have been torched or looted by rioters.
The real pain being felt in these communities isn’t a distraction from injustice—it is injustice. President Trump shouldn’t be alone in condemning it. All politicians, including the mayors and governors turning a blind eye to violence, have a responsibility to protect every single person in their communities.
President Trump wants justice for every victim of rioting AND for every American who has suffered from racial cruelty. Oftentimes, these are the same victims. We need to stand up for them, not look on idly as their neighborhoods are destroyed by criminals.
🎬 Press Secretary: First Amendment doesn’t protect looting or violence ([link removed])
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