You guys love to simplify things down to this or that issues. Or that every instance is is the same when it's bad...this is the same as George floyd to you as Michael brown. When in reality they were all different. In the case of Brown, Eric Holder concluded twice, the guy attacked the cop and the witness testimony, especially his friend, was untrue....but you continue the narrative.
Of course, there were millions of other stops that day across the country and nothing happened.
It's a horrible incident but every time something happens we have to wait to find everyone's race to see how we should react. And that's the thing, Breonna Taylor, not race or class...it was bad law. If that happened to a white person it wouldn't have made the news and the police narrative would've stood bc it wouldn't have any attention. They always talk about the statistically how black men are more likely to be in am incident...thats also bc they are more likely to resist. Amd that likely comes from the media attention we give to every instance and pretend they are all the same. And no, that's not to say historically things weren't worse for them, or terrible things still don't...but when you all project this blanket narrative on every instance it does nothing positive.
Speaking of class, when you all get your defund the police hard ons, which communities do you think are affected most? Also, aren't you a "living wage" guy...there are police out there making 14 dollars an hour in a high stress job where they need to make sound decisions.