‘It is White supremacy’: CNN speaks to son of Buffalo massacre victim

New details reveal the gunman in the Buffalo massacre scouted the store in early March and planned his attack months in advance. CNN's Omar Jimenez speaks to the son of one of the victims of the attack. #CNN #News

60 comments

  1. We to also look at his parents and his home life where he has two younger brothers. They could be waiting where their big brother left off. Like why would his father gift him a gun after his high school incident? And did he know that his son has this body armory? To have a 18 yr old living in your home and not know his mind makeup is insane. Or does the apple don’t fall far from the tree? Because they look like a close knit family all dress in their red and black flannel pajamas on Christmas morning.

    1. @Descartes walks into a bar We came in using sticks and stones. Continuing every day and will until the last.
      Guns will never catch up.

    2. @Jimmy Hunt There are eight billion people on the planet today. Trust me, we’ve caught up.

    3. @Descartes walks into a bar “Weve”?
      Meaning guns?
      As in hired guns?
      We make up so little of a fraction. Its not measurable.

    4. @Descartes walks into a bar It was the only option you left me.
      8 billion people, we’ve caught up?
      Maybe read what you’re trying to responde too.
      I do not doubt you’re far more educated than I but your reading comprehension is lacking sick like.
      Weather it be to much caffeine or crystal having you be to excited to understand, it still works out better if you actually respond to what is written rather than reacting like a hype.
      Chill out, relax then communicate.

  2. How do parents not notice what there child, that still lives at home, is thinking, feeling and doing? There was no awareness? That doesn’t sound right.

    1. @Million Last year Japan announced that wastewater from the Fukushima-Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, destroyed in March 2011 following the Tohoku Earthquake and tsunami, would be dropped into the Pacific in 2023.

  3. The NYS police had him last year and put him in an institution for a mental evaluation. But did they seize his computer, phone or any other device that may have given him access to the internet and all of the “hate sites” that he was frequenting?
    I’m sure if they had he would have been declared a substantial risk to cause violence in the future and been prevented from freely purchasing any firearms.

    1. @Nick Forman Police investigated the crime. It’s not up to “people” to investigate.

    2. @Latysha L. So that’s what the evaluation was for? If so then they probably should have dug a bit deeper.

  4. He is not an alleged shooter. He is the shooter smh it’s video footage of him committing the killings plus he was streaming it. The news people are really get on my nerves with how they report things.

    1. @Sincere When you live stream it, you are the killer. We all saw it. and he the nerve to plead not guilty. GTFOH.

  5. When 18 years old person can go and legally buy an assault rifle but he is not adult enough to buy beer then there is something seriously wrong in this country that you call the greatest country in the world

    1. Exactly 💯 how are you to young to buy liquor but old enough to buy assault weapons and body armor 👿 something ain’t right here.

    2. @Matthew Morel we talking about a deranged killer who already threatened to kill others. Even at his high school. You joined the military. There is a big difference unless you turn out to be a psychopath too.

  6. Why do people keep saying “alleged shooter”? They met him at the scene in the middle of the act. He doesn’t have to be convicted for us to know he did it…

    1. Just like when black people we hung the white newspapers always said they were hung by parties unknown.

    2. Right. His attorney pleaded not guilty. Can you believe that. I would have turn into a mad man.

  7. This is so sad, so incredibly sad. So sorry for all the victims and all who love them. Such good human beings lost by the hands of a person who does not deserve to live.

  8. “I do think it is a widespread phenomenon that African American males, in particular, are treated with extra suspicion and maybe not given the benefit of the doubt,” — Fmr. USAG William Barr interview by Pierre Thomas, July 8, 2020

  9. “Traditionally it’s always been Republicans suppressing votes in places. Let’s start protecting our voters. We know where they are. Let’s start playing offense a little bit. That’s what you’re going to see in 2020. It’s going to be a much bigger program, a much more aggressive program, a much better-funded program.” 
    — Justin Clark, Senior Campaign Advisor to Donald Trump, Wisconsin chapter meeting of the Republican National Lawyers Association, November 21, 2019

  10. Interestingly, the Confederate flag’s widespread use is relatively recent. Originally the battle flag of the Army of Northern Virginia (and often incorrectly referred to as the ‘Stars and Bars’), it didn’t gain popularity among Southerners until the mid-20th century—nearly 100 years after the Civil War had ended.

    Even some of the states that display it prominently only started doing after World War II. According to a 2000 report by the Georgia State Senate research office, Georgia incorporated the Confederate logo into their state flag in 1956 as a symbol of resistance against the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court decision of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, which ruled that segregating schools was unconstitutional. The same report said that in 1961, Alabama Governor George Wallace raised the Confederate flag over the State Capitol dome in Montgomery to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Civil War. The same year, South Carolina raised the battle flag on the grounds of its Capitol.

    The Atlantic wrote in 2012 that “the flag’s most lasting legacy—and the source of much of the controversy today—can be traced to its use as a symbol of ‘Massive Resistance’ by the Dixiecrats beginning in 1948.” This legacy, writer and Civil War historian Kevin M. Levin adds, continued on “through the Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 60s.”

    — Brian Ives, June 26, 2015

  11. *Alex Jones Jun. 25 2021:* “They’re going to attack a minority CHURCH, or college, or GROCERY STORE” – Both of those happened this weekend.

  12. I absolutely love how stern the commissioner is while showing his hatred for the shooter but he still stays professional. Beautiful job

  13. His mama, his poor elderly 86 year old mama slaughtered by a mad man. May those killed RIP🥀those injured fully recover 🙏 and their families and love ones I grieve with you, may GOD bless, comfort and strengthen you.

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