We went from "murdering unarmed black men for refusing to explain why they are jogging on white roads is not a crime" in the OP to learning that the "jogger" was not out for a jog, but rather, was a trespasser recognized from previous trespassing. We also learned that he was shot after darting across the road and trying to remove a gun from someone else's hands.
And, in typical ISF fashion, there are a whole lot of skeptics on here who know for certain the motivation of the two white men is racism based solely on the skin color of all involved. I'm not sure if you're one of them, I haven't had the time to read every post.
Very well put, and a good encapsulation of how even after years of these sorts of stories coming around and always following a similar trajectory, most people just cannot apparently be expected to exercise any sort of skepticism or measured thinking about them at all.
How so? It's entirely accurate.
It's mostly accurate, and the inaccuracies aren't all that critical, but let's dissect it anyway, because that's what we do.
We went from "murdering unarmed black men for refusing to explain why they are jogging on white roads is not a crime"
Suburban Turkey described the incident in very different terms than the quote above. The quote above is his characterization of the local DA's lack of an initial arrest. It's a bit hyperbolic. However, Suburban Turkey's description of the incident that precedes the quote is quite accurate, and nothing has been revealed since then to show any error in that description. That description said the white men were attempting a citizen's arrest. The description said that there was a struggle for the shotgun. The description said that there was "little to no evidence" that Arbery was doing anything suspicious.
All of those things were true when the OP was written and they remain true today. The only change is that a bit more evidence was revealed that might have created suspicion on the part of "the white men", as they were referred to in the OP. Since "little to no" isn't a well defined term, we could argue for days about whether or not that was true when the OP was written, and whether it was true now. We would be arguing about the definition of "little".
What was certainly true then and is certainly true now is that the available evidence was not sufficient to justify the men attempting a citizen's arrest under Georgia's citizen's arrest law. On that, there really is no dispute. Some parties might try to ignore the standards in the citizen's arrest law, but anyone who bothers to look at those standards ought to agree that the standards were not met.
Any time I see on this forum an attempt by one person to characterize what a different person says, it always seems that the person performing the characterization ends up doing it in, shall we say, a less than perfect fashion. I think there are two examples here. I think that Suburban Turkey's characterization of the DA's stance is not entirely complete or accurate, and Bogative's description of Suburban Turkey's starting point is also not accurate.
Suburban Turkey's characterization does, however, capture the fact, accurately, that the DA refused to charge the men in circumstances where an awful lot of people would have charged them, leaving people to come up with explanations of why they were not charged.
in the OP to learning that the "jogger" was not out for a jog,
We don't know that. So far, we do not know if he was jogging before he entered the construction site. We do know that he did something other than jogging while he was out.
but rather, was a trespasser recognized from previous trespassing.
I think that's a fair statement. At the time the OP was written, there was very little evidence that he was recognized. I know that I, at least, did not believe that to be the case, but I think today there is much more evidence that he was recognized. It's not absolutely conclusive, but it's much stronger than it was at the time of the OP.
We also learned that he was shot after darting across the road and trying to remove a gun from someone else's hands.
That was in the OP. At least, it was said that the men "struggled over a shotgun", and the video, which was linked, shows the "darting".
And, in typical ISF fashion, there are a whole lot of skeptics on here who know for certain the motivation of the two white men is racism based solely on the skin color of all involved. I'm not sure if you're one of them, I haven't had the time to read every post.
I think that's fair, although one might also say that they seem certain of the motivation because it fits a pattern of so many incidents where the motivation turned out to be, or at least include, racism. However, there is not currently any clear proof that racism was involved. It just fits a pattern of other events where racism was involved.
To my way of thinking it isn't all that important. Dead is dead, whether or not the killer was racist, and the "murder" part is more important than the "racism" part. On the other hand, I can see why people think that it might matter, because they might feel that this pattern will repeat in the future.
So, Bogative's summary isn't horribly wrong. However, it could easily be misleading. The fact is that not much has changed since the OP was written. We still have an unauthorized attempt at a citizen's arrest, resulting in death. The major points have stayed the same, so one has to wonder why Bogative thinks the new developments are all that significant.