In May 2020, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, a convicted felon tried to pass a counterfeit twenty-dollar bill. The police were called and placed the felon in handcuffs. They then put him in the backseat of a police car. George Floyd said he couldn’t breathe, so the police removed him from the back of the car and placed him on the ground. Floyd died and the country exploded, beginning with Minneapolis.
A short distance from Chicago Ave. where Floyd died, Minneapolis businesses went up in flames. Gwen Walz left the windows open in the governor’s mansion — she wanted to breathe in the smoke to assuage her white guilt, or something.
Gwen’s husband would also react to the Floyd riots. Six months after the smoke had cleared, Gov. Tim Walz sat down at a desk and signed a commutation order as a member of the Minnesota Parole Board. He commuted the sentence of Myron Burrell. Burrell…