Black Lives Matter Protest in Carpinteria

Black Lives Matter protest in Carpinteria on Saturday (Photos/Video: Christine Brown)

By edhat staff

Students from Carpinteria High School organized a peaceful “Carp for Black Lives Matter” protest on Saturday.

The event took place at 1:00 p.m. on all corners of Linden and Carpinteria Avenues.  

Teenagers put together the event to remember the lives lost at the hands of police brutality.

Protesters marched between Casitas Pass and Elm with local police and Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Deputies assisting with traffic control.

Edhat Staff

Written by Edhat Staff

What do you think?

Comments

9 Comments deleted by Administrator

Leave a Review or Comment

20 Comments

  1. There’s a lot of things that make me angry about these protests. Like the fact that they’re happening at all because of the pandemic. We better hope that Covid-19 a hoax like all the tinfoil hats say (and I don’t believe) or that the experts were wrong because the 2nd wave is gonna suck hard. But all that said, it’s great that people care it’s not just black people out there. This is a societal problem that we’ve let go on too damn long. I think if any cop is so jaded he can kill a man slowly in broad daylight and get away with it, it’s only a matter of time before everyone is in danger. I don’t know if these kids will solve this problem. I’m not super confident because some of the same things are trotted out that haven’t worked before; some of the same useless politicians are talking a great game will probably not do anything once the cameras stop. But maybe this time will be different. I hope so.

  2. BLM isn’t about the number of black people in a community or that show up to a protest, and it is not to say their lives are more important than others, it’s stating they are often treated unfairly and people are often quick to assume they are criminals. That’s the whole point of BLM is to expose social injustice and end police brutality. I agree the younger generation is definitely twisted at times but so are we. They learn from their parents and grandparents and for a systematic change we need ALL generations to open their hearts and wake the f*ck up… and I agree they need to record horizontally

  3. What concerns me is because of one bad apple we are painting all our police forces with the same brush. These hardworking officers who are our protecting us very day are getting attacked and killed for no reason. This out of control.

  4. So glad to see a new concerned generation. Painting them all with the same brush, “they take guns to school, disrespect parents, etc” is downright disrespectable to these young people. One or 2 bad apples does not spoil the barrel. Seeing all those teenagers out protesting injustice in encouraging, they “get it”.

  5. CARGUY. While it is true that not all cops are bad, many who become law enforcement officers change. Being around coworkers who have beliefs different than their own can influence those with good intentions to adopt bad beliefs.

  6. Guess what, EricL, we already ARE in danger! Cops in a TANK in California yelling at civilians “MOVE OR YOU’RE GONNA BE DEAD!” This is America today. The cops need to be demilitarized entirely. Cops should not have military grade weaponry and vehicles when teachers are paying for supplies out of their own pockets. POLICE REFORM NOW!

  7. “One Bad Apple”. Are you serious. Can you possibly be serious with that statement.
    Yes, most cops, maybe the overwhelming majority of cops, are solid.
    But there are far too many that aren’t, and will abuse the hell out of people because they have the power and desire to do so. Bad cops need to be flushed out of the system. New cops need to be trained that t’s not okay to beat the crap out of people or choke them to death.
    “One bad apple” is just as pathetically stupid as “All cops are bastards.” Same side of a dumb as sh!t coin.

  8. People haven’t forgotten that there is a pandemic going on. In fact, that is one of the reasons they are still protesting. There have been a disproportionate number of U.S. COVID-19 deaths in the black community – a recent study showed 3x the rate of white COVID-19 deaths. And of course, there’s the bigger, more important issue of racial injustice.

Double Fatal Collision in Santa Maria

Way Back When: Sexy Swimsuits in 1916