Max I’m not going to *stop* you using the song. I said before it was a gift to 
you. Simply remove my name from any public version of it and you may use it in 
whatever way seems proper to you. #GeorgeFloydWasMurdered #BlackLivesMatter 
#NoJusticeNoPeace


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On Sunday, May 31, 2020, 8:07 am, Max Herman via NetBehaviour 
<[email protected]> wrote:

#yiv3216385259 P {margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;}
Hi Michael,
Two blocks from my house tonight neighbors are out on the street observing for 
arsonists.  This is a primarily Somali section of our neighborhood.  There is a 
medical clinic across from the high rise serving many Somali residents.
Neighborhood observers noticed two vehicles on a side street replacing their 
plates with Minnesota plates.  They sent this message to the other observers.  
The two vehicles pulled up to the medical clinic, after a previous individual 
had cut a hole in the plywood boarding up the doors and windows.  They threw a 
molotov cocktail at the hole in the plywood, but Somali neighbors on watch from 
the high rise did as the neighborhood watch system advises and shouted to other 
observers to alert them.  
Fortunately, in my view, the device missed the hole in the plywood and was 
kicked away by an observer from the medical clinic before it could ignite the 
exterior.  The vehicles sped away.  This was all just reported on local TV 
through interviews with the neighborhood observers.
Do you really think it would be better if that medical clinic had burned down?  
If yes, should all medical clinics in the city be burned down?  All libraries?  
(Several libraries in the poorest neighborhoods have been destroyed.)  If not 
all, how many, now that the officer in the video is in custody and charged with 
murder?  Do you really think it likely that the attackers of the medical clinic 
were trying to change society for the better and accomplish justice for George 
Floyd?  Much video has been captured, and social media activity gathered, 
suggesting otherwise -- and I have seen things otherwise with my own eyes.  
Context here is also important -- the governor and city mayor are 
liberal-moderate, and both have been severely targeted by far-right rhetoric in 
the recent past.  The portrayal of their liberal politics as incompetent to 
prevent the annihilation of society will have distinct electoral consequences 
later this year.  Are those consequences not also relevant when considering 
motive?
My intent behind the lyrics of the song was as follows, which perhaps I should 
have discussed in more detail.  I wrote the words last summer, in part to 
lament the divisive ethnonationalist rhetoric which has succeeded in taking 
power in my own country and consequently in much of the globe.
"The Beautiful" is a reference to "America the Beautiful," and the tragic irony 
of the latter.  How far we are from that.  The ugliness which has reigned and 
thrives on death, division, hate, and fear.  On the proliferation of violence.  
What is beauty?  It goes deeper than ethnonationalism.  It can unite people and 
also heal them.  To me it is the truest hope of humanity, and it profoundly 
relates to peace.  That is what the song is about, for me.  It is about the 
power of beauty and peace to unite people and end the ugly violence which keeps 
history in its grip.  It's about what Lincoln called "the better angels of our 
nature."
However I totally respect that you prefer that I not discuss or share the song 
in that context.  I will not share or promote the song as a meditation on peace 
which might help my community survive this hell, as much as I would like to, 
and despite the fact that a call for peace was the specific intent of the 
lyrics.
I do respect your views greatly on this as on all things and hope what I am 
saying is not offensive or out of line -- just my POV from what I am seeing 
with my own eyes and feeling in my conflicted and indeed physically terrified 
situation of wanting justice for George Floyd but not wanting my neighborhood 
or his to be burned down.
Best wishes and regards,
Max





From: NetBehaviour <[email protected]> on behalf of 
Michael Szpakowski <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, May 31, 2020 12:35 AM
To: netbehaviour new netbehaviour <[email protected]>
Subject: [NetBehaviour] The riot is the language of the unheard See: 
https://mobile.twitter.com/tplohetski/status/1266787791733694465 



Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone
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