The Kyle Rittenhouse verdict continues to evoke a range of emotions from the public in the United States.
A University of Wisconsin expert says the outcome could have lasting effects on marginalized residents who already feel pushed away by social institutions.
Rittenhouse, a white teen, was acquitted of murder charges for shooting several protesters during last year’s police brutality demonstrations in Kenosha, Wisconsin.
Alvin Thomas, an assistant professor in the School of Human Ecology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, says it only adds to the list of previous high-profile cases tied to debates over racial injustice.
For anyone who’s experienced racial bias, Thomas says it could further cement negative reactions.
“Every time a new incident comes up, what it does is that it can produce some of these Post Traumatic Stress Disorder symptoms like re-experiencing, hypervigilance, avoidance, flashbacks and memories, intense sadness, and fear and anger, says Thomas,
Thomas noted a body of research links discrimination to worsening mental and physical health. He said even though some people who are Black feel resigned to an unfair criminal justice system, each event still has a tremendous personal impact on them.
Supporters of Rittenhouse argue the case boiled down to self-defence, adding those who died were white.
Thomas says it’s important to remember the protesters who were shot were there in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement. He explains a perceived injustice against anyone, no matter their race, can add to the pain already felt by so many.
“I think it’s very similar to what we saw during the Civil Rights movement,” says Thomas, “where you had people of different colours, ethnicities who were engaged in that fight. And they bled together.”
As for long-term effects, Thomas said there’s danger that people experiencing negative reactions could feel less compelled to take part in certain facets of mainstream society.
“Like elections and voting,” said Thomas, “engaging in different things that make society move.”
(Mike Moen/Minnesota News Service)