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Former President George W. Bush released a statement Tuesday afternoon on the killing of George Floyd and the civil unrest that’s swept the U.S. in the week since Floyd’s death.

“Laura and I are anguished by the brutal suffocation of George Floyd and disturbed by the injustice and fear that suffocate our country,” Bush’s statement read. “Yet we have resisted the urge to speak out, because this is not the time for us to lecture. It is time for us to listen. It is time for America to examine our tragic failures — and as we do, we will also see some of our redeeming strengths.”

Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, was killed in Minneapolis on May 25 after a police officer held Floyd down with his knee on Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes.

Floyd could be heard telling officer Derek Chauvin, who is white, “I can’t breathe.”

The incident was caught on camera and quickly circulated online, drawing outrage and protests first in Minneapolis and then dozens of other cities around the country. Many of those demonstrations have been peaceful but many others have involved violence and looting, with businesses ransacked and police vehicles set aflame.

Chauvin was fired and arrested on a charge of third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter, and three other officers involved were also fired.

Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo told CNN he believes the three officers with Chauvin were “complicit” in Floyd’s death.

“It remains a shocking failure that many African Americans, especially young African American men, are harassed and threatened in their own country,” Bush, 73, continued in his statement on Tuesday.

Bush, who did not call out or reference President Donald Trump directly, instead pointed to black figures throughout U.S. history.

“The answers to American problems are found by living up to American ideals — to the fundamental truth that all human beings are created equal and endowed by God with certain rights,” he said. “We have often underestimated how radical that quest really is, and how our cherished principles challenge systems of intended or assumed injustice. The heroes of America — from Frederick Douglass, to Harriet Tubman, to Abraham Lincoln, to Martin Luther King Jr. — are heroes of unity.”

Bush, who did not call out or reference President Donald Trump directly, instead pointed to black figures throughout U.S. history.

“The answers to American problems are found by living up to American ideals — to the fundamental truth that all human beings are created equal and endowed by God with certain rights,” he said. “We have often underestimated how radical that quest really is, and how our cherished principles challenge systems of intended or assumed injustice. The heroes of America — from Frederick Douglass, to Harriet Tubman, to Abraham Lincoln, to Martin Luther King Jr. — are heroes of unity.”

He continued: “Their calling has never been for the fainthearted. They often revealed the nation’s disturbing bigotry and exploitation — stains on our character sometimes difficult for the American majority to examine. We can only see the reality of America’s need by seeing it through the eyes of the threatened, oppressed, and disenfranchised.”

- A word from our sposor -

George W. Bush Says He’s ‘Anguished’ Over George Floyd’s Death: ‘It Is Time for Us to Listen’