This is just another symptom of a sick, dysfunctional society that will not get better on it's own. We need leadership on both sides to get past the crap and get down to finding things we have in common, not exploiting our differences. I don't have a lot of hope this will happen any time soon.
Nope.
It's not sick, it's not dysfunctional. It provides its people with more peace, freedom, and prosperity than any society in history. If that's "sick and dysfunctional," I'll take it.
It's a society working through its problems, inherited, current, and yet to come. More just, more fair, more equal than it was 50 years ago. And doing so with remarkable sensitivity and transparency (I just complimented your country, in case you missed it).
It ain't pretty, it ain't clean, it ain't efficient. The road ain't smooth and it ain't straight. There'll always be people trying to run things into the ditch for their own gain, and sadly, lots more willing to jump in and help them.
And what you're seeing here is the process. Two men met. It wasn't a happy meeting. One ended up dead, the other ended up on trial for his freedom. Indians weren't judged. White people weren't judged. The man who killed was judged. He was judged on what he did, as a man, not as a white person or a male person.
And now folks're working on the implications of things. Maybe the law needs adjusting some. Maybe not. But it won't happen by ignoring people's concerns.
"The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice."
-- The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.