Considering the extremely high incidence of domestic violence in the black community (and the fact that murder by a partner is the #1 cause of death for black women between 15 and 49), it's rather disturbing that someone would excuse or try to downplay this very PUBLIC incident (which simply shines a light on what goes on too often everyday between so-called "lovers," black and otherwise). It really HAPPENED people.
This DENIAL (and desire to sweep it away) just plays into the whole pattern.
Chris Brown's father had domestic violence problems himself.
Brown claimed that he was gonna be a better man, but we see that it is difficult to
unlearn what some are taught as children. Now we also wanna teach people how to DOWNPLAY such incidents. It just goes on and on. There is a real issue here. You wanna wait until someone's dead before you care?
Of course, if he'd killed her, which he easily could have given the type of injuries she suffered, there'd
still be apologists here. Sad. Tragic.
BTW, part of the pattern of the reaction to such incidents that battered woman (black or otherwise) have, is to reconcile with her abuser. No surprise there. It takes a while for the victim to fall out of love, and the instinct is to protect him from the outside world and the law. That's why she needs help from older and more thoughtful people around her, including the black community which, sadly, is always more sympathetic to the perpetrator than the victim.