Actually, that has not been proved. If you were watching the trial, you would have seen every single witness (for the prosecution) testify to how much Casey loved Caylee and what a great relationship they had. Every person has said that Casey was an amazing mother.
That doesn't mean that she is innocent, but I don't think it is fair to say that she didn't love or care about her daughter. A person can love someone and still do something terrible to them.
I think that the "not caring about her daughter" comment just MIGHT refer to the months after Caylee's death (which we now know, no matter how it happened, that Casey DID know from day one)...
not reporting her missing, sounding nonchalant to 911, smiling and giggling in court, entering a "hot body" contest within days of her 2 yr old's death, NO change in her demeanor, and stringing her family/police on for months until they found her body, and yes, the FL laws that put it all out there. No doubt there are people who feel that all of that does NOT mean that she didn't care about her DD, and well, I'll just have to say IMHO that I disagree.
You said on another thread that Casey probably died an "easier" death from drugs than other kids that didn't get much press. To be honest, that kind of turns my stomach (and then there's that duct tape put over her mouth/nose, most likely to KILL HER...wonder what suffocating FEELS like?

). Certainly, her life was as precious as any other child's, I hope, and her death as tragic. There ARE thousands of children who die in terrible ways, and there isn't enough media time to cover them all. And no, I wouldn't be watching it all, or I'd kill myself. If this case was more about the horrible details of a child's death, I couldn't watch...I couldn't sit through that. The fascinating part IS Casey and her lies and behavior, and wanting justice for that little girl.
As a black man, I appreciate non blacks speaking out against inequality. In this case, it's news coverage. You are the people that help bring certain things to light. A black person can be dismissed as being "overly sensitive" or just "disgruntled". While I hope that the discussion stays civil, I am happy that there is a discussion. For the record, I believe that news coverage is usually racially biased, but not necessarily racist. I think that people tend to report about and pay attention to people that are more like them. That simple.
My first grandchild who I am over the moon in love with

(the ultrasounds, anyway, on my fridge) is half minority. I'm sure that will change my perception of many things, just as other experiences in my life have...my and my kids' experiences in school, with family, with friends, with jobs, etc. (I have a sister who lies and who I've cut out of my life...a personal added interest in the liar Casey Anthony trial.) My elderly parents and their medical care, assisted living care, and their funerals...all have formed who I am and where I focus my thoughts and opinions. But if anything happens to that grandchild of mine, you can be sure as hell, it's going to make news. To the extent of Casey Anthony? Absolutely not, because even tho God help the person who does anything to my children or grandchildren, I highly doubt I'd be in the midst of something as unique and bizarre and twisted as this, and certainly pray I'm not.
And there are
many many many white children who are missing and murdered who don't get the same press as this case. Reading some of the comments of this thread, you'd think ALL white children get press, and ALL minority children don't. If Casey were a minority, and the case were the same, no doubt there'd be people saying that coverage was biased against her for that.
But the Susan Smith and Andrea Yates cases were pretty cut and dry - they confessed, they were sentenced, case closed.
Casey has been spinning lie after lie after lie..... and she believes them.
The OJ case is similar - he always maintained his innocence. I think people typically want closure - the bad guys are proved to be the bad guys or admit they are. And then they are punished. OJ avoided punishment until he went to jail in Vegas.
