Last week, we brought you Black Girl Nerds’ account of the shooting of Darrien Hunt, the 22-year old Utah man who was killed by police for “brandishing a sword” that happened to not be a real sword at all. Depressingly, Hunt’s murder is part of an all too common pattern of high-profile killings of unarmed black men by those who have been sworn to protect and serve them.

The death of Darrien Hunt did not happen in a vaccum. In the wake of similar instances in Staten Island with Eric Garner, or Ferguson with Michael Brown, and Ohio with John Crawford1 — and these cases are just from this summer — the mainstream media and society in general is paying attention more than they ever have in the past.

Hunt’s death, though, has particularly resonated in nerd of color communities in a way that the previous injustices have not. Partly, it may be due to the fact that early reports seemed to suggest that Hunt may have been cosplaying at the time he was killed.

While the facts surrounding whether he was actually cosplaying have been a subject of debate, his death has definitely gripped the attention of the nerd community. Even if Hunt wasn’t a cosplayer, images from his sketchbook released by his family today suggest that — like most young men his age — he had an affinity for anime and manga culture.

More manga-style/comic sketches by #DarrienHunt found by his family after his death by police shooting in Utah pic.twitter.com/74hFJbnr7h — Jon Swaine (@jonswaine) September 22, 2014

Again, we don’t really know if Hunt was a nerd of color or a cosplayer or just a guy trying to get lunch (or a job) at Panda Express. And honestly, it doesn’t matter. The nerd of color community has every right to be outraged about this senseless death. Just as we should be similarly outraged for John Crawford. And Michael Brown. And Eric Garner. And Trayvon Martin. And Oscar Grant. And Sean Bell. And Tim Stansbury. And Amadou Diallo. I could go on, but it’s too upsetting.

Nine days after Hunt was fatally shot, the Saratoga Springs Police Department released the names of the two officers involved in the shooting2. In response, there is a MoveOn.org petition that is being circulated that is calling for a “citizen review board” to reform police officer hiring and training in Utah.

Meanwhile, Utah and Ohio are two states, by the way, where it is actually legal to “open carry” weapons. On tumblr, the writer Keith Boykins reminds us of this fact when he shared the following image.

Over the same summer in which unarmed black men were getting gunned down in the streets by police, you also had an uptick in the Open Carry movement in which you had whole crews of white men strolling into Chipotles and Targets brandishing AR-15s and shotguns to “exercise their Second Amendment rights.” Because you need to be packing heat when eating burritos and/or buying toiletries. Anyone want to guess how many of these folks were taken down by the cops?

But if a black man carries a cosplaying sword to a Panda Express in Utah (or leans on a toy gun while talking on his cell in a Wal-Mart in Ohio), you better call 911.

Welcome to post-racial America.