Do not put overt street brutality and hidden brutality in buildings on the same level.
Don't put the victims of an expected brutality on the same level as the victims of an unexpected brutality.
Do not put the brutality that is recognizable to everyone because it is documented by videos and a brutality that is difficult to recognize because it is difficult to document on the same level.
Do not put a later victim walking the streets awake and a victim under general anesthesia on an operating table, on the same level.
Do not put a universally accepted victim with great solidarity on the same level as a lonely and so far not understood victim.
Do not put a victim with openly visible wounds and a victim with hidden wounds and hard-to-see evidence on the same level.
Do not equate a victim with initially terrible looking but healing wounds with a forever maimed, disabled, suffering victim with lost body parts.
Do not place a random victim on the same level as a specifically selected and targeted victim who is personally known to the perpetrators.
Do not put the victim of a spontaneous, brief, simple brutality on the same level as the victim of a subtle intrusion lasting several hours, similar to torture.
Do not put a one-time crime victim on the same level as a repeated victim.
Do not put individual crime victims on the same level as group victims because they have one another.
Do not place the victim of well-known crimes (such as police violence) on the same level as victims of tabooed, secret crimes that the victims find it difficult to speak about publicly.
it is not undesirable to think further