It is probably partly because Daniel Vinyard blows smoke in the face of another boy who then kills him, but since this boy provokes him first I do not think this is the main reason, it is essentially because his brother has brought about hatred towards black people which has had some influence on Daniel Vinyard, and a black person shoots him probably because he hates this, since hatred creates more hatred, also he may be from a rival gang to what Daniel Vinyard has been in. It is also possible that is he related to one of the people who Daniel Vinyard's brother Derek killed, so did this for revenge on Derek, as Derek has been let out of prison instead of staying to be punished. This shooting happens in this film to give the message that hatred is influential and has terrible consequences.
It was the first time in American history before or since that our cousins across the sea shot each other in great numbers instead of everybody else.
Help him find the birds he shot
Abraham Lincoln was watching "My American Cousin."
he was the 1st Patriot shot in war and was a member of the Son's of Liberty. (:
Frt. Sumter (the Confederates atacked the fort with cannons)
it was me
it is important in American history because Russia had shot down the us spy polane
Yes. He was shot and killed by a African-American boy in the school bathroom
the shot heard around the world
Michael Jordan's famous shot, nicknamed "The shot."
I presume you mean the American sniper, Private Daniel Jackson. In addition to making certain his rifle is ready to make an accurate shot, he quotes Psalms. Sometimes he also kisses a crucifix.
you can't inless a movie is shot there
The cast of Holy Shot - 2010 includes: Daniel McCrummen as Priest
Actually he has been shot. He had a BB. shot in to his hand and had surgery to remove it two months later. WOW!!
Free African American Crispus Attucks was shot and killed by British troops at the Boston Massacre.
The first shot of the American Revolutionary War that occurred during the Battle of Lexington. The term was actually not used during the war. Instead Ralph Waldo Emerson used the term in the opening stanza of the "Concord Hymn" in 1837.
an African American guy