Wednesday, December 3, 2014

After Ferguson: The Denial of Racism

This blog post was supposed to be about the grand jury decision to not indict officer Darren Wilson in the shooting of Michael Brown. It was supposed to speak on the sad excuses that the district attorney used in supporting the decision. It was supposed to talk about how now Dorian Johnson, the young man who was with Brown during the shooting, is hearing calls for him to be brought up on perjury charges. But as I typed up what was to be that blog, I just felt like it was all empty words. Apparently, the powers that be could care less how Michael Brown's family feels, how an entire community in Ferguson feels. What is also apparent is the fact that society doesn't give a damn about the value of Black lives in this country.

I know, I know, I know. Some people might read that line "society doesn't give a damn about Black lives in this country" and say "Whatever, here we go again with  the 'America hates Black people' thing". But to hate, you'd have to actually care. When people observe other groups of people protesting over the unnecessary deaths of young Black Americans and respond with rhetoric like "Black people kill other Black people everyday, so why are they protesting this?", that's basically asking, "Why should we care?" When an entire investigation is based on criminalizing or demonizing the victim so that the person who is suspected in a probable crime isn't held in a negative light, that's showing more care or concern for the perpetrator than the victim. When a witnesses testimony is said to be the most consistent of all the witnesses testimonies, and that witness not only changed his retelling of the events in question, but was first said to be 100 yards away, then 50 to 75 yards away, there is a message being sent. And it is "we don't care".

Here is another "we don't care" quote from the illustrious former New York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani in an interview he had on Fox News Sunday:

"I don't see how this case normally would even have been brought to a grand jury," said Giuliani, a former prosecutor, on Fox News Sunday. "This is the kind of case—had it not had the racial overtones and the national publicity—where a prosecutor would have come to the conclusion that there is not enough evidence to present to the grand jury."

A week earlier on Meet the Press, Giuliani blamed Black on Black crime for the need of a heavy police presence in the Black community. When Michael Eric Dyson challenged him, he said this:
 "...the white police officers won't be there if you weren't killing each other."

All too often, we hear this type of justification when the issue of unjustified police shootings or other shootings and brutalities involving black people and police officers or non-Blacks come up. We heard the same type of justification when the deaths of Trayvon Martin and Jordan Davis, just to name those two, were being protested. While these statistics may be true, by numbers only, the whole point gets missed by those who spew this nonsensical line of thought. Black people, especially young Black men, are often subject to police brutality, shootings and other forms of violence from non-Blacks with out clear justification. When these cases are reviewed, they are often handled typically; a short investigation, if any, and a swift decision usually in favor of the non-Black aggressor. It seems, also way too often, that any confrontation between Blacks and non-Blacks comes down to a shooting of the unarmed Black person. Just over the past few weeks while we awaited the grand jury decision in Ferguson, an unarmed young Black man, 28 year old Akai Gurley, was shot to death by a police officer while patrolling the stairwells of a project building. The young man and his girlfriend were taking the stairs due to the elevator being out of service. That shooting, which is said to have been an accident, has since been ruled a homicide but is still under investigation. Also, on Saturday, November 22nd, a 12 year old boy, Tamir Rice, was shot within seconds of police arriving on the scene to respond to a call that the boy was waving a gun and pointing it at people. The person who called made it a point to tell the 911 dispatcher that the individual was just a kid and that the gun could possibly be fake. That point was repeated to the dispatcher but apparently was not relayed to the officers responding to the call. It has been said that the officer told Tamir to show his hands but surveillance video shows that the young man was shot within 2 seconds of the officers arriving. This case is a bit difficult in that the officer was responding to a call that was said to involve a person with a gun. But the breakdown in communication between dispatch and the officer and the fact that it was a fake gun leave many questions unanswered.

But if we are going to quote statistics and mince words and all of that, lets look at this perspective. How often do you hear of white unarmed men being gunned down by police? When you hear of police standoffs or manhunts regarding armed white males (most recently Eric Frein), how often are these men shot and killed? The truth is, you don't hear this occurring too often under these circumstances. Why? Well I can only speculate but it has to be related to the image that is often portrayed, relayed and accepted regarding Black men in these United States. Before Trayvon martin was shot, I never saw signs in stores that said "No Hoodies, No Hats, No Sunglasses." There are hashtag movements that were sparked after Michael Brown was shot and the subsequent violent clashes with police like #pantsupdon'tloot. Young black kids have been told that if they sag their jeans then they would not be able to walk through shopping malls and other public places. The word "thug" has been primarily used to discredit those like Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown and Jordan Davis based soley on how they dressed, how they looked, the type of music they listen to and where they either come from or were perceived to come from. When looking up information on Akai Gurley, the first image that popped up was a mugshot along with another picture that prominently showed a tattoo on his neck. His back story was that he shied away from the street life and was about to start a job with the city. He had also been pursuing a modeling career.
 
When the grand jury decision came with no indictment for Darren Wilson, the District Attorney's press conference seemed to be motivated to discredited the slain Michael Brown and all those who offered accounts supporting him. The same thing happened when a group of NYPD officers in Staten Island, NY killed Eric Garner via an illegal choke hold. The officers claimed that he was resisting arrest in relation to selling illegal cigarettes. Fortunately their was someone videotaping the entire encounter, and if you have seen it, you can see and hear that the police regularly harassed Garner. Once they tried to subdue him, for whatever reason, the choke hold was applied and they turned a deaf ear to his pleas of not being able to breathe. Once the media got involved, the smear campaign was on. So here we have a pattern that we do not see when white males commit violent crimes but we see it when unarmed Black males are shot committing no crime at all (for those who want to say Michael Brown was committing a crime when he stole the cigarillos from the convenience store, Darren Wilson had no knowledge of that until after Brown was already dead. But even stealing cigarellos doesn't warrant being shot to death when you are unarmed.).

 I hear people say things like "We're never going to get past race in this country until people stop making everything about race." But everything in this country is about race. Our president is Black and anything said about him, positive and negative, is said and/or perceived through context of race. The fact that our country is over 238 years old and we had our first Black president 219 years after George Washington first took office shows how deeply rooted in race our country is. Race will always be an issue because it was what separated the haves from the have nots for so long. Even now, immigration reform has the face of Hispanic Americans when there are illegal immigrants from all corners of this earth here inside of our borders. Getting past race may be too much for a country so diverse, until the economic distinctions blur racial lines to the point where it is just the uber wealthy and the rest of us. But even that may not ease racial tensions, due to the fact that race is often used to push certain political and social agendas. We can't "wish" it away either, hoping that one day it won't be an issue. People who 'hope for change' have to understand, as sensitive a topic as race relations is in this country, it has to be talked about honestly. Listening to Darren Wilson describe Michael Brown during their altercation sounded like he was told to give as menacing a description as possible so that it would be proliferated throughout the media and that the public opinion would be that Wilson was battling this enraged thug hell bent on killing him. But the details don't add up and it is very obvious that the grand jury was never going to indict Wilson. The indictment would be of Michael Brown, the citizens of Ferguson who protested violently and peacefully and all those who sympathize with Brown, his family and those who feel like police practices and interactions with people of color need to be re-evaluated.


Many say before Black communities can expect change when it comes to the way we are perceived in society, we have to do a lot of changing ourselves. I can agree that there are a lot of issues in the Black community. Charles Barkley said some racial profiling isn't wrong due to the amount of crime that exists in Black communities. There are some young men and women who do fit the profiles that many others place on them. But as a whole, the profiles or stereotypes don't describe an entire community. There shouldn't be a set of "characteristics" that justify injustice, racism or extreme tactics. Michael Brown's personality or character traits didn't justify him being shot down in the street like a dog and left there for over four hours. Eric Garner's personality didn't warrant the deadly force used to subdue him, essentially because he wasn't buying the officer's reasoning on why they were questioning him. So, while change needs to be made within Black communities, it shouldn't dictate how we are treated by authorities, politicians and our neighbors of different races. The simple fact that an argument can be made in this regard shows that a real problem persists amongst those who feel like there are certain rules for certain groups of people. Those rules are usually one set of rules for whites and a series of separate rules for every other ethnic group around the world. In the case of Akai Gurley, different rules of law enforcement for certain areas, like the housing projects of Brooklyn, NY where there is a very high crime rate, leave way too much room for error. I believe that his death may have been the result of an accident. The police officer was relatively new to the force and he was patrolling dark stairwells in the building. Could it have been avoided? I think so, maybe by having seasoned, more experienced officers handle high risk situations such as project building patrols. Individuals close to the case said that Peter Liang, the officer who shot Gurley, was scared during the moments before the shooting. His fear, the instructions and training he had for his patrol (flashlight in one hand and gun drawn in the other) and the reputation those projects have, may all have led to the accidental shooting.


But what can we do? Honestly, I think the only thing we can do is to be honest about the separation that exists in this country. Ben Carson, a possible Republican candidate for the 2016 presidential election, said that race relations in our country have gotten worse under Obama. While that statement is true, his insinuation that it is Obama's fault because he plays the race card too much is not only inaccurate, it's misguided. As I mentioned before, Obama being president is a race card in of itself. You see his Blackness every time you see him on television. You hear his Blackness every time his name is mentioned. You can't get around it. Some people, like Carson, want to say he talks about race too much. People like Cornell West say he doesn't talk about it enough. While many, like me, would like to see him address situations like the Brown case a little more passionately, we can't look to him to be the face of change, at least not anymore. In 2008, we wanted him to be that face, we thought he was going to be that face. But one thing I learned was that the deep rooted racism that many had thought had subsided resurfaced more aggressively the day he took office. While some white Americans had been agreeable to the possibility of a Black president, many felt and still feel that a Black person isn't qualified to hold that position. Change takes more than time; it takes acceptance, patience and tolerance. These aren't things that our country has been known for throughout it's history. But whenever there is a conflict and someone brings up race, the conversation often turns to that itself than to a solution for the conflict. It's because we really want to believe that racism is dead and that we as a society are advanced enough to have moved on from that. It's just not true. Once we as a nation can admit that, then we can work on ways to coexist peacefully with one another entirely. But as long as we try to fool ourselves that the problem doesn't start with our perceptions, on both sides of the spectrum, then the issues that we see in places like Ferguson will not only continue to occur, they will get much, much worse.


2 comments:

  1. My dear brother. I appreciated your well written piece and your effort to remain even handed while surrounded by a society that has demonstrated hatred toward you and others who look like you and I. By process of elimination, I would like to suggest a solution we have failed to apply diligently and for the long haul - boycott America.
    What I am getting at is this fact: America is a business and every city and village is also a business. America's god is profit, wealth and power. Impact the bottom line of a business and you will get that business' attention. Yes, I am suggesting that we turn the tables on America and use the same strategy this nation uses when other nations refuse to comply with it's wishes - boycott and trade embargo.

    BOYCOTT BLACK FRIDAY AND DENY ALL OTHER UNNECESSARY PURCHASES
    Since it has become quite clear that American businesses are more concerned about “profit over people” and protecting “things over “the youth”, my family and I are officially declaring a boycott on Black Friday and all other unnecessary purchases promoted by an American economic system designed to exploit and take advantage of poor whites, blacks and other minorities.
    The erosion of civil and human rights, the broken American educational system, the school to prison pipeline, the tacit support and approval of police gunning down unarmed black men and the governments lies, deceit and promotion of constant war are no longer acceptable or tolerable by my family.
    All of these developments have caused us, as a family, to decide to stop purchasing anything and everything we do not absolutely need. We have also made a conscious decision to patronize black businesses whenever and wherever we can, in an effort to re-build a black economic base that has been historically and systematically destroyed and/or discouraged, as in the case of the 1921 Tulsa Riots.
    During that riot, on the part of whites against blacks, an entire prosperous community was destroyed, on the ground and in the air, by the state of Oklahoma. To this day, the state, the city and the nation refuse to acknowledge or compensate the black families and businesses that were destroyed. The whole story is on YouTube. Check it out.
    As a family we cannot tell others what to do, but as for me and my household, we will, from this day forward, never buy anything that supports a European holiday, festival or celebration. In addition, we will make every effort to consciously patronize black businesses whenever and wherever we can. We are not anti-white, but are certainly pro-black.
    Unless and until America is prepared to level the entire playing field so that black people have the “equal opportunity” as promised, we withdraw our families financial support of the American economic system and work diligently to create our own black economic system. Remember, it was an economic boycott that dismantled apartheid in South Africa. Let’s dismantle apartheid in America. Otherwise, we continue financing our own destruction.
    This message will be sent to every solicitation we receive online to make sure that American business gets the message. Black Americans control over $1 Trillion dollars and are white America’s Number 1 trading partner. In other words, we put more money into the American economy that the top 10 trading partners America has. If we stand together and withdraw our financial support, America must decide to either make righteous changes or perish.
    The rest is up to you and your families. We have the power. Let’s put up or shut up.

    Wes Bernard and Family

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    Replies
    1. I've always been of the practice of not shopping on Black Friday. I've always thought it was a ridiculous money grab by retailers. I am with you 1000% in supporting Black owned businesses whenever it is possible. Living in Greenville, SC, where a lot of the Black owned business have been driven out of the downtown area due to redevelopment, it takes much effort to do so, as I am sure it does in many other cities where we are not the majority, but it is important that we make the effort! I wish more of our people felt like you, but as we all know, we have the tendency to unite on fronts such as this but as the weeks and months pass by our resolve tends to fade away. I think that this is a significant problem in our society and in our culture. With the number of incidents that have occurred, (from Trayvon Martin, Jordan Davis, Eric Garner, and Michael Brown, just to name a few of the ones that made the headlines) my hope is that we all keep these fresh in our minds and stay resolute in our efforts to remember that we have to fortify and support our own. Thank you for your thoughts and for your admonishment for all of those who really want to make a difference!

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