A
population driven mad by months of relentless anxiety. Isolation. Job
loss. Rumor. Fear. Divisiveness.
A
cop.
And
a black man passing counterfeit bills.
It
shouldn't have gone this far. But it did.
I
am aware that black people do not trust law enforcement to the
degree that white people do. And
yet, I find myself still needing to ask this question: why do so many
black men and women resist police? Why do so many fight law
enforcement every step of the way in each and every encounter?
Has
no one ever told you that when you come across an agitated dog the
worst thing you can do is run? That this is only excites the dog's
chase instinct and increases the likelihood that you will know what
it's like to have a portion of your anatomy inside a dog's mouth?
I
often wonder if there's a cause-and-effect problem at work here. Do
black people resist because they fear the worst in any encounter with police? Or do cops get tough with blacks because they
resist so frequently?
I
have had encounters with police, too. And let me make this clear: I
don't harbor unconditional love for law enforcement. They are a
necessary evil. But if you're smart, you chill. You put a lid on it.
You clench.
Believe it or not, you're in control. You can either agitate the police or you can de-escalate the situation.
Believe it or not, you're in control. You can either agitate the police or you can de-escalate the situation.
For
all police know, you're Crazy Luther. And you've murdered seventeen
people and cooked 'em over a spit by the railroad tracks.
Show
them your ID. Tell them what you're doing in this part of town.
Again, chill. The cops are only doing their job. You want to
sleep in your own bed tonight, right?
Of
course, if you are Crazy Luther, you won't see this as the
best way forward. And your actions will scream “Guilty!” to the
police. They will react in kind.
The snippets of video I've seen indicate that prior to being put on the pavement, George Floyd was combative. He provoked law
enforcement's chase reflex to find, subdue and arrest the bad guy.
Before
you nominate me for an honorary membership in the Klu Klux Klan, let
me continue.
Derek
Chauvin was a cop. And like
the rest of us, he was probably feeling pretty pent-up himself.
We
Americans react very poorly when we are told we can't do something. It
is (or was) Derek Chauvin's job to keep us on the straight
and narrow.
As
a cop, he is lied to regularly. Every person he detains is innocent.
Every person he restrains can't breathe.
George
Floyd was just another belligerent black guy trying to manipulate him
and the circumstances of his detention. What reason did Chauvin have
to believe that Floyd truly couldn't breathe after hearing “Wolf!”
so very many times before?
Chauvin's
fatal error was in not realizing that Floyd couldn't breathe.
That Floyd's pleas were genuine. The hardened cop kept his knee on
Floyd's neck for upwards of eight minutes. Deprived of oxygen, Floyd
died.
We
have here the intersection of massive stereotyping. Prejudice.
Floyd's assumption that as a black man he would only receive the
worst from police and not be given the slightest opportunity to prove
otherwise.
And
Chauvin's assumption that Floyd was lying. And that since he
continued to resist, he required severe tactics
meant to lock-down his detention.
It
is a book of sorrow.
Stir in an agitated population rife with cabin fever and anxiety and
looking for something, anything to take the edge off and along
comes a made-to-order disaster.
Yes,
the death of George Floyd was cause for a civil rights demonstration.
And
it worked. All involved have been fired from the Minneapolis Police
Department. The lead culprit has been arrested and is facing second-degree murder charges. Let's hope the ensuing trial doesn't
turn into the farce a similar trial did here in Chicago.
Okay.
So the object of your derision is in jail. You got what you wanted.
Go home.
But you couldn't. And didn't.
Too
often, a demonstration is an excuse to burn stuff and break windows.
And if the broken window happens to be at a department store, that
entitles you to a free pasta maker. Or sheets. Or a case of
giardiniera.
Whatever you can get your hands on.
I
used to work in downtown Chicago. And I happened to be returning to
work after lunch when the news broke that Harold Washington
(Chicago's first black mayor) had died.
Let
me add he wasn't hung from a tree by guys in white robes. The cause
of death was a heart attack.
Nevertheless,
a small-scale riot broke out. Windows were smashed. Cars were
stopped. Windows and sheet metal were banged on. A liquor store's
windows were shattered. Bottles were snatched.
I
watched in disbelief.
This
wasn't an expression of grief. It was an excuse to act like a shit
and get free stuff.
So
I find myself in the awkward position of kinda sorta agreeing with
(gulp) Donald Trump's tweet. Demonstrating doesn't mean complimentary
consumer goods. Ever. I feel no empathy for those exploiting this event to burn and loot.
But
whatever our view of Trump, we are a nation riled-up by him. He
thrives on that. Distraction. Sleights of hand. Provocation. Feints. Loud voices.
Anger. Chaos.
It
is what he does best.
Ensconced in the hot house bubble of a pandemic, we are even more susceptible
to him. And while we're screaming at each other, Trump wants to forbid
the government from issuing economic reports until after the
election. He is issuing executive orders prohibiting social media from
fact-checking him.
“We're
here today to defend free speech from one of the gravest dangers it
has faced in American history” he said last week without a trace of
irony. Even as he demands his lies go unchecked and his failures as a
president stay hidden and unreported.
Toxicity
has never been so transparent.
If you're white, you need to acknowledge something: if America weren't a sexist and racist nation, Donald Trump would not be president. He....this....is the price of our hatred. Our prejudice.
If you're white, you need to acknowledge something: if America weren't a sexist and racist nation, Donald Trump would not be president. He....this....is the price of our hatred. Our prejudice.
We
are a nation in desperate need of healing. Two groups of extremists
who need to back away from the edges.
But
how do we do this? Where do we begin?
Maturing
would be a good start. You know, acting like grown-ups. Adulting. Realizing
that the definition of 'tyranny' so many of us are throwing around is
the equivalent of a tween calling his parents 'fascists' after their
smartphone privileges have been revoked for a weekend.
Oh
that we should ever know real, honest-to-God tyranny.
It's easy to hate people you don't know. It's even easier to reduce them to
one-dimensional caricatures. Like I do with conservatives and folks who
belong to the NRA.
Which
is why I advocate for leaving our hyper-demographic social media
bubbles. Engaging with whomever we define as the enemy. Get to know them. And find
another way forward.
Because
this isn't working. In fact, it will likely destroy us.
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