Let’s change it.
Systemic racism can be difficult to detect and destroy,
because it is so insidious. People can
say things without thinking, but they say them because the words seem to make
them sound like caring, concerned folks.
The words protect them from being seen as callous, compassionless
people. Good people say these things,
but if they think about the meaning of the words, and apply logic and common
sense, they can see what is hiding underneath those words.
I was having a phone conversation with a friend along the
lines of my commentary last week, “Work for white people,” when she said that she thought black people
had some work to do, too, because “most black people who are killed are killed
by other black people.” Bingo! There are
some of those words covering up hidden, systemic racism.
Think about it. Most
white people are killed by other white people because most people who are
killed are killed by someone they know.
Why apply this statement to just one group of people when it is true of
every group? It makes no sense. It is not logical.
According
to the Washington Post, in 2014, Rudolph Giuliani complained about the
focus on black people being killed by police, saying that he found it “very
disappointing that we are not discussing the fact that 93 percent of blacks are
killed by other blacks." Of course,
most murder and homicide victims were
killed by someone they knew! But the
percentage of black people who are killed by police is much higher than the
percent of black people in the population.
Giuliani was trying to change the subject, to steer away from the disturbing
truth, by saying words that he hoped would make him sound as if he were truly
concerned about black lives.
Let’s get back to the real topic. Philip Bump at the Washington Post wrote, “Our
database of police shootings indicates that there were 55 incidents in which
police shot and killed unarmed individuals in 2019. Twenty-five were white and
14 black. As we’ve reported, that’s not representative of the population of the
United States. Black Americans are more likely to be shot and killed by police when
unarmed than are whites.”
That must change. I
think it can and will change when white people stand up and demand that
policies and procedures be changed.
Choke holds should be an absolute last resort in restraining people. Unarmed people should not be shot by
police. Community policing should be
used everywhere, not just in some places.
It is a strategy in which police work closely with citizens in the
community to solve problems, allowing police to feel that people trust and
support them, and allowing people to feel that police support and protect them.
But as things stand now, black men in this country cannot
allow themselves to believe that all police will support and protect them, no
matter who they are. That must change,
and all people must work for that change.
So, white people, the next time you hear a white person
change the subject to black-on-black crime, throw out that red herring and talk
about changing the system so that black rights are supported as much as white
rights, so that black mothers do not need to be fearful every time their sons
go outside, so that black men do not have to be wary every time a police
officer approaches, so that black shoppers do not feel that they are being
watched and scrutinized more than white shoppers . . . the list goes on and
on. You know what I’m talking about.
Let’s talk about it, and let’s change it.
Listening to my black nephew go over what he taught his children about being pulled over made me think again about how to survive a pull over....windows down....hands on dash...keys in view on dash....follow any & all instructions...................
ReplyDelete..This also is true for EVERYONE.....
..a lawful order MUST be obeyed....if there is a problem, leave it to the attorneys..