I
can’t even count the number of times I’ve written about
men, who look like me, unjustly being gunned down by police…and
it’s a mentally fatiguing exercise in what sometimes feels like
futility. Each time I write, the words I choose re-appear—in
the same sequence, in the same context—with the same theme and
the same ending. This commentary though…has a different
ending. In a chicken-coming-home-to-roost ending, the revolt is
here. Now what after my “I-told-you-so” moment?
No,
I am not one to exploit tragic events to highlight my prognosticator
skill. Though I predicted the eventuality of blowback against the
police, I won’t claim to be prescient. This week, technology
saved the day, if not a life. Two Black men (and maybe more) were
shot dead by white, American police—and thanks to social media,
the incidents were memorialized and shared with the world. I wonder
when the world will take notice of our—Black Americans—longtime
outrage and outcry at the sustained injustice of extra-judicial
killings of Black human beings? If not now, then when?
The
killing of 32-year old Black male Philando Castile after a traffic
stop last Wednesday prompted Minnesota Governor Mark Dayton to
immediately order a state investigation. What it failed to prompt
was an arrest. Castile’s death occurred within a day of police
fatally shooting 37-year old Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge. Sterling
was killed during an interaction with two white police officers. His
death—murder—was captured on cellphone video that
triggered protests and an outcry. Likewise, Castile’s murder
was captured live on
social media. The Washington Post reported that
Castile was the 123rd Black American shot and killed by police so far
in 2016, that out of a total 560 police killings.
Guess
what? An investigation is now under way in the Castile case too. Are
you seeing a familiar pattern? What’s also familiar is that
the investigations usually lead to no charges against the police.
Instead, the media covers ad naseum the police unions that defend
illicit, if not illegal, police conduct. It doesn’t help that
once again, these police officers are white. That reality only
awakens this country’s “Race Monster,” a monster so
formidable that people make an end-run around it, scurrying for cover
as though it were Godzilla on Tokyo.
We’ve
entered the media phase of unearthing the Sterling’s and
Castile’s past legal, criminal and employment woes and
encounters, rather than address the acts of police needlessly pulling
a weapon on a Black man during an initially routine encounter.
Attacking the victim is what the police do.
Think about it: Hundreds of millions of us in America walk around
without a gun. Some of us even engage in confrontations with other
people—threatening or non-threatening—and choose not
to introduce a gun into the incident. Most of us walk away. With
these two shootings, what you likely didn’t see coming (and
here’s the I-told-you-so eventuality) was a Black male well
armed and fired up, ready to fire on police. Unthinkable, huh?
Officials
have identified 25-year old Army veteran Micah Johnson as the gunman
who stood atop a building and shot 12 Dallas police officers, killing
five. It appears that he acted alone. Neighbors of the home he
shared with his mother expressed shock on Friday over the actions of
the “normal, good kid” they knew. You have to think
deeply on the fact that he was trained to kill by the best—the
US Military.
It’s
been reported that Johnson was killed by a police-controlled robot
bomb following a standoff with law enforcement. When do US police
forces use robot bombs to kill suspects? The tactic of leveling a
bomb to halt
negotiations and standoff with police was news
to me.
Oh,
Johnson was the first recipient
of the police’s new tool in its crime-fighting arsenal; Johnson
was the proverbial canary in the coalmine. A bomb?…Really?
I’ve come to notice that Blacks are always making historical
Firsts in negative, life threatening events!
Johnson: killed by robot? How many white people have—and in
the foreseeable future—will share that dubious distinction?
The
killing of Black men by white police (or police, period) is a
multi-layered problem of a critical degree. The clear
differentiation in the use of force against Blacks and whites in
America is an issue; an issue of disparity, an issue of inequality,
an issue of injustice. Look, if this country didn’t tout
itself as moral or just or free, then I wouldn’t let our
justice system bring perpetrators to justice. However, America does
tout its moral superiority at home and abroad.
The
fact that whites claim that they’re aware—while some
diminish the existence— of tension-filled interactions with
Blacks is another issue. The fact that police unions fight
tooth-to-nail to avoid accountability is another issue. The fact that
police rank and file remain silent and are therefore, silent partners
in police brutality and illegalities is another issue. And, finally,
the fact that America refuses to utter the G-word as the visceral,
gut-wrenching issue is the
issue. Yes, guns are THE
issue.
Nothing
says power and control louder than the firearm. Once a gun is
introduced into the picture, the picture is altered dramatically.
Gun proponents never want to admit the role of guns in mass killings
or any fatal shooting, unless it’s in the context of firearms
for protection. Recent shootings, including the Orland Club massacre
that killed 49 people, have yet to bring us to a point of honest
admission: Guns are the common denominator in these tragedies.
Eliminate the guns and you eliminate a majority of threats and
murders. Just that simple…
What’s
not ironic is that police have described Micah Johnson (yes, he had a
biblical name, so don’t even bring in Christianity) as a
“loner” and said that he told negotiators he was not
affiliated with any groups. The Dallas Police Chief said, “The
suspect said he was upset at white people. The suspect stated he
wanted to kill white people, especially white officers.” I
posit that Johnson, a Black man, is not, nor will he be the last
person to invoke such sentiment.
Let’s
go back to police murders of Back men. The Castile murder was the
second high-profile police killing of a Black man in Minnesota in
seven months. Two Minneapolis police officers last November 2015 shot
and killed 24-year-old Jamar Clark in a struggle that started when
they were called to assist an ambulance crew that was helping Clark's
girlfriend. What we know is that numerous eyewitnesses said with
certainty that Clark was handcuffed when the police shot him, yet the
“investigation” disregarded their statements and as usual
accepted without question the police officers’ versions of the
event. This predictable scenario reeks of pure, unadulterated
injustice. I know because police lied in my 2008 trial, and I know
that eventually the victims of injustice will not continue to remain
calm. So, here we are. I told you so!
What
lessons do we learn here? Obviously, none. However, the obvious
lesson for police should be: STOP KILLING BLACK PEOPLE! Why is
that too much to ask? For some Blacks, such as the
Black Live Matter (BLM) movement, they’re
tired of asking; they’re demanding that the power elite in this
country value Black lives. For “lone wolfs” like Johnson,
he too demanded respect for Black lives, but he spoke
with in a mentally unhealthy, unwise and fatalistic voice.
Both
factions—BLM and Johnson—statements speak for a
population (that President Obama described as a bunch)
of Americans who walk daily in the conflicted
state of hope and fear, angst and anxiety. It isn’t right. It
isn’t fair, but I’ve said before on “The
Other Side of the Tracks” I told you a
long time ago that retaliatory murders of police would be
inevitable…that they would be an eventuality if elected
leaders continued to disregard the pleas of Black America. I told you
so.
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