I
am always worried to the point of nail-biting when my spouse leaves
in the morning for Boston Medical Center if she’ll return home
to me, because she’s always stopped by the Cambridge or Boston
police. They don’t see Dr. Thea James. Her gender
non-conforming appearance and driving a brand new BMW, that many cops
derisively dub as a “Black Man’s Wagon,” makes her
a constant target of suspicion. When gender
identity and sexual orientation come into play, the treatment by
police can be harsher. And when the police realized my spouse is a
woman, and a lesbian one at that, their unbridled homophobia
surfaces.
Always
nagging my spouse about being safe, she told me - with the recently
killings of Alton Sterling, Philander Castile and five Dallas police
officers -that she worries about me, too. She flatly stated she sees
Sandra Bland in me, the African American women pulled
over for a minor traffic violation on July 10, 2015 by a state
trooper and three days later found hung in her jail cell. African
American women combating police harassment is an ongoing struggle,
too.
A
gay Washington Post columnist asked me what is it that white
LGBT people don’t get about the Black Lives Matters movement as
well as racism within the community. I told him “This is a time
when we need the community front and center in this struggle for both
our survival and change, because their African-American LGBTQ
brothers and sisters stood by you with marriage equality and other
issues. We need now you front and center because we are hurting.”
But
the queer politics of discussing race in the LGBTQ community is as
unresolved among us as in the dominant culture. However, unlike the
larger dominate culture white LGBTQs can suggest and give advice to
communities of color from their own experiences of abuse by law
enforcement officers, including discrimination, harassment,
profiling, entrapment, and victimization that was often was ignored
- and all based on our actual or perceived sexual orientations and
gender identities.
The
treatment African Americans are experiencing at the hands of some
police officers who swore to protect but yet some have become both
verbal and physical assailants is neither news nor new to LGBTQ
communities.
Long
before the Stonewall Riots of 1969 liquor licensing laws were used to
raid establishments and bars patronized by LGBTQ people. Bar raids
continue to target LGBTQ people, especially in the South where many
of the southern states still vehemently oppose
“Obergefell v. Hodges,” the historic U.S. Supreme Court
ruling that legalized same-sex marriage in all 50 states.
Boston
which is internationally known as one of the most LGBTQ-friendly
spots on the globe continues to have its own police problem with our
community. In 2013, the Boston Police Department settled a case
against them with a transgender woman. The women was arrested for
using the women’s lavatory at the homeless shelter she was
staying at. When taken to the police station the woman proved her
legal grievance “that the officers forced her to remove her
shirt and bra and jump up and down to humiliate and laugh at her.”
Black
Lives Matter (BLM) movement is our present day Stonewall. It’s
a nationwide network of local state chapters that operate
independently. As an ideology and movement to cease state sanction
killing of African American males, BLM started as a call to action
after 17 year old Trayvon Martin’s killer was acquitted of all
charges based on Florida’s “Stand Your Ground” Law.
Founded by three African American straight and queer sisters BLM’s
ideals- to address poverty, homelessness,
unemployment, gentrification, and community policing that intersect
with systemic racism. - is a now a global cause with
solidarity protest in places like Canada, Germany, Britain and the
Netherlands, to name a few.
But
BLM continues to receive harsh criticism whenever riots break out or
killings occur like the recent one with the lone and derange Dallas
sniper. These incidents exploit motives which are not only
antithetical to the movement but also undermines BLM’s intent
to exercise their First Amendment right to peacefully assembly.
Of
all people to speak out on race and the recent racial violence
between African American community and law enforcement officers in
this country former House Speaker Newt
Gingrich (R-GA) has.
“It
took me a long time, and a number of people talking to me through the
years, to get a sense of this: If you are a normal, white American,
the truth is you don't understand being black in America and you
instinctively under-estimate the level of discrimination and the
level of additional risk,” Gingrich stated during a CNN
interview.
When
the dominant white culture doesn’t see and hear
African-American voices concerning our pains, fears, and
vulnerabilities our humanity is distorted and made invisible through
a prism of racist, LGBTQ and sexist stereotypes. So, too, is our
suffering.
I’m
calling on my white LGBTQ brothers and sisters for help because my
spouse and I don’t know where our Black
bodies are safe in America.
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