Mar 29, 2012 - Issue 465 |
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Same Actors, Different
Stage
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I’d
like to ignore this one, act like it never happened… but it did… a murder at the
hands of the self-righteous. Facts, unfounded.
Another young brother, dead. Case closed. But then again, we
cannot allow the same production to speak to how this story ends… for
Trayvon Martin’s sake, as well as In late February (Black History Month), a young Black man, Trayvon Martin, was shot and killed by a Hispanic white male, George Zimmerman. So the facts played out as yet another sad and unjust tragedy in the legacy of American criminal justice - or injustice as it stands. You see, the same actors - young Black man accused of being “the” fully loaded fireman and a dismissive policing agency - bring this production to life. But once again, this is not an act, this is real life. The young Black male always ends up the one dead, and the conservative commentators act as if whites are the victims. The shooter, Zimmerman, lied to local police investigating the incident - and they took his word for it. No background check. No alcohol sobriety tests (on the shooter), but the police did conduct drug tests on the corpse of Trayvon Martin! What part of justice is that? It’s the routine part of justice that causes Blacks to distrust any form of policing and bureaucratic investigation. Martin
has been dead since February 26th, but after Why does it take being affronted (Black victims) and outed (white-run investigative agencies) before the latter respects due process rights and laws. Shouldn’t this be police protocol? Of
course, it should, but as outlined in my forthcoming book, As a Condition
of Your Freedom, With this country’s sordid history of racial injustice, elected officials continue to devise ways and means to undermine those strides for equality under the law. From Kentucky Republican Senator Rand Paul’s call for repeal of the 1964 Civil Rights Act to the current challenge to the federal Affirmative Action law (that the U.S. Supreme Court will hear this Fall 2012), any exertion by Blacks to make their offenders accountable is portrayed as a criminal act. I’m saying “no more;” these maneuvers to shirk accountability must stop A
former slave state, We should also be aware that the shooter, George Zimmerman, isn’t the only one who should be arrested, prosecuted, convicted and imprisoned. The lawmakers who passed the “Stand Your Ground” law are just as guilty - if guilty only of escalating an already unstable racial dynamic in the constituent communities they represent. The
“Stand Your Ground” law says a person who feels threatened has no duty
to retreat and, in return, may respond with force - deadly force. You
see, Zimmerman was empowered by the law, even more than by the firearm.
It appears that “law-abiding” white males have a greater propensity for
causing mayhem and carnage than other demographic groups of the American
populace. In early March, two people were shot dead at a psychiatric clinic
in A
more recent incident is that of an Iraqi mother of five, fatally beaten
in her We
stand on the sidelines as 12 states continue on paths to allowing their
residents to own handguns - with NO permits! What I know is that thousands
of Black males, warehoused in prisons across It is time, due season, for us to get off the sidelines, and get busy - busy un-electing irresponsible lawmakers who kowtow to the lobbying money of the National Rifle Association (NRA) and the Gun Owners of America (GOA). The attack on Black men is prevalent, present and active. I’ve documented far too many cases to count of race-based injustice (see www.stopattackingblackmen.com). (We know documentation doesn’t stop murderers from murdering.) We must “out” the bad guys - including police departments that undermine due process and rule of law. We must take to the streets and demand justice. We must dispel our apathy of the electoral process, if we are to thrive in this country. Notice, I did not say live, survive, or definitely did I not say walk on egg shells. Our
ancestors paid a heavy price for a stake in the American process. We cannot
squander centuries of blood, sweat and tears, hoping for violent men to
become peaceable. The BlackCommentator.com
Columnist, Perry
Redd, is the former Executive Director of
the workers rights advocacy, Sincere Seven, and author of the on-line
commentary, “The
Other Side of the Tracks.” He is the host of the internet-based talk
radio show, Socially
Speaking in
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