6/06/2020

Let’s go to the videotape – if we have the courage


Having been born into the white race, the race of privilege in America, it’s easy to misunderstand what it means to be black.  Even with desegregation, the majority of whites and blacks still live in separate worlds divided by wealth, individual biases, and an unforgiving and racially discriminatory justice system, among other things.

Many well-meaning whites simply don’t appreciate the depth of oppression in black communities, but social media affords us an opportunity to see some of the truth. 

Ubiquitous Smartphone images on the Web provide a window into this other world, yet many of my friends don’t want to look.  Maybe it’s because the window also serves as a mirror.  They may occasionally watch a video, but generally speaking, they don’t want to see the plethora of brutal images that conflict with the more sanitized and justifiable world in their mind’s eye. 

The recent, senseless killings of Ahmaud Arbery and George Floyd are eye-opening, but so are the more insidious examples; take for instance, the white, somewhat hysterical woman in Central Park, NY who calls 911 falsely accusing a non-confrontational, black birdwatcher of threatening her life when all he did was ask her to leash her dog.

How can we effectively right wrongs like these without fully appreciating the breadth of humiliation, degradation, and terror facing people of color everyday.  Indifference when the truth is right there on our smart devices is unconscionable and ultimately incites the huge demonstrations and rioting we see today. 

Wake up white America and go to the videotapes – if you have the courage. 

Another compelling video shows a Glynn County Police officer confronting a young, black adult who is parked in plain sight on an open, grassy field at the edge of a Georgia park.  It’s broad daylight and he’s chillin’ on music on his day off.  Although he is doing nothing suspicious, he is subjected to lengthy, accusatory questioning, a body search, and several attempts to inspect his car without cause.  A second officer arrives and without provocation pulls his Taser and shoots the non-threatening man.  The gun malfunctions and the man is ultimately left alone. 

Any white person subjected to such treatment would have been apoplectic and a lawsuit would likely have followed.   But, blacks are not readily afforded such options.  They often get brutalized and in some cases killed if they display any dissatisfaction or resistance, and they don’t have the same avenues of justice we do.  They have little choice but to bite their tongues and swallow their pride.  The harassed man, Ahmaud Arbery (also mentioned earlier), did just that and was thereby granted another two years of life before he was killed while jogging this past February by a retired cop from the same police department and his son.

A common reaction of my white colleagues is that blacks may have cause to be angry, but rioting and looting are not the way to bring about change.

Yet, American history suggests otherwise.  Wasn’t the celebrated Boston Tea Party looting?  A great deal of meaningful social change in America has come as an outgrowth of social upheaval like the Revolutionary and Civil Wars, the Great Depression, and the civil rights and anti-war movements of the 1960’s.  There is fertile ground for promising, social change when virtually every American is unsettled by national events.

When blacks do use peaceful means, white society always finds a way to ignore the message and demonize the messenger.  They say it’s inappropriate to deliver an impassioned speech about injustice while accepting an Academy Award or unpatriotic to kneel during the national anthem at an NFL game.  White America is particularly incensed when the unsavory truth invades their comfortable living rooms and disrupts time-honored, American television traditions.

Colin Kaepernick did what few Americans would do:  He put his lucrative and celebrated professional football career in jeopardy for what he believed in.  And yet few applauded his courage or discussed his cause, instead they spent all their time criticizing his method.  Kaepernick was eventually blacklisted from the NFL and essentially gagged by white society.

How can we then criticize the rioting and looting?  If you gag the oppressed too long with apathy, violence will erupt.  Oppressed people need to be heard.