Being youthful, black and male should not be a crime, but Freddie
Gray’s death is Baltimore is the latest in a string of police assaults on unarmed
African American men. Before that, just
in the last few months, there was Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, Eric
Garner in New York, Dontre Hamilton in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, John Crawford in
Dayton, Ohio, Ezell Ford in Florence, California, Dante Parker in Victorville,
California, Akai Gurley in Brooklyn, NY, Tamir Rice in Cleveland, Ohio, Rumain
Brisban in Phoenix, Arizona, Jerame Reid in New Jersey, Tony Robinson in
Madison, Wisconsin, and the list goes
on. There is a pattern here that black
people have always known about but that now even white folks are beginning to see. Young black men are being profiled, harassed,
victimized and all too often murdered by the police who are supposed to protect
the public and dispense equal justice to all.
What is the
remedy? Body cameras on cops are a good
idea. Here are some other initiatives
that make sense:
- · establishing special prosecutors whose sole job would be investigating police misconduct (ending the chummy relationship between law enforcement and District Attorneys)
- · hiring more women on the police force (females tend to be better at negotiation and de-escalating confrontations that men)
- · de-militarizing departments that have become tooled up with tanks, drones and wartime technology
- · providing better training to enable police to deal with psychiatric issues as illness rather than criminal offense.
First and
foremost, we must collectively admit that racism is a societal problem. We cannot just blame the police without also
shouldering a portion of the responsibility for overcoming the legacy of discrimination
that continues to make inequality the norm in our country. Maintaining “law and order” must do more than
perpetuate a system that distributes wealth, rank and privilege to those
already connected to the echelons of power and opportunity. It is up to each of
us to create a future where every child has an equal chance in life. Until then, we will get the police we
deserve.
1 comment:
It isn't just the young. Kenneth Chamberlain Sr., an elderly vet. was killed in his own home when his alarm bracelet accidentally called for help. The police can pretty much kill any ordinary person with impunity, and they do. The problem is the impunity first, but second that being poor and black makes you statistically more likely to be the object of police attention. We need to change the police, but also a society that puts more effort into policing the poor and the mentally ill than in helping them.
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