These are difficult times.
Not only are we deep into efforts to contain and eradicate Covid-19
and the economic damage that attends these efforts, but now we are also experiencing
an unexpected level of civil unrest in our cities. The issue is
all-too-familiar: the death of a yet another black man, George Floyd, at the
hands of white police officers.
I am old enough to have seen many events like this before.
After each killing, after grieving the senseless loss of a particular life,
after mourning over the cloud that settles again over the black community, I
hope and pray that things will be different now, that the people who need to
understand and change will understand and
change.
From where I watch this national trauma unfold, it seems
obvious that the rash of demonstrations spurred by this police killing are not
like demonstrations I have seen before. Yes, they were sparked by the
senseless, unnecessary, and damnable act itself; and, yes, protest against
racism is the central element of all the demonstrations.
But there are enormous differences too. I find myself
reminded over and over of the “police riots” of 1968 in Chicago at the
Democratic National Convention. Those clashes between Chicago Police and
protesters were as much about the exclusion of whole categories of citizens
from the political process as they were about opposition to the Vietnam War or
in support of the Civil Rights movement.
The current demonstrations and protests – and, yes, the
looting and burning too – have quickly absorbed many issues in addition to
Floyd’s killing. Many of these “other issues” are local grievances regarding
official injustice. This fact alone should tell us something about what is
really going on.
Racism sparked by Floyd’s killing is at the heart of these
demonstrations, but they are also clearly about the conditions that made his
death a common occurrence. The protests are about the political order that promotes
and tolerates use of deadly force. What we used to call “the Establishment” is
not sufficiently responsive to the needs of citizens.
While one would expect the black community to come out in
protest, and it has, we are also seeing many white folks coming out in protest.
And these protests are happening around the world, not just in American cities
with our history of racial violence and injustice. This phenomenon, too, would
affirm that the concerns of the protesters are global, that they are
multi-generational and multi-racial. That protests have erupted in cities
around the world suggests that the world is watching and that they want us to be better than the
killings would indicate we are.
Probably the biggest difference now from racial
demonstrations and protests earlier in my life-time, say in the 1960s, is the
toxic atmosphere at the top of our government that seems to encourage
aggressive police action. I am speaking of the President and his self-serving
drive to un-make the necessary functioning of a government.
It is not necessary to detail this point about the
President. I will simply note that the racist nature of this administration is
embodied in its “Make America Great Again” slogan. If you are African American,
Asian American, Hispanic American or any other “non-white” resident, what “great”
era would you like to see recreated? What era is the slogan referring to? Prior
to 2016, what would that era of former “greatness” be like for you?
A second significant difference between what I view on the
streets now from the 1960s is me. Before beginning college in 1967, I knew
exactly one African-American, a classmate whom I did not know well. And I knew
no Asians. Zero. Today I know and have worked with many. Having friends in the
black, brown, and Asian communities by itself has revolutionized my
understanding of racism and its pernicious effects.
If we are going to see serious improvement in race relations,
these calls for systemic change need to be taken seriously. The changes will
have to begin with the tangible step of voting. Citizens of all ages must make
voting a top priority. And as much as we need change at the top, we must also
take seriously local elections that affect city, county, state, and
congressional offices as well.
These down ballot races are crucially part of the system
that needs to be changed. If they are not taken seriously, the groundswell of multi-racial
support for meaningful change will find itself choked out.
And anything short of systemic change will amount to denial of justice for
George Floyd.
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