“Most
middle-class whites have no idea what it feels like to be subjected
to police who are routinely suspicious, rude, belligerent, and
brutal.”
– Dr. Benjamin Spock
When whites frame the need
for action against racist police brutality as a “black problem,”
they departmentalize the issue. By that, I mean they neatly pack it
into a box labeled “Minority Concerns” because they see no direct
familiarity with mistreatment by enforcement. Although many are
sympathetic to the plight of blacks, they view the police as
respected authorities “just doing a tough job.” In essence, many
whites are completely indifferent.
Samantha Cocco, current
women's coordinator for the Akron Chapter of the Ignatian
Spirituality Project and research administrator for the Begun Center
for Violence Prevention Research and Education at Case Western
Reserve University, explains a typical white view …
“As white people, we
are tired of hearing about it because it doesn’t affect us. Because
we know we can commit a petty crime and not wonder if we’ll make it
out of our arrests alive. Because we know we can go jogging and come
home alive. Because we can lay down for a nap and not worry about
never waking up again. Because our kids can play with toy guns.
Because we know we don’t pose a threat to authority figures with
tasers and nightsticks and guns for the simple fact of our skin color
and what it represents.
“But we are nowhere
near as tired as Black people and POC. Black folks are tired because
they’re living it, every day. They’re tired of having a good day
until they open their phone or computer and see the news that another
brother or sister has been unjustly murdered.”
(Samantha
Cocco. “Fellow White People, About Your Inherent Racism.”
Ignatian
Solidarity Network. May 29, 2020)
How about police attitudes
toward the issue? The results are hardly surprising.
Pew Research Center
conducted an extensive survey of nearly 8,000 sworn police officers
across the country in 2016. In that survey, 67 percent of officers
said they thought the deaths of black people in encounters with the
police were isolated incidents, compared with 31 percent who said
those deaths were part of a broader pattern.
Just 35 percent of
officers in that 2016 survey said they thought protests against the
killings of black Americans were motivated at least in part by a
“genuine desire to hold officers accountable” for their actions.
In separate questions, almost all officers (92 percent) said that
these protests reflected at least some long-standing bias against the
police, and 86 percent said that the attention surrounding
high-profile incidents of police killings of black men and the
resulting protests has made their jobs harder.
Dr. Earl Smith, an adjunct
professor of sociology at George Mason University, says people can
become annoyed if one makes statements asserting a disconnect between
police and the Black community, “but I’m thinking, ‘Who are you
trying to kid? In the place that I grew up (Long Island, New York)
police routinely beat up young Black males.”
In truth, the relationship
between African-American – black people – and police has always
been contentious. Blacks have a historical fear of authorities with
good reason, as local governments often looked the other way as black
citizens were terrorized. That same history reeks of no
accountability for white police officers who attack black citizens.
And, make no mistake, the
blame for lack of action against violence can be shared. In addition
to it being a race issue, police violence is a class issue within the
black community itself. Dr. Ray Von Robertson, an associate professor
of criminal justice at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, says
middle-class blacks want to dissociate from the problem, believing a
respectability doctrine – dressing well, being well educated and
well spoken, avoiding the general appearance of trouble – will
shield them from any conflicts with the police. Recent headlines,
however, have shown police aggression directed toward those who would
not necessarily have been previously thought to be likely to end up
in conflicts with police.
Racist police brutality is
not just a black problem, it is an American problem that must be
faced by all U.S. citizens – those in the majority and those in the
minority. The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights reports …
“Accurate and
comprehensive data regarding police uses of force is generally not
available to police departments or the American public. No
comprehensive national database exists that captures rates of police
use of force.
“The best available
evidence reflects high rates of use of force nationally, and
increased likelihood of police use of force against people of color,
people with disabilities, LGBT people, people with mental health
concerns, people with low incomes, and those at the intersections of
these groups.
“Lack of training and
lack of funding for training leave officers and the public at risk.
Critical training areas include tactical training, de-escalation
techniques, understanding cultural differences and anti-bias
mechanisms, as well as strategies for encounters with individuals
with physical and mental disabilities.
“Repeated and highly
publicized incidents of police use of force against persons of color
and people with disabilities, combined with a lack of accurate data,
lack of transparency about policies and practices in place governing
use of force, and lack of accountability for noncompliance foster a
perception that police use of force in communities of color and the
disability community is unchecked, unlawful, and unsafe.”
(Catherine E. Lhamon,
Chair. “Police Use of Force: An Examination of Modern Policing
Practices.” U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. 2018.)
The demonstrators who have
taken to the streets in response to the killing of George Floyd by
Minneapolis police officers are protesting against police violence
and the inequities of the criminal justice system, which call into
question the role and neutrality of the law enforcement personnel who
patrol those streets. Antiracism is about doing and not just knowing.
That means taking on the issue of racism and oppression as your own
issue even if you’ll never truly understand the damage that it
does.
White supremacy – white
nationalism – uses whites as racial dividers. This nationalism
espouses the belief that white people are a dominant race and seeks
to develop and maintain a white racial and national identity.
Instead of entertaining
ideas of white pride, we should work to defeat inequality and
injustice in family systems, in communities, in schools, and in
police departments. We should constantly be asking ourselves what we
can do as white people to break those systems down and to evolve and
learn … and, of course, how to be responsive in our own white
skins.
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