Following
Horrific Violence, Something More is Required of Us
We need a profound shift in our collective
consciousness in order to challenge an entrenched
system of racial and social control -- and build a
new America.
By Michelle Alexander
Michelle
Alexander first shared this post on
her Facebook page.
July 11,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Bill
Moyers"
- I
have struggled to find words to express what I
thought and felt as I watched the videos of
Alton Sterling and Philando Castile being killed
by the police. Thursday night, I wanted to say
something that hasn’t been said a hundred times
before. It finally dawned on me that there is
nothing to say that hasn’t been said before. As I
was preparing to write about the oldness of all of
this, and share some wisdom passed down from
struggles of earlier eras, I heard on the news that
11 officers had been shot in Dallas, several killed
from sniper fire. My fingers froze on the keys. I
could not bring myself to recycle old truths.
Something more is required. But what?
I think we
all know, deep down, that something more is required
of us now. This truth is difficult to face because
it’s inconvenient and deeply unsettling. And yet
silence isn’t an option. On any given day, there’s
always something I’d rather be doing than facing the
ugly, racist underbelly of America. I know that I am
not alone. But I also know that the families of the
slain officers, and the families of all those who
have been killed by the police, would rather not be
attending funerals. And I’m sure that many who
refused to ride segregated buses in Montgomery after
Rosa Parks stood her ground wished they could’ve
taken the bus, rather than walk miles in protest,
day after day, for a whole year. But they knew they
had to walk. If change was ever going to come, they
were going to have to walk. And so do we.
What it
means to walk today will be different for different
people and different groups and in different places.
I am asking myself what I need to do in the months
and years to come to walk my walk with greater
courage. It’s a question that requires some time and
reflection. I hope it’s a question we are all asking
ourselves.
In recent
years, I have come to believe that truly
transformative change depends more on thoughtful
creation of new ways of being than reflexive
reactions to the old. What is happening now is very,
very old. We have some habits of responding to this
familiar pain and trauma that are not serving us
well. In many respects it’s amazing that we endure
at all. I am inspired again and again by so much of
the beautiful, brilliant and daring activism that is
unfolding all over the country. Yet I also know that
more is required than purely reactive protest and
politics. A profound shift in our collective
consciousness must occur, a shift that makes
possible a new America.
I know many
people believe that our criminal justice system can
be “fixed” by smart people and smart policies.
President Obama seems to think this way. He
suggested yesterday that police-community relations
can be improved meaningfully by a task force he
created last year. Yes, a task force. I used to
think like that. I don’t anymore. I no longer
believe that we can “fix” the police, as though the
police are anything other than a mirror reflecting
back to us the true nature of our democracy. We
cannot “fix” the police without a revolution of
values and radical change to the basic structure of
our society. Of course important policy changes can
and should be made to improve police practices. But
if we’re serious about having peace officers —
rather than a domestic military at war with its own
people — we’re going to have to get honest with
ourselves about who our democracy actually serves
and protects.
Consider
this: Philando Castile
had been stopped 31 times and charged with more
than 60 minor violations — resulting in thousands of
dollars in fines — before his last, fatal encounter
with the police.
Alton
Sterling was arrested because he was hustling,
selling CDs to get by. He was unable to work in the
legal economy due to his felony record. His act of
survival was treated by the police as a major crime,
apparently punishable by death.
How many
people on Wall Street have been arrested for their
crimes large and small — crimes of greed and fraud
that nearly bankrupted the global economy and
destroyed the futures of millions of families? How
many politicians have been prosecuted for taking
millions of dollars from private prisons, prison
guard unions, pharmaceutical companies, oil
companies, tobacco companies, the NRA and Wall
Street banks and doing their bidding for them —
killing us softly? Oh, that’s right, taking millions
from those folks isn’t even a crime. Democrats and
Republicans do it every day. Our entire political
system is financed by wealthy private interests
buying politicians and making sure the rules are
written in their favor. But selling CDs or loose
cigarettes? In America, that’s treated as a serious
crime, especially if you’re black. For that act of
survival, you can be wrestled to the ground and
choked to death or shot at point blank range. Our
entire system of government is designed to protect
and serve the interests of the most powerful, while
punishing, controlling and exploiting the least
advantaged.
This is not
hyperbole. And this is not new. What is new is that
we’re now watching all of this on YouTube and
Facebook, streaming live, as imagined
super-predators are brought to heel. Fifty years
ago, our country was forced to look at itself in the
mirror when television stations broadcast Bloody
Sunday, the day state troopers and a sheriff’s posse
brutally attacked civil rights activists marching
for voting rights in Selma. Those horrifying images,
among others, helped to turn public opinion in
support of the Civil Rights Movement. Perhaps the
images we’ve seen in recent days will make some
difference. It’s worth remembering, though, that
none of the horrifying images from the Jim Crow era
would’ve changed anything if a highly strategic,
courageous movement had not existed that was
determined to challenge a deeply entrenched system
of racial and social control.
This nation
was founded on the idea that some lives don’t
matter. Freedom and justice for some, not all.
That’s the foundation. Yes, progress has been made
in some respects, but it hasn’t come easy. There’s
an unfinished revolution waiting to be won.
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