Black Lives Matter -White Lives Matter:
Not the same thing at all.
Not the same thing at all.
Being upfront: I
think most law enforcement folks are great.
I have friends who are police officers. Heck, I have KIN who are police
officers. They have my upmost respect
and support.
However…
If you’re part of the hegemony here in the U.S., for example if you're a middle class white guy, most of this may be invisible to you. That bears
repeating: If you’re part of the power
structure, you may not be aware of it.
You may think that everyone in the country has equal access to
education, good jobs, upward mobility and so on. All they have to do is exercise some
gumption. If they don't, that's on them. However, if you’re part of the
underclass, like many women or people of color, you live in a very different world.
The institutions of society – education, justice, religion,
etc. – have many functions, but they also act in part to preserve the power of the hegemony. Law enforcement, as
one of these institutions, provides for the safety of the citizens and
retribution for criminal behavior.
However, they may also act as agents of the overclass. Nowhere is this
more clear than in the stunning differences we have begun to see on a regular
basis between a police report of the shooting of a person of color and the
video that shows what happened. A clear
example is the shooting of Chicagoan Laquan McDonald in 2014. The police report said that he lunged at
officers with a knife. Yet the dash-cam video, which the city sat on for a year, shows McDonald walking away from officers when he was shot in the back multiple times.
Is this an isolated incident? I can’t be the only person who
wonders now how many other shootings of the underclass have been filed away as
justified when video footage might have revealed something quite different.
And then Black Lives Matter became a movement.
But wait: Don’t white
lives matter too? Of course they
do. All lives matter. But when you capitalize it as a movement, it’s
something else entirely. Thus, when a white person states that White Lives Matter, it's about stating membership in and supporting the hegemony and the unequal distribution of the benefits of our society. Blue Lives Matter is about respecting people who do a difficult and sometimes deadly job. And Black Lives Matter is about justice.
I love your use of that Star Trek photo. I think that episode is one of the most eloquent statements ever made about the absurdity of skin-color prejudice.
ReplyDeleteIt really sticks with you, even after all these years.
ReplyDelete