“After this summer’s protests in the wake of the police killing of George Floyd, there was definitely a sense that this could be the moment of systemic change. But as we’ve been reminded of yet again, there is still a long way to go. Two police officers shot Jacob Blake seven times in the back, in front of his children, paralyzing him.
In horrific cellphone footage of the incident, Blake appears to calmly walk away from the officers, who follow with their guns pointed; they open fire into his back as he opens his car door. I’ll never get used to how quickly police go from issuing commands to using deadly force. Whatever happened to warning shots? Or tackling a suspect? Like are we really meant to believe that the only two options a cop has is do nothing or shoot somebody in the back seven times?
In the wake of the shooting, people have again taken to the streets in protest, which makes sense. Black people are tired of hearing ‘I’m sorry’ and then nothing happening. Because essentially what they’re really hearing is, ‘I’m sorry this is happening, and I’m sorry that it’s going to happen again.’
Look at the racist double standard in treatment and coverage of Kyle Rittenhouse, the 17-year-old white, self-styled ‘militia’ member who is suspected of involvement in shooting three protesters on Tuesday night, killing two. Despite carrying his assault weapon down the street afterwards, three cop cars passed him by; he wasn’t arrested until the next morning.
Rittenhouse claimed on Facebook to be ‘defending a business’ but that’s some bullshit. No one has ever thought, ‘Oh, it’s my solemn duty to pick up a rifle and protect that TJ Maxx.’ They do it because they’re hoping to shoot someone. Enough with this ‘militia’ bullshit. This isn’t the battle of Yorktown. It’s a bunch of dudes threatening people with guns.
The police treatment of Rittenhouse was illuminating, in that it really made me wonder why some people get shot seven times in the back, while other people are treated like human beings and reasoned with and taken into custody with no bullets in their bodies.
How come Jacob Blake was seen as a deadly threat for a theoretical gun that he might have and might try to commit a crime with, but this gunman who was armed and had already shot people – who had shown that he was a threat – was arrested the next day, given full due process of the law and generally treated like a human being whose life matters?
Why is it that the police decide that some threats must be extinguished immediately while other threats get the privilege of being defused? The answer, is clear: The gun doesn’t matter as much as who is holding the gun, because to some people, black skin is the most threatening weapon of all.” —Trevor Noah
http://idiocracy23.blogspot.com/2016/06/john-hulse-collected-poems-1985-2015.html
“A magisterial collection. A combination of Bukowski’s Last Night On Earth and Orwell’s 1984.”
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