I look as if my ancestors were from northern Europe. I am sixty-three years old. I often wear a suit, but I never wear gang-related clothing. I work in a prosecutor's office.
When I am stopped by the police - and sometimes I am - I am afraid of the police officer.
He wears a uniform and I don't. He wears a badge and I don't. He carries a gun and I don't. He is trained in the use of force and I am not. He has the power to arrest me and I don't have the power to arrest him. His story will probably be believed and mine, if it differs from his in any way, probably won't be. He may lie and I won't.
Of course, I am afraid of him. I ought to be. And, so, I treat him with the utmost respect and courtesy, even when I think he's wrong and I'm right.
If I had robbed a store, if I were walking down the middle of the street, if a police officer told me to get out of the street and I refused, if I cursed at the police officer, if I reached into the officer's patrol car, if I struck the officer twice in the face with my fist, if I tried to get control of the officer's gun, I'd expect to get shot. I would be surprised if the police officer didn't try to shoot me.
I look as if my ancestors were from northern Europe. I am sixty-three years old. I often wear a suit, but I never wear gang-related clothing. I work in a prosecutor's office. And I would expect to be shot by the police officer if I did all those things.
I'm not saying that the police always treat people who look as if their ancestors were from sub-Saharan Africa properly. They don't. They should. I'm sure there are cases of police violence against people who look like their ancestors came from sub-Saharan Africa that would justify righteous indignation. But, the shooting of Michael Brown is not one of them.
If I did all the things he did, I'd expect the police officer to try to shoot me, regardless of what I looked like. What, exactly, did he expect?
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
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