Friday, July 31, 2015

WHITE ACTIVIST REPLY TO SIMPLISTIC LETTER REGARDING #BLACKLIVESMATTER


Tempting as it was to just shut the Opinion section after reading the first paragraph of David Morelli's simplistic letter in the Hartford Courant on July 26, 2015 ("Do black lives matter? Or do they only matter when cops, particularly a white cop, has taken a life?"), I had to force myself to read the full nonsensical entry. Of course it starts off badly by presenting two options as if they are the only possibilities; if it helps, the answers are Yes to the first question and No to the second. Sensing that this might be confusing to the type of pin-headed thought process that passes for public (and governmental) discourse these days, here is how it works: #BlackLivesMatter is a civil rights movement that is focused on the systemic abuse of power by some police departments (and the legal machinery that protects them) toward black and brown people. This abuse can NEVER be justified by any other social issue or set of issues.

 

As for Morelli's contention that the murders of scores of black men have gone "nearly unnoticed": perhaps the news has not reached into Kensington. I find it unfathomable that the dozens of vigils, rallies, and marches to decry the deaths of black youth and young adults could be "unnoticed."

 

More importantly there are many ongoing community efforts in every urban center, INCLUDING partnerships with local police, to find solutions to the ongoing problem of violence within communities. Not all are successful, most are under-funded, but at least they are based on deeper analyses than simply teen and out-of-wedlock birth rates. By the way, had Morelli spent any time on the CDC's website, he would have learned that teen birth rates have dropped by over 28% nationwide since 2007 (over 30% in Connecticut), the trend being consistent across all demographic groups. 

 

There is so much work ahead to excavate urban populations from the rubble of poverty, red-lining, exclusionary housing and education policies and "development" that lines only the pockets of the already wealthy. But we as supposed Americans cannot dodge the responsibility to stop human rights abuses that are occurring on a daily basis on our very own streets. The #BlackLivesMatter campaign moves the issue of police and judicial torture and violence toward black and brown people to the front of the national stage, where it must remain until we have knocked it down and stomped out the last hot spots.

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