I will never suffer the indignity of being pulled over for Driving While Black. I have never lived in a neighborhood that fears a police presence. I have never felt like my vote didn't count. I can never truly give full voice to to the anger of feeling marginalized due to the color of my skin. I have never been, and hopefully never will be, placed in the back of a police vehicle. If I do find myself in police custody, however, I deserve, as does EVERYONE ELSE, to be treated with dignity and fairness until justice is served. So I can't fully live the experience of all my neighbors, but I can stand with those seeking answers in Ferguson or New York or with those wanting to know what really happened in the back of a paddy wagon in Baltimore. I can appreciate the outrage. I acknowledge it. I get it. What I don't get is using this outrage as an excuse to indulge in wild, illegal, destructive behavior.
The looting and rioting has eclipsed any positive message the peaceful protestors sought to spread. Thousands of people protested peacefully Saturday. Unfortunately, a much smaller number of people (not entirely unprovoked, by the way) decided to show their asses. This destruction, and the coverage of it by local media, seemed to give license to troublemakers who took to the streets with the craziness after Freddie Gray's funeral yesterday. Just like in Ferguson and New Orleans after Katrina and countless other places before, opportunistic losers took advantage of a grievance to act like assholes. I have been pissed about a lot of things in my life, but I promise you I have never once thought, "You know what would make me feel better right now? Burning down a CVS after I steal all the Charmin." Vandalizing your own neighborhood, "getting mines", attacking police with bricks, destroying businesses-these things make no sense even in, maybe especially in, this context. My favorite, in a hilariously sad way, video from yesterday was a news chopper feed of the one mall being looted. One of the looters ran from the store with an armload of clothes, which she had to put down so she could unlock her car. Rioting Pro Tip: Be sure to lock up so no one steals your stuff while you are off stealing someone else's stuff. Brilliant! What are we doing here people?
Thank goodness for those who cut through the nuttiness to help. Thank goodness for Robert Valentine and for the mom who slapped some sense into her son. Thank goodness for the man who quietly started sweeping up in the middle of the chaos. Thank goodness for the hundreds of first responders who stood watch last night while the city burned around them. I love Baltimore. She is a proud city. Despite making fun of her for once being the most syphilitic city in the country, I constantly defend Baltimore to the naysayers. We have never had trouble going to ball games or to Johns Hopkins for my daughter's surgery and follow-ups. I hope the city finds peace. I hope communities across the nation can find peace. How that happens, I don't know. We are talking about systematic injustice and mistrust. We are talking about drugs and the violence and sadness they leave in their wake. We are talking about selfishness. We are talking, but not always listening. Criminals and victims. Sometimes, criminals as victims.
What I do know, is that we can all help. We must be sensible and sensitive. Respectful and responsive. Caring and careful. And I know that burning police cars and smashing in windows or skulls is none of those things.
Wonderfully said.
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