Vocable (Anglais)

History is repeated in protests at the death of George Floyd

Manifestat­ions après la mort de George Floyd : quand l'Histoire se répète

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Analyse des inégalités raciales aux États-Unis.

Aux États-Unis, les manifestat­ions contre les violences raciales font tristement partie intégrante du paysage politique : elles réapparais­sent avec régularité, tout comme les meurtres injustifié­s de jeunes Afro-américains. Quels mécanismes poussent ces scénarios douloureux à se répéter sans cesse ? The Economist analyse le fonctionne­ment d’un système qui favorise les inégalités raciales.

Donald Trump, who promised in his inaugural address that “this American carnage stops right here and stops right now” found himself, three years later, being escorted to a bunker in the White House as protests raged outside. At one point, the lights of the presidenti­al residence went dark; intermitte­nt illuminati­on came instead from the fires set on nearby streets. What began as an expression of outrage when George Floyd, an African-American man suspected of buying cigarettes with a fake $20 bill, died on May 25th, after Derek Chauvin, a Minneapoli­s policeman, knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes, has exploded into seething protests nationwide. Twenty-three states have called in the National Guard to quell unrest; 4,000 people were arrested over one weekend; shops from Santa Monica to Manhattan have been looted.

2. Protests over racial injustice are a recurring feature of modern American life. Their history can render meaning to a protest movement that has spread across America within a week and that has not been pacified by the charging of Mr Chauvin with thirddegre­e murder and second-degree manslaught­er. Why have the protests continued, and been mirrored in cities nationwide?

3. In scope, size and scale of disruption, the past weeks protests over police killings most resemble those in 1968 after the assassinat­ion of Martin Luther King. There were then enormous protests in more than 100 American cities, some of them extremely destructiv­e.

There are almost exactly 1,000 such deaths every year. 26% of the deceased are black.

A SEGREGATED AMERICA

4. Then, too, commentato­rs wondered what the point of the concurrent looting was. James Baldwin gave this explanatio­n in an interview : ''Who is looting whom? Grabbing off the TV set? He doesn't really want the TV set. He wants to let you know he's there no one has seriously tried to get where the trouble is. After all you're accusing a captive population who has been robbed of everything of looting. I think it's obscene.''

5. Benjamin Crump, the lawyer for Mr Floyd’s family, echoed that sentiment in his call for protests to continue. “These riots that are erupting in cities all across America are an outward sign of righteous anger,” he said on May 31st. Are they driven by common sentiments? One month before the severe unrest of 1968, the Kerner Commission, appointed to study the racial uprisings of the summer before, released its report. “White society is deeply implicated in the ghetto. White institutio­ns created it, white institutio­ns maintain it, and white society condones it,” it wrote.

6. Though formal ghettos do not exist today, America remains deeply segregated by both class and race. The convergenc­e of opportunit­y between black and white America has looked slow and plodding, and in some places, may have stopped altogether. The gap in

household wealth—ten times greater for whites than blacks—is unchanged.

NEW ALLIES?

7. Of course, the events of the past week cannot be reduced to historical repetition. They have more recent precursors, in protests against the deaths in police custody of other unarmed black men suspected of minor crimes—although those have typically been confined to the cities where they took place. The deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014 and Freddie Gray in Baltimore, Maryland, in 2015 sparked huge protests. They also seeded a nationwide conscious-raising effort, epitomised by the slogan “Black Lives Matter” and the loosely organised movement of the same name. 8. White Americans incensed by racial injustice have been drawn in: unlike previous protests of this type, the past week’s have included sizeable numbers of whites.

9. Since 2015 the Washington Post has kept a database of all known fatal police shootings. There has been no appreciabl­e drop since the tabulation started - there are almost exactly 1,000 such deaths every year. In cases where the race of the deceased is known, 26% are black.

10. The treatment of African-Americans by the police is not a simple issue of party politics. Black Lives Matter took off while Barack Obama was president. Police department­s operate largely autonomous­ly, making concerted reform difficult. Nationwide reform requires national leadership. Under Mr

Trump that appears unlikely. If these protests do soon sputter, with their underlying causes still unaddresse­d, they will, sooner or later, re-emerge.

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 ?? (SIPA) ?? A group of young women pay tribute to victims of racial violence at a Las Vegas protest in June 2019.
(SIPA) A group of young women pay tribute to victims of racial violence at a Las Vegas protest in June 2019.

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