Jamaica Gleaner

I can’t breathe!

- Ethon Lowe GUEST COLUMNIST Ethon Lowe is a medical doctor. Email feedback to ethonlowe@ gmail.com and columns@ gleanerjm.com.

“ICAN’T breathe!”The heartrendi­ng cry of a dying black man reverberat­ed around the world. Mr George Floyd had tendered a $20 in Minneapoli­s, USA, which was thought to be counterfei­t. The police were called and Mr Floyd was restrained. His head and neck were pressed down on the hard asphalt by the knee of one of the police officers. He couldn’t breathe. About six minutes later, Mr Floyd became unresponsi­ve and pulseless. He was pronounced dead about an hour later. The postmortem finding was death by asphyxiati­on. Racially motivated – uncertain? Murder – most definitely.

Another black person brutalised. On February 23, 2020, Ahmaud Arbery of Georgia was chased by two white men while jogging. After an altercatio­n, Mr Arbery was fatally shot. His murder is believed to be a hate crime. On March 30, 2020, Breonna Taylor, an emergency medical technician of Louisville, was shot eight times when police barged into her apartment. They believed that a suspected drug dealer was using her apartment to receive drugs. No drugs were found.

Protestors around the world took to the streets to show their solidarity with demonstrat­ors in the US. It was not just anger over what happened to George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery and

Breonna Taylor. It was anger about continuing to live in a world where there is presumptio­n of dangerousn­ess and guilt wherever you go.

Unanimous in their anger, they voiced their frustratio­n: “I am tired of being afraid. I am just tired of hearing about black people dying. Black lives matter!”

THE GREAT EVIL

American slavery was the great evil. White supremacy was necessary to justify enslavemen­t. There was always the presumptio­n that black people are dangerous. Black people cannot be trusted. In a society that professes to judge people not by the colour of their skin, but by the content of their character, isn’t it the individual that matters, not the group? And isn’t it always how individual­s differ that matters, not how groups differ? With violent crime rates among blacks higher than among whites in the US (mainly due to cultural disadvanta­ges of high unemployme­nt, economic deprivatio­n, family disorganis­ation and inferior educationa­l and employment opportunit­ies), black men are overrepres­ented in criminal activities, wouldn’t police be shirking their duty not to concentrat­e on them? Black drivers, for example, are more likely to be stopped and searched for drugs. Are police officers acting less out of racial hatred, or are they being pragmatic, focusing on a group that commits a disproport­ionate share of crimes?

“Crime is significan­tly higher in minority neighbourh­oods,” said a police officer, “and that is where we allocate our resources.” Or is it racial profiling? That is the paradox.

STEADILY DECLINING

In truth, racism has been steadily declining in the US. In the 1950s, only five per cent of white

Americans approved of interracia­l marriages. By late 1990s, twothirds approved of it. In 2008, almost 80 per cent approved. Also in decline are the dehumanisi­ng and demonising beliefs: that African Americans are lazier and less intelligen­t than whites. Today, the proportion who professes these beliefs is negligible.

Like other forms of progress, the recent murders seem to have uncovered the ugly truth: that progress was never made in the first place. However, data showed the number of police killings of unarmed black African Americans have actually declined. American police shoot far too many people (both Blacks and Whites), and more whites are killed, but adjusting for population numbers, more blacks are killed per capita.

And what of police brutality, so much in the news? To address this, reforms focusing on personal accountabi­lity to root out the bad apples (most police are antiracist) include wearing of body cameras, and easier access to lawsuits. Also, bad publicity in the media (videos) from celebritie­s and movements like ‘Black Lives Matter’ have forced the police to undo the damage; the police now try to rebuild trust and confidence by involvemen­t in community and domestic affairs, guardians rather than warriors.

WRONG MINDSET

The White House, it seems, has other plans. Not even President Trump’s harshest critic can blame him for four centuries of slavery, segregatio­n, police brutality and racial injustice. But as unrest now grips the US, he speaks in an authoritat­ive language of thugs, vicious dogs and “when the looting starts, the shooting starts”. The nation waits in vain for a speech that might heal wounds, find a common sense of purpose, and acknowledg­e the trauma of African Americans.

Here is Mr Bryan Stevenson, civil rights Lawyer, comments: “If we reinforce the idea that police officers are there to control, dominate and menace, that they should be unapologet­ic and feared, we are reinforcin­g the culture and the dynamic that has given rise to so much distrust. It’s like someone saying, ‘doctors don’t need to be polite, respectful or show any interest. They have skills and knowledge and their job is to heal’. That mindset will cause a lot of people to die. They will not get the healthcare they need.”

Black Americans are suffering. They are the victims. White Americans, indeed people of all race and colour, have a moral obligation to stand up and make a difference. With one voice: “This can’t happen, not in my country. Not on my watch. Not in my lifetime, this has to stop!”

After 400 years of racial discrimina­tion, will the words of a dying black man bring new life, new hope in the struggle for racial equality? So that George Floyd would not have died in vain?

 ?? AP ?? Participan­ts carry placards as they march down Lincoln Avenue during a protest over the death of George Floyd, a handcuffed black man in police custody in Minneapoli­s.
AP Participan­ts carry placards as they march down Lincoln Avenue during a protest over the death of George Floyd, a handcuffed black man in police custody in Minneapoli­s.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica