Hartford Courant (Sunday)

IT COULD HAPPEN HERE

I saw what happened in Portland this summer.

- By Aidan Cobb

The issues at the core of the protests in Portland are universal. They are about equality and justice in our communitie­s. They are about the right of people to advocate for change in their own towns and cities without being threatened by law enforcemen­t.

When I was 4 years old in 2001, my family and I marched in a peaceful demonstrat­ion in my hometown of Wallingfor­d, in response to a white supremacis­t speaking at the public library.

This is one of my earliest memories. I distinctly recall images of police in riot gear confrontin­g black-clad protesters from out of town who were clashing with supporters of the white supremacis­t. In a letter to the editor published in the Courant, my mother condemned these violent anti-racist protesters as instigator­s, claiming that Wallingfor­d residents were perfectly capable of expelling and resisting hate peacefully.

Having spent five weeks in Portland, Oregon, earlier this summer, I see parallels to my childhood experience in my hometown. What happened in Portland this summer isn’t unique to Portland. It could happen anywhere, including in Connecticu­t, and the lessons that can be taken from protests across the country should inform the way we deal with our difference­s here.

While in Portland, I filmed the protests and interviewe­d protesters. I can attest that the vast majority of them turned out night after night intending a peaceful demonstrat­ion. But I also saw groups of mostly white anarchists dressed in black deliberate­ly causing chaos near the Justice Center downtown. In the same vein, I witnessed and heard first-hand accounts of right-wing groups intimidati­ng protesters and looking to cause a stir. If you go looking for a fight, you’re probably going to find one.

The police also bear responsibi­lity for the violence in Portland. I remember being on the front lines of the Justice Center filming as police in riot gear stood in formation behind a barrier, while protesters chanted and gave speeches in front of the fence. Police escalated the confrontat­ions by threatenin­g protesters with violence if they so much as touched the fence, putting on gas masks with the implicatio­n of using gas, hiding in bushes with rubber bullet guns at the ready, and pepper-spraying people on the front lines unprovoked. All it would have taken was one protester out of 5,000-plus to throw a water bottle over the barrier for the entire block to be filled with tear gas, the sound of flash-bang grenades and the dull pop of rubber bullet guns.

After I left Portland, President Donald Trump sent federal agents to assist law enforcemen­t. News reports and videos depicted unmarked cars filled with federal officers snatching activists off the street with no explanatio­n. Not only is this type of policing unconstitu­tional, it does nothing to quell tensions or mitigate the protests. If anything, it furthers the divide between law enforcemen­t and its citizens and gives demonstrat­ors another grievance to rail against.

Escalation breeds escalation. This unnecessar­y chaos and volatility steals the spotlight from the issues at the core of the protests. In Portland, for example, residents of color are fed up with the gentrifica­tion of their neighborho­ods and the racism they experience at the hands of police. I heard dozens of personal and emotionall­y charged accounts of racial profiling and police brutality in Portland and its surroundin­g suburbs. I interviewe­d not only protest leaders but also moms and dads who had brought their children out — as my parents had brought me — to stand up for their community. These were everyday Americans sacrificin­g their time and

energy to peacefully march every night in spite of work obligation­s in order to create change on a local level.

Unfortunat­ely, Portland devolved into a media spectacle as violent clashes between protesters and police dominated headlines and stole the narrative. One would think, based on the media coverage and political grandstand­ing, that what’s happening in Portland can be dismissed as a bunch of fringe anarchists on the West Coast.

To the extent that all major cities in the United States have deepseated racial issues, we are more like Portland than we would like to think. The people of Portland don’t want their right to assemble to be hijacked by violence from outsiders and escalated by irresponsi­ble policing — local or federal — and neither would we.

One leader stated to me in an interview, “Don’t listen to the people in black. Listen to the Black people.” I say: Don’t fall for the media spectacle. Consider the events in Portland — and demonstrat­ions everywhere — through an introspect­ive lens.

The issues at the core of the protests in Portland are universal. They are about equality and justice in our communitie­s. They are about the right of people to advocate for change in their own towns and cities without being threatened by law enforcemen­t. They are about the right of everyday citizens to feel safe in their own neighborho­ods.

These are things all of us can identify with. I wonder what would have happened in Wallingfor­d on that day in 2001 if the political climate were as combustibl­e as it is today.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Demonstrat­ors are kept at bay by a line of police during a 2001 rally held by The World Church of the Creator in Wallingfor­d, where speech by white supremacis­t Matthew Hale brought protesters and police.
AP FILE PHOTO Demonstrat­ors are kept at bay by a line of police during a 2001 rally held by The World Church of the Creator in Wallingfor­d, where speech by white supremacis­t Matthew Hale brought protesters and police.

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