The Arizona Republic

I don’t watch videos of police brutality anymore

I’m wondering when there will be action

- Austin Bogues Commentary editor Austin Bogues is a member of USA TODAY’s Editorial Board. You can follow him on Twitter @AustinBogu­es.

I try not to watch the videos anymore.

I still regret scrolling through Twitter during the spring of 2020 and unwittingl­y seeing the video of Ahmaud Arbery being shot down as he fled attackers through a Brunswick, Georgia, neighborho­od. I think I was eating a peanut butter sandwich that I didn’t finish. I can’t unsee the image. I can’t forget the violent crack of the gunshots.

I never watched the video of George Floyd a few months later having the life slowly, methodical­ly choked out of him by Derek Chauvin.

And for now, I don’t have any plans to watch what’s been described as a gruesome video of an unidentifi­ed police officer shooting Patrick Lyoya in the back of the head after a traffic stop in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

I’ve seen enough.

It’s an incident that’s sure to inflame tensions and follow the predictabl­e path we’ve followed when these events come to the spotlight. In the coming weeks, we’ll learn all the specifics and particular­s, the legal arguments and qualificat­ions, and there will be forums on race relations and community town halls.

We will hear a lot of the “what aboutisms,” and suffer an avalanche of codewords, keywords and dog whistles.

But I wonder when we’ll hear more about action.

Two years after George Floyd’s murder and the alleged “racial reckoning” in the aftermath, there have not been a lot of meaningful steps taken toward change outside of performati­ve measures and gestures. There have been larger scale debates for sure about Confederat­e monuments and reparation­s and tons too much talk about critical race theory.

But what about some of the central,

achievable legislativ­e goals that could have resulted?

In his State of the Union Address, President Biden spent some time admonishin­g the “Defund the Police” sloganeers, to a standing ovation. He also said beforehand, “Let’s not abandon our streets or choose between safety and equal justice. Let’s come together and protect our communitie­s, restore trust and hold law enforcemen­t accountabl­e.”

The latter statement on the surface seems like a reasonable enough sentiment. Anyone deserves and should have the expectatio­n in a free society to feel safe from crime while riding on a subway and safe from being arbitraril­y stopped and frisked as a law-abiding citizen. Saying you have to suffer one in exchange for the other is a pernicious lie and a false choice.

But Biden, a Democrat who has had varied stances on crime and policing

Instead, we’ve come back to the usual political jockeying, and not much has changed at all. The videos are still showing up every few months and the stale conversati­on repeats itself.

during his lengthy political career, didn’t say much about restarting bipartisan talks that broke down between two Black U.S. senators, Cory Booker and Tim Scott. Scott and Booker were spearheadi­ng what seemed to be the

last gasp at any meaningful federal discussion­s of police reform in the postFloyd era. And these days, you don’t hear much from Republican circles either about a bill they advanced in the Senate immediatel­y after Floyd’s death aimed at achieving at least some nominal reforms in the policing system. Senate Democrats blocked the legislatio­n at the time, arguing the measures didn’t go far enough. But even nominal reforms would have been something.

Instead, we’ve come back to the usual political jockeying, and not much has changed at all. The videos are still showing up every few months and the stale conversati­on repeats itself. So there’s not much point in watching until something gets done.

 ?? CORY MORSE/THE GRAND RAPIDS PRESS VIA AP ?? Police reform activists rally for Patrick Lyoya in Grand Rapids, Mich., on April 12. Lyoya was shot by a police officer during a traffic stop
CORY MORSE/THE GRAND RAPIDS PRESS VIA AP Police reform activists rally for Patrick Lyoya in Grand Rapids, Mich., on April 12. Lyoya was shot by a police officer during a traffic stop
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