The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

America’s problem with a four letter word: Race

Don’t play it safe. When you see something, speak up and speak out. Be part of the solution

- By Joe Beasley

Our frustratio­n and righteous indignatio­n over America’s refusal to accept African American people as people, as human beings just like you, has been simmering in a pressure cooker for too long.

When our loved ones were left hanging from trees or left to collect the remains of scorched homes while you stood cowardly under your white hoods at night, and badges during the day, we knew what happened and who was responsibl­e. But America played the race game and turned its head. There were no cellphone videos to document our abuse. No protests to demand justice. But this is a new day.

Righteous indignatio­n, left to spread like an incurable cancer, leads to destructio­n.

It won’t stop until America deals with the four letter word: Race.

Here are three ways to start the healing and show African Americans you stand with us, not against us. To show your children, your grandchild­ren, your friends, family, coworkers, the world — that our lives, black lives, matter just like yours because we are all part of the human race. People whom God created. People who need to breathe to survive.

No. 1. White people, stand down. Even though you have the privilege to go, come and move about as you please, you don’t believe black people should have that same freedom. To attempt to check us at the door and demand to see our ID at your apartment complex, or shoot to kill because we’re curious about a home under constructi­on in your neighborho­od, or to call the police when we’re waiting for a friend at Starbucks, taking a nap in our college study hall or watching birds in the park, reeks of your not understand­ing that we belong here just like you. You don’t have a right to question us just because of the color of our skin. You can start the healing by stopping the baseless threats and harassment.

No. 2. Fix the justice system so it’s not “just us.” Make police department­s throughout the country understand that policing black people unfairly because of our skin color will not be tolerated. Don’t protect the blue. Stand in solidarity to protect and police everyone, black, brown, white and every color in the rainbow. Law enforcemen­t believes they have a license to kill unlawfully when there are no penalties for their actions; when they are all but guaranteed to get off because of the badge.

If police and sheriff ’s department­s throughout America made it clear that there will be swift repercussi­ons, that officers will no longer get a pass by saying they felt threatened or by outright lying — and if the unions supported that, and not corrupt cops — it would start the healing.

Hate crimes legislatio­n is good start. But criminal penalties should be harsh for people who knowingly and willfully accuse a black person of a crime that they committed themselves, or when no crime had taken place at all.

No. 3. Society needs to walk the walk, not just talk the talk. To all the people of different races and nationalit­ies who supported us in the George Floyd protests and who took part in the destructio­n that followed, don’t go home to business as usual and post selfies on your Instagram page to show your friends how woke you are.

Instead, when you’re in the boardroom or the tech hub, the doctor’s office, the principal’s office, your real estate office, classroom, a nonprofit, the grocery store or anywhere you happen to be, don’t stand silently by and let racism go unchecked. Don’t play it safe. When you see something, speak up and speak out. Be part of the solution instead of letting institutio­nal racism fester and spread until it explodes.

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC ?? Marchers hold up signs at the state Capitol during a march Thursday. Many leaders are looking for ways to heal the racial divide.
STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC Marchers hold up signs at the state Capitol during a march Thursday. Many leaders are looking for ways to heal the racial divide.
 ??  ?? Joe Beasley
Joe Beasley

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States