The Denver Post

Black Lives Matter is winning

- By Farhad Manjoo

It’s wondrous, isn’t it, how the people just keep coming out? Day after day, night after night, in dozens of cities, braving a deadly virus and brutal retaliatio­n, they continue to pack the streets in uncountabl­e numbers, demanding equality and justice — and, finally, prompting what feels like real change.

How did this happen? How did Black Lives Matter, a hashtagpow­ered movement that has been building for years, bring America to what looks like a turning point?

I have a theory: The protests exploded in scale and intensity because the police seemed to go out of their way to illustrate exactly the arguments that Black Lives Matter has been raising online since 2013.

For the last two weeks, the police reaction to the movement has been so unhinged, and so well documented, that it couldn’t help but feed support for the protests. American public opinion may have tipped in favor of Black Lives Matter for good.

By “the police,” I mean not just state and municipal police across the country, but also the federal officers from various agencies that cracked down on protesters in front of the White House, as well as their supporters and political patrons, from police chiefs to mayors to the attorney general and the president himself.

Black Lives Matter aims to highlight the depth of brutality, injustice and unaccounta­bility that American society, especially law enforcemen­t, harbors toward black people. Many protesters set out to call attention to the unchecked power of the police, their military weaponry and their capricious use of it. They wanted to show that the problem of policing in America is more than that of individual bad officers; the problem is a culture that protects wrongdoers, tolerates mendacity, rewards blind loyalty and is fiercely resistant to change. More deeply, it is a law enforcemen­t culture that does not regard black lives as worthy of protection.

To understand why this moment may prompt structural change, it is worth putting the latest protests into a larger context. To me, the past two weeks have felt like an echo of that heady moment late in 2017, after The New York Times and The New Yorker exposed Harvey Weinstein’s history of sexual assault. At the time, #MeToo, as an online rallying cry against sexual abuse and harassment, was more than a decade old. The Weinstein story didn’t create that movement, just as the videos of George Floyd’s death at the hands of the Minneapoli­s police didn’t create Black Lives Matter.

Instead, the Weinstein news broke the dam. Since then, #MeToo activism has gone on to upend society in a way that felt revolution­ary. It feels like the dam is breaking again.

The movement behind Black Lives Matter has taken to the streets before — but nothing on this scale. And not with these results. The National Football League was once a powerful and bitter rival; now it has embraced the movement. Politician­s at every level are professing newfound support, and, right before our eyes, the Overton window of acceptable public discourse about police reform has shifted to include terms like “demilitari­ze,” “defund” and “abolish.”

More important, we are no longer just talking about imposing new limits on how the police can operate. We’re finally asking more substantiv­e political questions: What roles should be reserved for the police in our cities, and what roles would better be served by hiring more teachers, social workers or mental health experts?

Alex Vitale, a sociologis­t and the author of “The End of Policing,” which argues for a wholesale dismantlin­g of American policing, told me that he has high hopes for structural change because organizers had laid the groundwork for it. “My reason for optimism is that before Minneapoli­s happened, there were already dozens of campaigns to divert police funding, so that’s why that demand emerged so quickly — people were already doing that work.”

Vitale also suggested that the movement can take hold permanentl­y, that what’s happening now has cracked “the ‘ideologica­l armor’” of policing in America.

I think he’s right.

 ?? Farhad Manjoo became a columnist for The New York Times in 2018. ??
Farhad Manjoo became a columnist for The New York Times in 2018.

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