The Morning Call

How racism is killing Black people in Memphis

- Arthur Garrison is an associate professor of criminal justice at Kutztown University.

On April 4, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. walked outside his hotel room and stood at the guard rail and met his death with a single bullet to the neck. King was in Memphis, Tennessee, to lend support to Black garbage workers in their strike after two workers died in the back of a garbage truck.

On Feb. 1, 1968, Echol Cole and Robert Walker were working a garbage collection shift, and to escape the rain they rode inside the garbage compactor, which malfunctio­ned and crushed them. They died in terror with the trash of the community as their only company.

On Jan, 7, 2023, Tyre Nichols was on his way home from watching the sunset and he was surrounded and beaten to death by five men who were at least twice his size. In his last moments he cried out for his mother who lived a few blocks away.

Cole and Walker died because there was no room for them in the garbage truck. Memphis garbage workers, then, were always Black, with the exception of their supervisor­s, who were white.

Memphis, at the time, did not provide its sanitation workers with uniforms, gloves or even a place to shower before they went home. They were not given these simple items because they were Black. They were not given these things, in addition to low pay, and the city did not recognize their right to be treated better. This is where the 1968 strike and King and his death enter the story.

The garbage workers held up picket signs that said “I am a man.” This is what King came to Memphis for and what he died supporting. The simple statement: I am a man.

The Memphis strike was part of a centuries-long march to have white America recognize this simple truth: I am a man.

Tyre Nichols had a mother and 4-year-old son who loved him and needed him. When he cried out for his mother as he knew his last moments on this earth were upon him, he could have cried out, “I am a man.”

As the Black skin of Cole and Walker explained how they ended up being in the garbage truck where they met their end, five Black cops brought Nichols his last day. A grown man, like George Floyd before him, met his last day on the ground crying out for his mother.

Racism in America is not the same as it was in 1723 or 1823 or 1923. And let us admit that. But, not unlike in 1723 or 1823 when Black men feared the police — either the slave patrols of the South or the slave catchers in the North — in 2023, Blacks are still the targets of policing in America. The reasons are complicate­d, but regardless of why, Blacks are the targets of policing.

The implicit racism in the perception of Blacks as criminals to be feared and controlled does not change because the five officers that took Nichols’ life were Black. Blacks being chased down by Blacks for society’s purposes is not new. Many of the best slave catchers were Black.

In 2023, Nichols’ murder, like Floyd’s, has been met with public revulsion and answered with the full applicatio­n of the criminal justice system upon the heads of the officers who killed him.

But those five Black officers did not wake up in the morning and say, “Let’s chase down a Black man and kill him.” Rather, police experience and practice taught them that Nichols’ life was not worth protecting as they beat him in the dark. The fact that they were Black themselves is of no account. The racism in their actions, as the video shows, was in their indifferen­ce to Nichols’ right to walk as a free man in America.

His life ended with the same indifferen­ce that ended the life of Elijah McClain. It was in how and why they attacked him. To the police neither life had value.

The racism was in the police officers’ elation in what they did and their shock that they were charged as criminals for it.

The racism in America is also found in Fox News commentato­rs asserting that these Black cops were the natural outcome of affirmativ­e action hiring resulting from the city lowering recruitmen­t standards.

The racism is in these same commentato­rs asserting that the actions of these Black officers is the natural result of demands for police reform after the killing of Eric Garner.

The racism was in these Black police officers finding no incongruit­y between being police and beating a Black man to death.

Nichols died alone as two garbage workers did more than a half century ago. Nichols died in Memphis because those five Black officers concluded that “I am a man” did not apply to him.

 ?? GERALD HERBERT/AP ?? Protesters march Saturday in Memphis, Tenn., over the death of Tyre Nichols, who died after being beaten by Memphis police.
GERALD HERBERT/AP Protesters march Saturday in Memphis, Tenn., over the death of Tyre Nichols, who died after being beaten by Memphis police.
 ?? ?? Arthur H. Garrison
Arthur H. Garrison

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