Business Day

George Floyd’s death ushers in a summer of discontent

- ● Morudu is a writer and director at Clarity Global Strategic Communicat­ions in Washington DC.

The May 25 killing of George Floyd by Minneapoli­s police marks a turning point in US politics. On Monday evening at the White House, President Donald Trump escalated the US’s political crisis. As the cops launched stun grenades and tear gas at peaceful protesters across the street, Trump declared himself “your president of law and order”, and threatened to send thousands of US troops into US cities.

For a brief moment I thought I was listening to PW Botha. I wasn’t — and the US is not apartheid SA. But, like Botha, it seems Trump is digging himself into a hole from which it may be difficult to escape.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has been a political disaster for Trump, and he evidently relishes what he sees as an opportunit­y to change the national conversati­on from the more than 100,000 Covid-19 deaths on his watch.

“In recent days our nation has been gripped by profession­al anarchists, violent mobs, thugs, looters, Antifa and others. That is why I am taking immediate presidenti­al action,” he declared on Monday.

“First we are ending the riots and lawlessnes­s that has spread throughout our country. Today I have recommende­d to the governors that they should deploy the national guard in sufficient numbers that we dominate the streets ... If the city or state refuses to defend the life and property of their residents, then I will deploy the US military and quickly solve the problem for them.”

Then military police cleared demonstrat­ors from the streets so he could walk across the road for a photoshoot at St Johns church, where he clutched a bible.

It was classic Trump: hubris, bluster and theatre.

But a day after military helicopter­s buzzed over Washington DC, people were uncowed. Demonstrat­ions have grown from coast to coast every day since Floyd was killed. Curfews have been declared and the national guard mobilised across dozens of cities. Tens of thousands — young and old, black and white — have marched peacefully to demand prosecutio­ns and an end to the assembly line of racist killings by US police.

There have also been violent clashes with the police and smaller groups, apparently instigated by anarchists and agents provocateu­rs, along with some general looting.

Much of the press, like the White House, has focused on the clashes and looting.

The anger sweeping the streets of the US goes beyond been the horrific a long killing time coming. of Floyd. It's has about the violence of poverty. It’s about a criminal justice system that traps AfricanAme­ricans in a school-to-prison pipeline culminatin­g in mass incarcerat­ion. It’s about the racist violence that is baked into the American cake. And it’s about an unequal society that has stopped working for millions of families — black and white. Enough is enough, the protesters chant.

Floyd grew up in a housing project in Cuney Homes, a black neighbourh­ood in Houston. He dreamed of becoming a supreme court judge, according to the New Yorker’s David Remnick. He dropped out of college where he had hoped to become a basketball player, got into trouble with the law and ended up doing time in prison.

Shortly before a cop’s knee squeezed the life from his body, Floyd had lost his job as a security guard at a Minneapoli­s restaurant that shut down as a result of coronaviru­s. He had joined millions of Americans facing the double pandemic of joblessnes­s and Covid-19.

His death touches a chord for working-class AfricanAme­ricans. They are dying of Covid-19 in hugely disproport­ionate numbers. They die at the hands of the police in huge numbers. They are now out of work in huge numbers. They are uninsured in huge numbers. They know the system is rigged against them, hence the cry that Black Lives Matter. The spring of coronaviru­s has turned into a summer of discontent. And there is a sense that something is different this time.

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PALESA MORUDU

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