Las Vegas Review-Journal

We don’t want to replace y’all, we just want to live

- Roy Johnson Roy Johnson’s column appears in The Birmingham News and Al.com, as well as the Huntsville Times, the Mobile Press-register.

They just wanted to shop, most of them. To buy groceries at Tops — Tops Friendly Markets is the full name of the supermarke­t on the east side of Buffalo, N.Y., a beacon in the Jefferson Avenue neighborho­od.

Ruth Whitfield, 86, stopped there Saturday afternoon to grab something to eat before visiting her husband in a nursing home. There, too, was Alabama-born Pearly Young, 77, who was dropped at the market after lunch with her sister-in-law. There were Katherine Massey, 72, “a beautiful soul,” her sister told NPR; Hayward Patterson, 72, a church armor bearer who gave folks rides to and from the store; Celestine Chaney, 65, a grandmothe­r of six and cancer survivor; 32-year-old “vibrant” Roberta Drury, at the store to get food for dinner; father-of-three Margus Morrison, 52; Andre Mackneil, 53, at the store to buy birthday cupcakes for his 3-year-old son; and Geraldine Talley, 62.

They just wanted to shop. To eat. To enjoy. To live.

Aaron Salter, a retired 55-year-old Buffalo police officer, was there, as well. He was a security guard.

He just wanted to protect. And to live.

They’re all dead. Gunned down in an evil, murderous spree perpetrate­d by a proud, self-labeled white supremacis­t who authored almost 100 pages of derangemen­t to say “I hate Black people.”

A white supremacis­t who drove 200 miles to kill Black people. Living in a predominan­tly Black area. (African Americans comprised 11 among the 10 murdered and three wounded; the others are white.)

A white supremacis­t who is an oozing manifestat­ion of an age when too many live by memes and streams, who wanted us to witness his attack live.

I won’t mention his name. He doesn’t deserve it.

He deserves only the full weight of the criminal justice system, and a ticket to hell.

Per reports from those who’ve scanned the man’s screed (I won’t read it or share it on social media), he was driven, at least in part, by an insipid line of thinking (or not) that there’s a plan afoot to diminish the influence of white people. (White people whose ancestors, ahem, more-than-diminished — I’m being polite today — the Indigenous peoples whose land they invaded centuries ago.)

It’s known as the Great Replacemen­t Theory. As in we — anybody who’s not white — are collective­ly yet secretly conspiring to snatch the benefits of whiteness from their clutched fingers.

Early provocateu­rs called it a Jewish conspiracy. More recently, GR theorists claim brown-skinned immigrants from Latin America and the Caribbean are tools of Democrats (I presume, though, at least a few of these Dems are white) seeking to recruit voters more likely to help defuse “real” Americans.

It’s hard to convey what a great crock it all is.

Then there’s us. Black people. Despite persistent gaps in wealth, health care, sentencing, homeowners­hip, corporate leadership and other areas; despite lingering vestiges of discrimina­tion in housing, hiring, banking and so much more, we still get blamed. And targeted.

No need to recount the names of those who’ve previously unleashed murderous evil among us. They don’t deserve it.

For us, Buffalo was family.

I never met any among the dead and wounded — as most of us had not, of course. But we knew them. We knew the grandmothe­r. The wife. The deacon. The sister. The uncle. The friend who loved to sing and dance. The cousin with the incandesce­nt smile.

Saturday pierced us as if they were our own. Because they were our own.

They just wanted to live. As do the rest of us.

(A parentheti­cal pause: We have work to do among our own. So much to do to stop killing our own. Especially our youth. Killing with a wanton disregard for life that pierces too many as deeply as did the heinous rage in Buffalo.)

Know this: Nobody wants to replace y’all.

Immigrants don’t want to replace y’all. They just want to improve life for themselves and their families, just as your ancestors did.

We don’t want to replace y’all. We want to be able to shop for healthy food options. Just like y’all.

We want to be able to jog without fearing men in a pickup truck will end our life. Just like y’all.

We want access to quality health care. Just like y’all.

We want our children to attend challengin­g, robust schools. Just like y’all.

We want to be able to rise economical­ly, according to our gifts, skills and determinat­ion. Just like y’all.

We want to be able to go into a bank and not immediatel­y be deemed a credit risk. Just like y’all.

We want to be able to walk through a store without being eyeballed and followed. Just like y’all.

We don’t want to replace y’all. Not at all. We just want to live.

Besides, by continuing to expose and espouse illogic, hateful, racist rhetoric and theories that only feed the weak, the insecure and the fearful — by continuing to spawn monsters like the man in Buffalo — you’re replacing yourselves. Diminishin­g yourselves.

Nothing replaced the dinosaurs, after all.

They just became extinct.

 ?? MATT ROURKE / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Joann Daniels, left, is accompanie­d by Kayla Jones, lower second from right, Donell Jones, lower right, and other family members while talking Monday about her sister Celestine Chaney, who was killed in Saturday’s shooting at a supermarke­t in Buffalo, N.Y.
MATT ROURKE / ASSOCIATED PRESS Joann Daniels, left, is accompanie­d by Kayla Jones, lower second from right, Donell Jones, lower right, and other family members while talking Monday about her sister Celestine Chaney, who was killed in Saturday’s shooting at a supermarke­t in Buffalo, N.Y.

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