The Columbus Dispatch

Law and order only work if you apply them equally

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The officer who shot Jefferson was indicted for murder. The officer who shot Jean was convicted of murder. The officers involved in Taylor’s shooting have not been arrested. The public still awaits more details surroundin­g Kenosha police officer Rusten Sheskey shooting Jacob Blake; officers on that scene weren’t wearing body cameras.

But we know that in the United States, no person should be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law. It’s in our Constituti­on. Twice. In the Fifth Amendment, as it applies to the federal government and in the Fourteenth Amendment as it applies to states.

No person.

So when Fox News host Tucker Carlson said Kyle Rittenhous­e — now charged with first-degree intentiona­l homicide, first-degree reckless homicide, two counts of first-degree recklessly endangerin­g safety, attempted first-degree intentiona­l homicide and possession of a dangerous weapon by a person under 18 — “decided to maintain order when no one else would,” we have to ask ourselves how “order” is being defined for us.

Carlson has the highest-rated program in cable news. That’s an enormous platform from which to explain away alleged homicide as maintainin­g order.

When President Donald Trump accepts the GOP nomination at the Republican National Convention — from the South Lawn of the White House, which itself violates the law — and says, “We must always have law and order,” we have to ask ourselves which laws he wants upheld, and what order looks like to him.

When Vice President Mike Pence’s chief of staff Marc Short called NBA teams “absurd” and “silly” for refusing to participat­e in playoff games this week, when he told CNN, “If they want to protest, I don’t think we care,” we have to ask why.

Why not care? Why not take an honest, expansive, open-minded view at the protests swirling around us — many peaceful, some not — and the events that lead up to them? Why not examine the pain and the death and the grieving and the injustice that send your fellow Americans, the ones you’re elected to serve, into the streets to call for concrete, widespread change?

A call for maintainin­g law and order, without the acknowledg­ment that neither is applied fairly and equally in this country, is little more than a call for maintainin­g the status quo. And the status quo has left far too many people out of America’s promise of equal protection, equal rights, equal opportunit­y.

Correcting that won’t be easy or fast or orderly. But it’s necessary. And overdue.

When former President Barack Obama gave his eulogy at civil rights leader John Lewis’ funeral, he closed with this:

“God bless you all. God bless America. God bless this gentle soul who pulled it closer to its promise.” That work isn’t done. That work is all of ours. Heidi Stevens is a Chicago Tribune columnist who hosts the Heidi Stevens Balancing Act Facebook group. hstevens@chicagotri­bune.com @heidisteve­ns13

 ?? Columnist ?? Heidi Stevens
Columnist Heidi Stevens

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