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Indybay Feature

On Baton Rouge, Falcon Heights, and Dallas

by Linda Burnham
Baton Rouge, Falcon Heights, Dallas
July 11, 2016

A thick strand in the history of U.S. policing is rooted back in the slave patrols of the 19th century. Patty rollers were authorized to stop, question, search, harass and summarily punish any Black person they encountered. The five- and six-pointed badges many of them wore to symbolize their authority were predecessors to those of today’s sheriffs and patrolmen. They regularly entered the plantation living quarters of enslaved people, leaving terror and grief in their wake. Together with the hunters of runaways, these patrols had a crystal clear mandate: to constrain the enslaved population to its role as the embodiment and producer of massive wealth for whites and to forestall the possibility that labor subordinated to the lash might rebel at the cost of white lives.

How far have we come, really? Having extricated ourselves from a system of bottomless and blatant cruelty we have evolved a system that depends on the patty rollers of today to constrain and contain a population that, while no longer enslaved, is ruthlessly exploited, criminally neglected and justifiably aggrieved. Ruthlessly exploited by the low-wage industries that depend on ample supplies of cheap labor, by the bottom feeders of capital – pay-day loan companies and slumlords come to mind –­ by the incarceration-for-profit industry, by the municipalities that meet their budgets by preying on poor people, generating revenue by way of broken taillights, lapsed vehicle registrations and failures to signal.

Criminally neglected by policy makers – 152 years’ worth and counting – at every level of government. And so our education policy appears to be: starve the public system until it collapses and to hell with the children whose parents have no alternative. Housing policy stubbornly stacked against the development and maintenance of low-income housing. Jobs policy that, against an ideological backdrop that touts personal fulfillment and prosperity through honest effort, reduces grown men to selling loosies and cd’s on street corners to provide for their families.

Justifiably aggrieved because we still must assert, against the relentless accumulation of evidence to the contrary, that Black lives matter.

And all this on top of the foundational failure to financially repair or compensate the formerly enslaved or their descendants.

So today’s patty rollers are expected to contain any overflow of bitterness and anger on the part of the exploited, neglected and aggrieved, maintaining order in a fundamentally – and racially – disordered system. Their mandate is as clear as that of their forefathers: to constrain a population whose designated role is to absorb absurdly high rates of unemployment and make itself available for low-wage, low-status work without complaint, much less rebellion. Those who fear a spiraling descent into disorder, know this: we are merely witnessing the periodic, explosive surfacing of entrenched disorders we have refused to face or fix.

Our narratives and debates about good cops and rogue cops, better training and community policing are important but entirely insufficient. No doubt the patty rollers of the 1850s could have been trained to reign in their brutality. Given the gloriously diverse dispositions of our human family, patrollers likely ranged from the breathtakingly cruel to the queasily reluctant enforcers of patent injustice. All that is, at bottom, beside the point. Whether cruel or kind, restrained or rogue, their job was to police – and by policing, maintain – a barbaric system.

Today’s police can be better trained to recognize implicit bias, to dial back on aggression and deescalate tense encounters. All to the good, as far as it goes. But none of it changes their core mandate in poor Black communities: to control and contain, by any means necessary, a population that has every reason to be restive and rebellious.

* * *

“Was he colored?” That’s what my grandmother would say whenever she heard news about a criminal act. She knew that if the alleged perpetrator were “colored” his criminality would be read not simply as the act of an individual, but as an expression of an ingrained racial tendency. Somehow being Black meant that the actions of every random thief, rapist or murderer who was also Black redounded to you and your people. I imagine most Black families had a version of “Was he colored?” And I wouldn’t be surprised if Muslim American families have an equivalent expression today. Untying the knot of individual culpability and the consequences of racial belonging is nowhere near as straightforward as it might seem.

I was on a dance floor on Thursday night, desperately trying to shake off the news from Baton Rouge and Falcon Heights. My phone was in my back pocket and, like an idiot, when it buzzed with an incoming text, I left the dance floor and stepped outside to the news from Dallas. Though the action was still unfolding, I immediately surmised that the shooter was “colored,” and that he had been trained by the U.S. military.

It has fallen to President Obama, time and again, to make sense out of the incomprehensible and bind the wounds of a nation apparently bent on self-destruction. In the aftermath of Dallas, Obama quickly condemned the despicable violence of a demented, troubled individual. The president’s intent was clear and laudable. He sought to defuse tensions by definitively asserting that the shooter’s action was not associated with a political movement or a particular organization, that his murderous deeds should in no way be linked to African Americans in general. He struggled to shift the focus from “Was he colored?” to “Clearly he was crazy, right?”

But before boxing Micah Johnson up and setting him aside as deranged and demented it’s worth asking a few questions. Honestly, good people, did anybody in their right mind – that is, not troubled or demented – think that the police could continue to pick off Black people at will and on camera without producing a Micah Johnson? And is troubled and demented shorthand for “traumatized by repeated exposure to the graphic depiction of the murder of people who look just like me?” Or for “agonized by the fact that the officers of the law who placed a handcuffed man in the back of a van and snapped his spine in an intentionally “rough ride” were neither held criminally accountable nor labeled troubled and demented?” Or for “depressed beyond imagining and haunted by the ghosts of the men and women whose lives were snatched by the side of the road, down back alleyways, and in precinct stations from one end of the country to the other before the era of cell phone video?” Or for “pierced through the heart by the voice of four-year-old Dae’Anna, comforting her mama?” Because if demented and troubled is shorthand for any of that, then Micah Johnson may have been a lone gunman, but he is far from alone.

That whoosh you heard on Friday morning was the sound of people rushing to condemn the Dallas shootings, or to extract condemnations from others. There is, of course, no moral justification for gunning down police officers. And, retaliatory violence aimed at the armed representatives of the state, beyond being a suicidal provocation, also shuts down all avenues for advancing the cause of racial justice. But there is a lot of room for reflection between the cheap polarities of condemn or condone.

So here we are, once again, with calls from all quarters for dialogue across the racial divide. But if the long years before the emergence of the various movements for Black lives have taught us anything, it is this: our purported partners in dialogue simply turn their backs and leave the table as soon as the pressure is off. This moment calls for the vigorous defense of our right to continued protest and the intensification and elaboration of multiple movements for Black lives – for the sake of our ancestors and the generations to come. And for the sake of this country that is our home.

Linda Burnham
§Response to: Linda Burnham on Baton Rouge / Falcon Heights / Dallas
by Thomas Ruffin, Jr.
Thank you for this eloquent statement by Ms. Linda Burnham. I am pleased with much of what she said.

However, I totally disagree with Ms. Burnham's statement that "there is, of course, no moral justification for gunning down police officers". That is to say, when a community's notion of right and wrong acquiesces in police sadistically lynching unarmed black men and women, one by one, day after day, and with seeming impunity, as happens to be the case today in the United States; when that happens, black people as a nation of oppressed people owe a firm obligation to themselves and to others to bring that sort of police state terror to an immediate end. On that point, if black people must gun down murderous police in order to terminate a campaign of legalized lynchings, then we as black people owe a moral obligation to ourselves and to others to do just that. Obviously, we must take on that task intelligently and as part of a politically and morally conscious community defense campaign, one that so-called "conscientious" white people should support if they genuinely oppose the racist bigotry of the American police state. With that said, let me be clear about my theme: black people, and that includes me, would be embarrassingly foolish to do otherwise than to defend ourselves when threatened with police state terror, especially when we live in a racially bigoted society that deliberately funds the wanton, racist violence of the American police state.

As Ms. Burnham implicitly pointed out, two Baton Rouge police officers gunned down Alton Sterling, a lawfully armed black merchant, while holding him down on the ground and beating him without any justification whatever. Within twenty-four hours, suburban police in Falcon Heights, Minnesota, gunned down Philando Castille, another lawfully armed black man, this time during the course of a traffic stop that the police either had no business executing, or that warranted nothing more than advice to Mr. Castille's companion to get her automobile tail light repaired. In both instances, the officers made use of their newly ordained license to stop, to search, and to arrest anybody, most especially black and Latino men, without adequate justification as established by the Supreme Court in Utah v. Strieff,195 L.Ed.2d 400 (June 20, 2016); see Strieff, 195 L.Ed.2d at 415-18 (Sotomayor, J., righteously dissenting). After the murders of Alton Sterling and Philando Castille, the police state worked tirelessly, and in typical racist fashion, to blame Messrs. Sterling and Castille for getting lawfully lynched by sadistic police. This happened while the American Bar Association, President Barack Obama, Attorney General Loretta Lynch, the United States Congress, the Supreme Court and the rest of the federal judiciary, the two most prominent U.S. presidential candidates, and the prosecutors in Baton Rouge and Falcon Heights refused to condemn without equivocation the racially bigoted police state lynchings of Alton Sterling and Philando Castille.

Prior to these two instances of police state terror, we in the black community suffered through the police murders of Michael Brown, Eric Garner, twelve-year-old Tamir Rice, Cedric Chatman, Walter Scott, Samuel DuBose, John Crawford, Freddie Gray, Sandra Bland, Oscar Grant, Bobby Daniels, Tanisha Anderson, Yvette Smith, Malissa Williams, Shantel Davis, Alesia Thomas, Rekia Boyd, Shereese Francis, Tanika Wilson, seven-year-old Aiyana Stanley-Jones, ninety-two-year-old Kathryn Johnston (who rightly used her handgun to defend against Atlanta police breaking in her door, the wrong door!), Archie Elliott III, Prince Jones, Amadou Diallo, Fred Hampton, Mark Clark, Bobby Hutton, John Afrika (along with five other adults and their five children killed in the Philadelphia police bombing of the MOVE Organization home), Zayid Shakur, Troy Anthony Davis, and so many others that we could not list them all. Add to this train of suffering the Chicago police torture from about 1972 through about 1991 of an estimated 200 black men so as to force them to confess to crimes, in some cases even to murders, that they never committed. The former head of this Chicago torture program, Detective Jon Burge, told a reporter in April 2015 that he found it "hard to believe" that the "political leadership" of Mayor Rahm Emanuel in Chicago would "even contemplate giving reparations to human vermin", or, as he also called them, "guilty vicious criminals", whom he tortured and forced to confess to crimes they never committed. To be clear, this police torturer had his day before the American media while many of his victims remain in prison to this day.

As an adjunct, I am also reminded of the videotaped recording of the savage beating of fifty-one-year-old Marlene Pinnock, a black woman, whose head a white male officer beat again and again into the roadside pavement bordering a portion of the Los Angeles freeway. Indeed, as the case of Marlene Pinnock made clear, the American police state need not be deadly in order to be genocidal. After all, our colleagues, Michael Tarif Warren, Esquire, and his wife, Evelyn Warren, Esquire, of New York City merely documented the exceedingly violent assault by Brooklyn police on an unarmed black man. For performing their civic duty, Tarif and Evelyn suffered the indignity of a police state beating, a formal arrest, and a totally bogus prosecution (which ultimately the prosecutor dismissed). Unfortunately, what happened to Tarif, Evelyn, and Marlene Pinnock is common fare for those of us living under the yoke of the American police state.

When I see videotapes of white police gunning down a twelve-year-old Tamir Rice, of white police beating a fifty-one-year-old Marlene Pinnock's head into the pavement, of white police bombing a Philadelphia home in order to burn to death eleven black people protesting against the racist excesses of the police state, and of white police using firearms to destroy the life of Alton Sterling, I see irrefutable evidence of police state terror that President Obama and the rest of the American government not only tolerate but in fact ordain. This state of affairs persisted since the colonial oppression of my ancestors as black slaves, and, on this day, when we witness all sorts of racially bigoted injustices, from the sadistic torture and murder of Freddie Gray to the senseless execution on Georgia's death row of Troy Anthony Davis, black people, including me, need desperately to arm ourselves, to do so in unity and with disciplined and political resolve, and to fight back against this racist police state terror. We must do so because the American police state will continue its legalized lynchings of black people; that is, until we and our allies, if we have any, stop them. If history established anything, it firmly established as a historical fact the racist and deadly bigotry of America's police state. As for the one or two "good cops" in Baton Rouge, in Falcon Heights, in Dallas, in Ferguson, in Baltimore, in New York City, in Chicago, in Los Angeles, in Prince George's County, in the District of Columbia, in Guantanamo Bay, or elsewhere, if they genuinely insisted in all of their endeavors on the humane and loving treatment of all people, including all black and Latino people, then they should have long ago resigned in protest from the American police state. Whoever the one or two "good cops" happen to be, they should have long ago tendered their resignations when the racist gendarme of the American police state sadistically lynched one black person after another over the last eight or so years.

With all that said, I feel no compunction if I cry out, "Where can we find the Black Liberation Army or the Nat Turner Rebellion when we need them?" If you as colleagues feel that I press too far in my advocacy, then know this: black people died too often and suffered far too much torture and rape to be blamed if we tolerate these injustices no longer. Simply put, it's a damnable shame that every white American patriot, including Barack Obama, can be so offended by the brutal killing of five Dallas police officers, but essentially never give a damn when racist death squads go about black communities killing black men, women, and children, doing so day after day, all as part of the ordinary business of the American police state! I wish that my statement exaggerated the problem. However, I simply quote the words of Ms. Linda Burnham: "[D]id anybody in their right mind -- that is, not troubled or demented -- think that the police [state] could continue to pick off Black people at will and on camera without producing a [response like that of] Micah Johnson['s]?" It seems to be that Ms. Linda Burnham, with her dignity and self-control, nonetheless, as a black woman, happens to be righteously pissed off.

Sincerely, Thomas Ruffin, Jr.

RUFFIN LEGAL SERVICES
153 Galveston Place, S.W., Suite 4
District of Columba 20032
(202) 561-2898
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