In an effort to have a real discussion about this issue that is not linked to something that is actually not an example of it, at all, I thought I would instead open a fresh thread.
Thread rules: (modified after Boots' suggestion)
1. Don't talk about the Ferguson case.
1a. You can talk about other unrelated cases that got some attention because of it, like the mentally unstable guy who was shot after walking toward STL police with a steak knife.
1b. Don't talk about the riots or related cases.
2. Don't talk about any of the very small number of potentially race-related shootings that attracted similarly large amounts of media attention in the past couple of years. For example, talking about how police handled the Zimmerman case is not allowed.
3. Feel free to bring up any other example of police behavior that in your mind illustrates police racism.
4. It is allowed to debate whether individual examples constitute good examples of police racism. However, if the thread gets bogged down over a large number of posts in discussions of whether individual cases illustrate racism or not, any poster may attempt to steer it back on topic. Mods will get involved with modtext if necessary. The topic is institutional police racism in general.
Farm Boy asked me to, "put on the shoes of somebody that lives everyday as the parent of a black son." To put it quite bluntly, I cannot do that. I am not black, I have no grown in as a black man, and even on the children front I cannot since I am not a parent. So, no, I really cannot honestly put myself in their shoes. That does not mean I cannot see that there are issues with police and how they target black men (and women I suppose, but the argument seems to be focused around black men.)
So, what are the causes of it from both sides, and what do we do about it? Some very basic and obvious steps to me seem to be things like:
Those are just off the top of my head and honestly I don't know if any of them are really relevant or not, but they strike me as decent starting points.
Thread rules: (modified after Boots' suggestion)
1. Don't talk about the Ferguson case.
1a. You can talk about other unrelated cases that got some attention because of it, like the mentally unstable guy who was shot after walking toward STL police with a steak knife.
1b. Don't talk about the riots or related cases.
2. Don't talk about any of the very small number of potentially race-related shootings that attracted similarly large amounts of media attention in the past couple of years. For example, talking about how police handled the Zimmerman case is not allowed.
3. Feel free to bring up any other example of police behavior that in your mind illustrates police racism.
4. It is allowed to debate whether individual examples constitute good examples of police racism. However, if the thread gets bogged down over a large number of posts in discussions of whether individual cases illustrate racism or not, any poster may attempt to steer it back on topic. Mods will get involved with modtext if necessary. The topic is institutional police racism in general.
Farm Boy asked me to, "put on the shoes of somebody that lives everyday as the parent of a black son." To put it quite bluntly, I cannot do that. I am not black, I have no grown in as a black man, and even on the children front I cannot since I am not a parent. So, no, I really cannot honestly put myself in their shoes. That does not mean I cannot see that there are issues with police and how they target black men (and women I suppose, but the argument seems to be focused around black men.)
So, what are the causes of it from both sides, and what do we do about it? Some very basic and obvious steps to me seem to be things like:
- More community policing and less patrolling from inside the car.
- Police - neighborhood associations. Organizations dedicated to meeting and keeping the lines of communications open.
- More diverse police maybe? But I don't know if that would really matter initially. Would they see a fellow black man, or just a "sell out" cop?
- The community members themselves also need to step up and be more involved. They cannot just wash their hands and refuse to engage with local government.
Those are just off the top of my head and honestly I don't know if any of them are really relevant or not, but they strike me as decent starting points.