Monday, July 11, 2016

Same Shit, Different Day


So, I read this the other day.





I'm going to put it right out there that I have a certain amount of trepidation about commenting on an essay about racial injustice, written by a biracial man, found in a publication called Black Community News.  It can certainly be argued that Bomberger has more right to comment than I.  I can accept that.  What I won't accept is misinformation, especially when the context in which I saw the article stated that he is biracial, as if this one person's opinions, because of his skin color, outweighed all the data available. I have said it before, and will repeat it.  There is no single "black experience" which can speak for all black people, any more than one woman can speak for all women.  There are, however, facts that exist which should balance any one person's opinion.  

I agree with some of what he says.  There are social problems in this country that need to be solved.  I agree abortion, so called “black on black violence,” police safety, etc. all need better solutions.  I just don’t agree that those problems negate the very real issue of systemic racism in the United States.  I don’t agree that these problems justify ignoring other problems.  Nor do I agree that all other social problems need to be solved before we can address the use of excessive force by the police against African Americans.  To imply that they do is ridiculous.  Imagine if I wrote something suggesting that we couldn’t try to stop heart disease because people die of cancer.

I’m annoyed by the tired “black on black” crime thing.  Sorry.  It is just a stupid argument.  We aren't allowed to call for racial justice because of "black on black" violence?  (Or, as I like to call it, violence.)  83 percent of white murders are committed by white offenders.  90 percent of black murders are committed by black offenders.  What does that prove?  Nothing except what we already know—most murder victims know their killer.  It's probably unrealistic to expect anything better than a violent culture from a nation who solves every foreign policy problem by spending a trillion dollars to blow it up.  In any case, I am bothered by his misleading use of statistics like this.  For someone so disgusted by media misrepresentation, maybe he should not be adding to it. 

Let me put it this way.  Blacks comprise about thirteen to fifteen percent of the United States population, depending on the source.  All things being equal, one would expect, then, about thirteen percent of US doctors to be black.  One would expect about thirteen percent of the people in prison to be black.  One would expect about thirteen percent of the business owners in the US to be black.  One would expect about thirteen percent of women getting abortions to be black.  One would expect about thirteen percent of the people killed in officer-involved fatalities to be black.  Makes sense, right?

Here’s the reality (see endnotes for references):
1.     Black doctors = 4-7%
2.     Black prisoners = 37%
3.     Black business owners = 37.4%
4.     Black abortions = 30%
5.     Black police fatalities = 26%
6.     Black high school graduates = 69% of black students graduate (86% of white students graduate)
7.     Black school expulsions/suspensions = 50% (on average, 24% of students are black)
8.     Black college graduates = 26% (whites 41%)
9.     Black welfare recipients = 39% (same for whites)
10. Black unemployment rate = 8% (white 4%)
11. Black homeowners = 44% of African Americans, (73% of whites own their homes.) What’s even worse is that black-owned homes were valued at 18% less than white-owned homes, even for homeowners with equal incomes.

According to this essay, we are supposed to be appalled at the 30% of abortions in 13% of the population, but unconcerned at the 26% of police fatalities within the same 13% of the population?  That simply does not make sense.  Look, I’m pro-life too, but I strongly suspect that means something different to me than it does to this author.  I believe that safeguarding the sanctity of life is not an obligation that stops at birth.  I believe we are equally compelled to defend every child’s safety and access to opportunity, regardless of race.  Come on.  What are we trying to save our babies for?  I’m serious.  To get shot in the street without a trial or go to prison for a dime-bag while a white swimmer rapes somebody and gets a slap?  Are we really going to say the media is making it all up?  No. 

Look at the numbers, and think.  Forget about black and white.  Forget about the 300 years of government-sanctioned enslavement.  Take any people group, create a system that will for a hundred years deny them education, employment, housing, and opportunity in general; herd them into certain communities through redlining; kill and imprison the men in disproportionally high numbers; and limit access both financially and geographically to health care except abortion clinics.   Kind of sounds like a recipe for high abortion rates to me.  Here we are trying to say we want to stop abortion because we believe human lives are sacred.  I say, if we want to show that human lives are divine miracles, we have to value the homeless drug addict, and the gang member, and the black guy with the broken taillight as much as we value the soccer mom and the CEO. 

As long as we are on stereotypes and soccer moms, let’s talk about white guilt.  This guy is mad because some white people feel bad?  ARE YOU SERIOUS!?!?!  What a load of crap, and how arrogant to generalize the motivation of people he does not know.  Isn’t it thinking like this that perpetuates the mess? I am white, and I will continue to fight for police reform not out of some misplaced sense of white guilt, but for my family and loved ones.  I support the work of Black Lives Matter, despite that same, tired clip everyone keeps dredging up with the crazy bacon fryers.  Speaking of unbalanced media representation, and all—there are chapters and have been peaceful demonstrations all over the United States for the last four years, and the only media image you ever see is the bacon one.  <SMH and rolling my eyes> 

Let me put his mind at ease.  I do not feel guilty for a damn thing related to racial justice, nor does any single person of color I know want me to.  It seems to me that they just want the justice and freedom promised to all of us by that Constitution we worship.  Even though I am white, I may have clued in to something very important that his essay completely misses.  This is not about how white people feel.  GASP!   Try to stay with me here.  Despite the fact that we keep trying to make it about ourselves, this issue is not.  About.  White people.  At all.  Speaking as one, though, I can tell you that having a basic understanding of concepts like white privilege and knowing the historical context of practices like redlining have helped me understand the problem at hand.

The problem we are facing is not what people are "feeling.”  Who cares how we feel about other people, other races?  You can't control the emotions of other people, and someone else's emotions can't harm you.  The longer we keep tiptoeing around each other's feelings instead of addressing the actual problem—a discriminatory system—the more black kids are going to die needlessly.  Does it matter that it is only happening to 0.000006 percent of the black population?  Not to the mamas of the 0.000006 percent, it doesn’t.

Bomberger, like many others, makes a big point of mentioning that more whites are killed by police than blacks. I could mathematically explain how he is again using numbers to present misleading information by failing to account for the vast difference in population size, but why bother?  Why are we accepting the killing of anyone, of any skin color without a proper trial? Why?  Why are we not employing even the most rudimentary de-escalation techniques?  Don’t tell me it is because of the danger police face.  The situations around the killings of Sterling and Castile were about as dangerous a shooting fish in a barrel, and don’t even make me point out Tamir Rice.  Now, don’t lose your mind.  I know there are legitimate dangers to police.  The problem here is that the police don’t have to be in any actual danger to get away with killing people.  They only have to feel in danger, and it apparently doesn’t even matter if the police have themselves escalated the situation to the point that they feel endangered.  Well, if the police officer’s feelings of safety are such an issue, why are we not training these officers to manage unconscious bias and otherwise ensuring they can make sound tactical decisions instead of killing people because they feel an unfounded fear?

I’ll tell you why.  There is no accountability.  None.  Are you aware that police departments in the US are not even required to report police fatalities to anyone, let alone investigate them?  If they are investigated, it is done internally, with no transparency.  As if that ever really works for anything!  I am no attorney, but as I understand it, the burden of proof is much different when it comes to officer-involved fatalities, making it incredibly difficult for criminal charges to be made.  By contrast, in Australia, all police shootings are subject to national monitoring and, I can only assume, appropriate consequences.  Big surprise then, that even when adjusted for the difference in population size, Australian police kill a fraction of the people that ours do.12  We kill in one month, what they did in almost twenty years.  Wow.  Is the disparity explained away by media bias?  Is it any less dangerous to be a cop in Australia?  Do you think there is no prejudice or fear in Australia?  Come on.  We are smarter than that, aren’t we?


The best way I know how to say it is like this:  I do not care if someone hates my kid because he is black.  Could not care less.  Whatever.  Everyone has to learn to deal with idiots.  What I care deeply about is whether or not someone can harm my kid and get away with it because he is black.  In this country, in the year 2016, the sad reality is that yes, someone--even someone sworn to protect him--could harm my child or yours and get away with it.  That is a terrible problem which needs an immediate and concrete solution. Don’t you dare try to dismiss it.



1.  Ellyn R. Boukus, Alwyn Cassil, Ann S. O'Malley, A Snapshot of U.S. Physicians: Key Findings from the 2008 Health Tracking Physician Survey, 2009
2.  U.S. Department of Justice, 2014
3.  US Census Bureau
4.  Multiple sources
5.  Bomberger essay
6.  and 8.  US Department of Education
7.  Equal Justice Initiative, http://www.eji.org/node/1141
9.  US department of Commerce
10.  US Bureau of Labor Statistics
11.  Harvard University; Forbes http://www.forbes.com/sites/forbesleadershipforum/2012/12/10/how-home-ownership-keeps-blacks-poorer-than-whites/#62b46bf57e57
12.  https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/jun/09/the-counted-police-killings-us-vs-other-countries