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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHow many Ahmaud Arberys is it going to take, America?
https://www.upworthy.com/how-many-ahmaud-arbery-is-it-going-to-takeHow many Ahmaud Arberys is it going to take, America?
Annie Reneau
05.08.20
It's a story as old as America itself. A story we've heard so many times we've collectively got it memorized.
Chapter 1: Black man lives his life. White man thinks black man living his life looks suspicious. White man kills black man.
Chapter 2: White killer goes home and lives his life. Black man's family reels and cries for justice. Black man's community reels and cries for justice. Weeks or months pass, until the cries for justice grow long and loud enough that someone in power actually listens.
Chapter 3 is a cliffhanger, every time. Will the white killer be arrested? This time, yes. Will he be convicted? We'll find out in the next chapterbut don't count on it.
snip//
We could debate all of the details of Arbery's killing, but doing so starts to distract from the big picture, which is this:
Black Americans don't feel safe in our country for a reason. Black Lives Matter exists for a reason. Black Americans have higher rates of poverty and more health problems and disproportionate crime rates for a reason. Black folks are even experiencing this freaking pandemic disproportionately for a reason.
Every reason for racial inequality and injustice traces back to racismhistorical, institutional, racism in addition to personal, individual racism. As prominent voices and activistsas well as my own black friends and familykeep saying, this isn't new. This has been the perpetual, ongoing, exhausting reality of daily life as a black American for centuries.
And we don't even have to go all the way back to slavery. In 1951, the Civil Rights Congress petitioned the United Nations to call the U.S. government to account for its crimes against black people in America. Seventy years later, despite having won equal civil rights on paper, black people are still experiencing injustice from institutions that are supposed to protect all Americans. We still have laws that can beand areused as a cover for racism. We still have to have national campaigns with organizations and senators and citizen petitions in order to get the wheels of justice turning for one black man murdered while jogging. It's ridiculous.
Our black friends, family, coworkers, and acquaintances are tired. Not only is the fight for justice seemingly never ending, but Ahmaud Arbery's death just adds to the laundry list of things black Americans have to worry about doing.
This is why it's not enough to just be "not racist." Being "not racist" in a country whose history and institutions have always been permeated with racism doesn't do anything to change the status quo. It's like saying, "I'm not planting weeds" in a garden where weeds keep popping up. That's nice that you're not contributing to it, but you're not actually helping.
Racism has to be uprooted to be eliminated, and that can't be done passively. We have to be willing to continually dig in and get our hands dirty if we ever hope to rid our world of it. Occasional activism like today's #IRunForMaud run are well and good, but occasional activism can't be all that we do.
White Americans (like myself) need to acknowledge that it's not enough to be non-racist and start embracing anti-racism. Start by following black thought leaders. Do an honest, deep dive into the concepts of white fragility and privilege. Join anti-racism groups, such as Showing Up for Racial Justice. Contact your representatives and push them for legislation like California's new Racial Justice Act. Keep on educating yourself and address racism directly when you see it.
Change doesn't just happen; it's created. If we want the stories of racial justice in America to have better endings, we need to play a proactive role in creating a whole new setting and an entirely new plotline for them.
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How many Ahmaud Arberys is it going to take, America? (Original Post)
babylonsister
May 2020
OP
Frasier Balzov
(2,646 posts)1. Without that recording, cries for justice might not have been enough.
WhiskeyGrinder
(22,336 posts)4. That recording alone wasn't enough, either.
Solly Mack
(90,765 posts)2. K&R
demosincebirth
(12,536 posts)3. I hate to say this , but amend freedom of speech laws
WhiskeyGrinder
(22,336 posts)5. Wait, what?
Igel
(35,300 posts)6. I assume that it's a call for banning
certain kinds of speech. Only approved forms of speech can be allowed in a truly free (as opposed to a merely free) society.
demosincebirth
(12,536 posts)7. Banning any group that promotes hate towards any minority.