African American
Related: About this forumHalf of Black Millennials Know Victim of Police Violence
Source: Associated Press
By JESSE J. HOLLAND, ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON Nov 4, 2015, 4:04 AM ET
Years before the high-profile deaths of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown and Freddie Gray, more than half of African-American millennials indicated they, or someone they knew, had been victimized by violence or harassment from law enforcement, a new report says.
The information, from the "Black Millennials in America" report issued by the Black Youth Project at the Study of Race, Politics and Culture at the University of Chicago, reflects starkly different attitudes among black, Latino, Asian and white millennials when it comes to policing, guns and the legal system in the United States. Researchers, who have surveyed millennials several times during the past decade, point out that the disparities existed well before the "Black Lives Matter" movement began.
In the 2009 Mobilization and Change Survey, 54.4 percent of black millennials answered yes to the question "Have you or anyone you know experienced harassment or violence at the hands of the police?" Almost one-third of whites, 1 in 4 Latinos and 28 percent of Asian-Americans surveyed said yes to the same question.
This study, released to The Associated Press on Wednesday, comes as the United States grapples with concerns over policing in minority communities following the deaths of Martin, 17, in Florida three years ago, Brown, 18, in Ferguson, Missouri, last year and Gray, 25, in Baltimore earlier this year. Their deaths, as well as those of other black men and women, have inspired nationwide protests under the "Black Lives Matter" and "Say Her Name" monikers.
But even while being the wellspring of those movements, a clear majority of black millennials 71 percent said in that same survey they believe police in their neighborhood were "there to protect you." Eighty-five percent of whites, 76 percent of Hispanics and 89 percent of Asians also said police were in their neighborhood to protect them.
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Read more: http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/half-black-millennials-victim-police-violence-34955569
Response to Eugene (Original post)
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MisterP
(23,730 posts)the few (non-millennial) suburbanites I know who believe in the "thin blue line" are those who've never encountered or even phoned one ...
likewise all my Orange County acquaintances have at least one friend or relative who's been in the increasingly-profitable prison system
guess it's the same process as that "middle-aged Whites death-rate spike" story from yesterday: BLM's unstated message *is* that, yes, what affects the AA community is "dress rehearsal" for everyone else--that colonialism (domestic as much as overseas) generates techniques and situations that'll be
that's why it's so important to remember that BLM is a generational thing, too--that it's the millennials who've seen their future taken from them, whether since Bacon's Rebellion or whether since the Sagebrush Rebellion: that's their call to arms--not that "everyone's in the same boat," but that there's tremendous forces working against us to put us into said boat