Saturday, 9 July 2016
Shootings Further Divide a Nation Torn Over Race
Shootings Further Divide a Nation Torn Over Race
First came the cellphone video of an African-American man being fatally shot
 by a Louisiana police officer, and the astonishing live feed of a 
Minnesota woman narrating the police killing of her African-American 
boyfriend during a traffic stop. Then came the horrific live television 
coverage of police officers being gunned down by a sniper at a march protesting the police shootings.
And suddenly, the panoply of fears and resentments that have made this a foreboding summer had been brought into sharp relief.
Police
 accountability and racial bias have been at the center of the civic 
debate since August 2014, when a black teenager was killed by a white 
officer in Ferguson, Mo., a suburb of St. Louis. Mass murders in 
Newtown, Conn.; Charleston, S.C.; Orlando, Fla., and too many other 
locales have revived gun violence as a social issue and national shame. 
Both black anger at police killings and the boiling frustrations of some
 whites who feel they are ceding their long-held place in society have 
been constant undercurrents in politics since January and the Iowa 
presidential caucuses.
Now,
 in the space of three days, the killings of two black men by Louisiana 
and Minnesota police officers and the retaliatory murders of five Dallas
 officers, this time by a black Army veteran, have coalesced all those 
concerns into a single expression of national angst. In the midst of one
 of the most consequential presidential campaigns in memory, those 
convulsive events raised the prospect of still deeper divides in a 
country already torn by racial and ideological animus.
Since
 the Thursday night sniper attack the national conversation has swung 
between bitterness and despair over seemingly unbridgeable gulfs in 
society. The New York Post’s front page blared “CIVIL WAR.” The Drudge 
Report warned in a headline that “Black Lives Kill.” Some Minnesota 
protesters on Thursday night chanted, “Kill the police.”
Police
 officers and sociologists alike say that racial tension is approaching a
 point last seen during the street riots that swept urban American in 
the late 1960s when disturbances erupted in places like the Los Angeles 
neighborhood of Watts and Detroit and Newark, during summers of deep 
discontent.
“Even
 in the 1960s and 1970s, when there was a lot of tension around policing
 and civil rights and the antiwar movement, we’d never seen anything 
like what happened in Dallas,” said Darrel W. Stephens, the executive 
director of the Major Cities Chiefs Association and an instructor at the
 Public Safety Leadership Program in the School of Education at Johns 
Hopkins University.
Mr.
 Stephens and other police officials said that departments were 
increasingly schooling officers in ways to avoid and defuse violent 
encounters with minorities. But other experts said the parade of 
cellphone videos depicting shootings of black men have only reinforced 
African-Americans’ conviction that little has changed in six decades.
“There
 is a constant bombardment of images of brutality against 
African-Americans, and not just brutality, but state-sponsored 
brutality,” said Paul Butler, a former federal prosecutor and a law 
professor at Georgetown University Law Center. This week’s videos, he 
said, were particularly devastating. “It’s visceral,” he said. “It hits 
you in the gut. It’s emotional and graphic, so it makes you feel worse.”
There
 are some parallels today to the 1960s. Those riots were largely touched
 off by violent encounters between blacks and the police. Scholars say 
and statistics show that attacks on police officers became an 
increasingly frequent African-American response to decades of inequality
 and mistreatment at that time.
The Kerner Commission,
 established by President Lyndon B. Johnson, reported in 1968 that “Our 
nation is moving toward two societies, one black, one white — separate 
but unequal.” And a white backlash became a driving force in the 
presidential campaign that year that saw a tough-talking Republican, 
Richard M. Nixon, end eight years of Democratic rule.
Whether
 this week’s violence presages a repeat of that history is, of course, 
an unknown, as the nation’s first black president nears the end of two 
terms in office and the two political parties move toward their national
 conventions this month.
But racial tensions are clearly rising. A June survey by the Pew Research Center
 found that only 46 percent of whites surveyed thought that race 
relations were generally good, a sharp drop from the 66 percent who held
 that opinion in June 2009, shortly after Mr. Obama took office. For 
blacks, the corresponding decline — to 34 percent last month from 59 
percent in 2009 — was even steeper.
The
 same Pew survey found that about three-quarters of African-Americans 
thought that blacks in their communities were treated less fairly by the
 police than were whites; a bare 35 percent of whites felt the same.
In
 the hours after the Dallas ambush, stunned officials and civic leaders 
pleaded for citizens to repair the rips in the nation’s social fabric.
“Our
 profession is hurting,” said the Dallas police chief, David O. Brown, 
who is African-American. “Dallas officers are hurting. We are 
heartbroken. There are no words to describe the atrocity that occurred 
to our city. All I know is that this must stop, this divisiveness 
between our police and our citizens.”
The
 Rev. Bryan Carter echoed him at a Friday memorial service for the 
fallen officers, saying: “We refuse to hate each other. We commit to 
pray together.”
 
President
 Obama, speaking on Friday from Warsaw, where he was attending a two-day
 NATO summit meeting, said of the police, “Today is a wrenching reminder
 of the sacrifices they make for us.” He called the attack a “vicious, 
calculated and despicable attack on law enforcement.”
In a presidential race in which racial and ethnic divisions have become an issue, both Hillary Clinton and Donald J. Trump canceled political events on Friday. Mr. Trump called the events in Texas “an attack on our country.”
“It
 is a coordinated, premeditated assault on the men and women who keep us
 safe,” Mr. Trump said in a statement. “We must restore law and order.”
Mrs.
 Clinton wrote on Twitter on Friday, “I mourn for the officers shot 
while doing their sacred duty to protect peaceful protesters, for their 
families and all who serve with them.”
But
 on social media, there were salutes to the sniper, blame of the news 
media for dividing the nation, charges that black protesters had spread 
hysteria, calls for love, fear of civil war and laments that the country
 is headed toward an unbridgeable divide.
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