Riots are a necessary part of the evolution of society.
Unfortunately, we do not live in a universal utopia where people have the basic
human rights they deserve simply for existing, and until we get there, the
legitimate frustration, sorrow and pain of the marginalized voices will boil
over, spilling out into our streets. As ‘normal’ citizens watch the
events of Ferguson unfurl on their television screens and Twitter feeds,
there is a lot of head shaking, finger pointing, and privileged explanation
going on. We wish to seclude the incident and the people involved. To separate
it from our history as a nation, to dehumanize the change agents because of
their bad and sometimes violent decisions—because if we can separate the
underlying racial tensions that clearly exist in our country from the looting
and rioting of select individuals, we can continue to ignore the problem.
While the most famous rant against the riots thus far comes
from Kevin
Sorbo, where he calls the rioters “animals” and “losers,” there are
thousands of people echoing these sentiments. Sorbo correctly ascertains that
the rioting has little to do with the shooting of an unarmed black man in the
street a few weeks ago, but he blames it on the typical privileged American’s
stereotype of a less fortunate sect of human being—that the looting is a result
of frustration built up over years of “blaming everyone else, The Man, for
their failures.”
Because when you have succeeded, it ceases to be a
possibility, in our capitalist society, that anyone else helped you. And if no
one helped you succeed, then no one is holding anyone else back from
succeeding. Except they did help you, and they are holding people back. So that
blaming someone else for your failures in the United States may very well be an
astute observation of reality, particularly as it comes to white privilege
versus black privilege. And, yes, they are different, and they are tied to race,
and that doesn’t make me a racist, it makes me a realist. If anything, I am
racist because I am white. Until I have had to walk in a person of color’s
skin, I will never understand, I will always take things for granted, and I
will be inherently privileged. But by ignoring the very real issues this
country still faces in terms of race to promote an as-of-yet imaginary colorblind
society, we contribute to the problem at hand, which is centuries of abuses
lobbied against other humans on no basis but that of their
skin color.
Sorbo is not alone. One of
the Tea Party’s pages has hundreds of comments disparaging the rioters,
bemoaning the state of our country, and very much calling skin color on the
carpet as the culprit of this debauched way of dealing with the state of our
society.
“To hear the libs, one would think that burning and looting
are a justifiable way to judge negative events that effect (sic) the black,”
commented Ray Hause. “I intentionally used black because of a fact that you do
not hear of these events when another skin color is in play. It is about time
that the blacks start cleaning their own backyards before they start on ours.”
However, the conservative group to which Hause belongs gets
its name from the founding riot, The
Boston Tea Party. For those who need a quick history brush-up, in 1773
American protesters dumped an entire shipment of tea into the Boston Harbor to
protest The Tea Act, which colonists maintained violated their rights. In
response to this costly protest and civil unrest, the British government
enforced The Coercive Acts, ending local government in Massachusetts, which in
turn led to the American Revolution and created our great country.
Samuel Adams wrote of the incident, claiming it “was not the
act of a lawless mob, but was instead a principled protest and the only
remaining option the people had to defend their constitutional rights”
according to John K. Alexander, author of “Samuel
Adams: America's Revolutionary Politician” (pg. 129).
That protest back in 1773 was meant to effect political and
societal change, and while the destruction of property in that case may not
have ended in loss of human life, the revolution
that took place afterward certainly did. What separates a heralded victory in
history from an attempt at societal change, a cry for help from the country’s
trampled, today? The fact that we won.
In terms of riots being more common in black communities,
that is true only when the riots are politically aimed.
The obvious example here is the
L.A. Riots of 1992, after the Rodney King beating and verdict. I would put
forth that peaceful protesting is a luxury of those already in mainstream
culture, those who can be assured their voices will be heard without violence,
those who can afford to wait for the change they want.
“I risk sounding racist but if this was a white kid there
would be no riot,” commented Thom Nielsen on the Tea
Party page. “History shows us that blacks in this country are more apt to
riot than any other population. They are stirred up by racist black people and
set out to cause problems. End of story.”
Blacks in this country are more apt to riot because they are
one of the populations here who still need to. In the case of the 1992 riots,
30 years of black people trying to talk about their struggles of racial
profiling and muted, but still vastly unfair, treatment, came to a boil.
Sometimes, enough is simply too much. And after that catalyst event, the
landscape of southern California changed, and nationally, police forces took
note.
And the racism they are fighting, the racism we are all
fighting, is still alive and well throughout our nation. The modern racism may
not culminate in separate water fountains and backs of buses, but its insidious
nature is perhaps even more dangerous to the individuals who have to live under
the shroud of stereotypical lies society foists upon them.
Take Jerry Lister’s
comment for example:
“I believe the only way to stop the blacks from rioting is
to film every person involved and prohibit them from receiving ALL public
assistance for life.”
Instead of tearing down other human beings who are acting
upon decades of pent-up anger at a system decidedly against them, a system that
has told them they are less than human for years, we ought to be reaching out
to help them regain the humanity they lost, not when a few set fire to the
buildings in Ferguson, but when they were born the wrong color in the
post-racial America.
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