By Barack Obama
I want to share parts of the conversations I've had with friends over
the past couple days about the footage of George Floyd dying face down
on the street under the knee of a police officer in Minnesota.
The first is an email from a middle-aged African American businessman.
"Dude
I gotta tell you the George Floyd incident in Minnesota hurt. I cried
when I saw that video. It broke me down. The 'knee on the neck' is a
metaphor for how the system so cavalierly holds black folks down,
ignoring the cries for help. People don't care. Truly tragic."
Another friend of mine used the powerful song that went
viral from 12-year-old Keedron Bryant to describe the frustrations he
was feeling.
The circumstances of my friend and Keedron may be
different, but their anguish is the same. It's shared by me and millions
of others.
It's natural to wish for life "to just get back to normal" as a
pandemic and economic crisis upend everything around us. But we have to
remember that for millions of Americans, being treated differently on
account of race is tragically, painfully, maddeningly "normal" — whether
it's while dealing with the health care system, or interacting with the
criminal justice system, or jogging down the street, or just watching
birds in a park.
This shouldn't be "normal" in 2020 America. It
can't be "normal." If we want our children to grow up in a nation that
lives up to its highest ideals, we can and must be better.
It
will fall mainly on the officials of Minnesota to ensure that the
circumstances surrounding George Floyd's death are investigated
thoroughly and that justice is ultimately done. But it falls on all of
us, regardless of our race or station — including the majority of men
and women in law enforcement who take pride in doing their tough job the
right way, every day — to work together to create a "new normal" in
which the legacy of bigotry and unequal treatment no longer infects our
institutions or our hearts.
EDITOR'S NOTE: It would have been far better had America's first black
president called on his brothers and sisters to stop looting stores and
torching businesses.
2 comments:
I believe Obama lit the fuse on racial unrest when he first criticized police for detaining his former professor. Through out his Presidency he criticized and maligned police officers for arresting blacks. He set the civil rights movement back instead of building on it. That is his legacy with me.
Now you are being judgmental Howie. Everybody knows that the sun rises out of Barack Obama's anal orifice every morning and if it wasn't for his wonderfulness we would live in constant darkness and have only four TV channels, with no HULU or NetFlix. Life would be unendurable.
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