These include having a toy gun while black and breathing while black.
When I attended the Saturday protests in Baltimore calling for justice for Gray, I was momentarily positioned next to a demonstrator with a T-shirt reading: ‘Unarmed Civilian’. The shirt was a holdover from last year’s protests in Ferguson, Missouri, over the shooting of unarmed black teenager Michael Brown, whose murderer – policeman Darren Wilson – was soon cleared of rights violations.
In typically conspiratorial fashion, Fox News released an exclusive report citing the findings of an anonymous data mining firm that does work for the government: “An analysis of social media traffic in downtown Baltimore ... has unearthed striking connections to the protests in Ferguson.”
There is indeed a “striking connection” between Ferguson and Baltimore, but it has gone over Fox’s head: It’s the countrywide criminalisation of black people for daring to exist, and their recriminalisation for reacting logically to state violence.
Of course, the government and complicit media unabashedly invert the roles of aggressor and victim so that the police occupy the latter spot.
The repeated allegations by Mayor Rawlings-Blake and police officials that “outside agitators” are responsible for stirring up trouble in Baltimore have meanwhile failed to withstand the test of reality – though the claims have given protesters some good material to work with.
The American Civil Liberties Union has warned that: “If police forces across America continue to militarise and treat communities of colour as the enemy, they will increasingly be seen as an occupying army.”
And while the US’ cultivation of its own domestic battlefield – and its own crop of folks with nothing to lose – might yield a high payoff for the arms, surveillance, and prison industries, the ethical cost to society will be much higher.
Excerpted from: ‘Baltimore: On the domestic frontlines’. Courtesy: Aljazeera.com
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