“Let’s do it to them
before they do it to us,” was the line with which Sgt. Stan Jablonski
(played by Robert Proskey) dispatched his troops on the old TV show Hill Street Blues. When Sgt. Jablonski
replaced Sgt. Phil Esterhaus (on the death of actor Michael Conrad) they had to
come up with a replacement for Esterhaus’ “Let’s
be careful out there”. Perhaps the show’s writers felt it was ok coming
from the shorter, pudgier actor than the 6’6” Conrad, but it has a very
different meaning and very different connotation, an “us against them”.
Presumably the “them” was bad guys, not the regular folks
that the police were supposed to be there to “protect and serve” but now, 30
years after the show went off the air, we realize how much this was, sadly,
prescient. I am not going to recite the names of all the black men – and
children – killed by police in recent years, including Tamir Rice, Michael
Brown, Freddie Gray, Philando Castile, but
it is an epidemic. Yes, more white people have been killed by police than
black in both 2016
and
2017 – about twice as many – but the proportions are way off given that
just over 12% of the population of the US is black. And what has been even more
graphic is the lack of convictions, and frequently even prosecutions, of the
perpetrators.
If these deaths were not at the hands of police, but rather
had a different cause – an odd virus that struck down black men when being
confronted by the police, or a very selective alien attack, we would not
hesitate to call it an epidemic and search for the cause. But this issue is
political, it is personal, it is an “us” against “them”, raising the issue is
seen by many to be attack on the police, who heroically and at great risk to
themselves protect us from evil. Certainly, the Governing Council (GC) of the American Public Health Association (APHA), by
far the largest public health association in the nation, did not choose to
identify the killing of black men by police as a public health epidemic when it
voted, 65%-35%, against a resolution so designating it at the recent meeting in
Atlanta. The resolution had been introduced a year before, and sent by the GC
back to the authors to make changes to the language, which was done. But it was
not sufficient.
If it was the language, felt, for example, to be denigrating
to police, that was the issue, members of the group could have introduced and
passed amendments to correct it. This point was made (after the vote) by APHA
immediate past President Camara Jones, MD MPH PhD. But it was not the issue;
the GC (and thus, the APHA) did not want to take a stand identifying the
killing of black men by police in the United States as a public health
epidemic. Speakers against the resolution cited personal but irrelevant
concerns like “my brother is a policeman, and he is a good man”, as well as
saying “the data is not sufficient to make the case that it is an epidemic”,
which is patently false. The vote was portrayed as a scientific decision, but
it was clearly a political one, a decision by the overwhelmingly white group to
put their fingers in their ears, their hands over their eyes, and shut their
mouths rather than standing up and saying “this is a problem”.
Many of these killings have been of people (usually men, but
sometimes women or children) who were not involved in committing crimes. They
result from the heightened suspicion police hold of black people in general. If
you don’t believe that, you’re probably white. Just before the vote, I was at
an session at the meeting discussing police violence against black men. Most of
the group was minority (predominantly black) and were relatively young public
health professionals, students, and junior faculty in schools of public health.
A couple of speakers introduced the issue, but then opened the floor. One by
one, in random order, unrehearsed, person after person in the group talked
about their fears and their experiences; these were not prepared in advance,
but slowly came out, one giving rise to another. A government employee noted
that she had two young sons, and worried about their safety. Another woman, a
public health professional, noted that her flight to Atlanta departed at
5:30am, so she’d left her home in a mostly-white suburb at 3:30am to go to the
airport. She was followed by a police car all the way into the city. Another
woman, a professor, talked about driving to a neighboring state and being
followed by a police car that eventually stopped her for no reason or
violation; in the process the officer asked “if you’re a teacher, why aren’t
you in school?” The stories went on and on, from the mouths of professional
people, most of them, in fact, women.
Although many people would disagree, often virulently in
with this age of Trump giving loud voice to aggrieved white men, being white in
America is a privilege. It is a privilege of not thinking that you will be
followed by police, or pulled over by them, or subjected to inappropriately
probing questions by them. It creates an illusion, obviously held by the
majority of the GC of the APHA, that it is mostly criminals, or
“probably-criminals”, or people who look like they might be criminals, who are
followed by, stopped by, and sometimes killed by police. But that is not the
experience of black people in this country, not the black men shot by a police
officer who makes up a story about being threated, nor of the middle-class
professionals who told their stories at that APHA session. It is not the
experience of the young woman who drove me to the Atlanta airport from the
conference; in talking she said she had a 3-year old son and I asked if she
feared for his safety not just from gangs but from police. In response she said
she did, and pointed to a button hanging from her rear-view mirror and said “my
uncle was killed by the police 3 years ago”. I don’t know what occurred with
her uncle beyond what she told me, but I suspect it is not fate, coincidence,
or Kismet that caused my driver to have her own story to tell, but rather the
ubiquity of this experience among black people in America.
What about the police? Don’t we have to worry about the
safety of the people who risk their lives each day to protect us? What about
the fact that there are many (if not enough) minority police officers? To
identify the current situation, not only the killings but the very real sense
of most black people in this country that they do not have the same rights as
whites, that they are, by definition, “suspicious” because of their color, does
not require denigration of all police officers. Indeed, the families
(especially male family members) of black police officers, and even the
officers themselves when off-duty, experience the same indignities (and worse) as
other black people.
It does mean that the idea that a police officer’s first
loyalty is to other officers rather than to the community that they “protect
and serve” must be very narrowly construed. Rather than a “thin blue line” of
brothers (always, it seems, brothers, not sisters), it means that we should
have tighter standards for police, excluding those who are overtly and
viciously violent and racist. It means better training in identifying a
situation in which you see through your prejudice and not through reality, and
how to de-escalate. It means that when an officer kills a person innocent of a
crime, it is not enough for other officers to have not “done it”; they must, if
they were unable to prevent it, disclose it and discourage it and, yes, testify
against the perpetrator. Police officers who do so are not “traitors”, they are
heroes who allow the force to be thought of as we want to think of them.
The fact that even the most respectable and middle-class
black people have to fear interactions with police (even when they are the ones
who have called them!) is a societal scandal. The enormously disproportionate
killing of black men by police is an epidemic, and like all epidemics we must
identify it as such, find the cause, and treat it.
Even the APHA should be able to acknowledge that.
1 comment:
The post's focus rightly highlights the centrality of racial inequality and discrimination in our institutional structures of population and social control. As we know from volumes of research, the manifestation and internalization of discriminatory practices and bias has serious implications for public health, and not just for the individual targets of these practices. I think the implications for public health can go further, however, than police killings of Black men. The mere presence of police and the knowledge of their actions has created an environment of intimidation and harassment, for all of the reasons noted, and more. So, the stress associated with the ever-present threat to Black men, women, children, communities, organizations as well as to other racialized groups requires consideration as part of this epidemic of intimidation. The predatory activity of violence against Black men is the tip of the iceberg and certainly the most extreme manifestation of this public health threat. As an older white middle-class woman I should have less to be concerned about with police interactions, but that is not the case: I am concerned about driving my car and being cited for a small, harmless infraction; standing up for an injustice in my local community and being targeted as an accomplice to something; needing to be vigilant about police actions that threaten everyday freedoms of community members; the effects of excessive force and intimidation practices on the families and children of my closest relationships. But all of this is not so easily measured, more readily experienced.
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