We are a nation of diverse
people. Too many times we react negatively to the differences between them and us, be it social, economic, or cultural differences. To bad because we are one United States of
America. I find myself asking, “Are we
the crazy ones, we capable, educated, caring folk?”
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| Jai's Art Speaking To Me |
Social media is filled with personal
perspective about the recent killing of a young black man by the police.
Unfortunately it’s old news as it keeps happening to black men.
Today there is blame, crying
and verbal head shaking about the rioting and destruction going on in Ferguson,
Missouri. It’s the backfire from the
shooting death of teenager Michael Brown by local police (no argument on that
fact). I’m inclined to feel compassion
for the rioting as an expression of grief for the horrendous racial injustice
that continues for black men in this nation. Think Trayvon Martin.
First news reports told me
Michael, this latest victim, was 17 years old and unarmed. Now I see in several sources, he was 18 years
old. Also I’ve read he was grabbing a
policeman’s gun. What really happened? But did he have a birthday everyone forgot
had happened? Did he run toward a
policeman, not down the street hoping to escape from folks who challenged how
he was walking in the neighborhood?
First reports had the devastated
mother sharing pride for his graduation from high school, adding her son was
thinking about going to college.
This morning I hear he was starting
college on Monday.
No matter how the facts
evolve and ferment, bottom line, once again, a police person shot a black kid
dead.
No matter the seemingly
self-serving details being generated, when are we the people going to put a
stop to this continuing occurrence of murder with authority?
As usual (think Trayvon
Martin), there’s no whole story – yet!
Get ready America.
Whatever his life plan, Michael
Brown’s murder that day was, at best – a mistake, and at worst – a crime that
must be acknowledged by the local leadership, quickly!
The shooting is the event we must
systematically address (think strategy and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.) to see that it never
happens again.
Are you up to it America?
I’m certain, here in 2014,
more citizens have law degrees than they did 60 years ago. Still, back then community leaders with or
without credentials mobilized to plan and legislate change that provided equal
rights to all.
In 2014 for sure there are
more mega-churches with mega-dollars than there were 60 years ago when the
churches assumed magnificent leadership roles in that civil rights movement for
equality and justice.
Today our response finds us deeply
sad and angry about the injustice. We
are disgusted with the riots. Otherwise
we sit and wait. We haven’t accepted the truth
that the task of implementing a solution to the problem belongs to all of
us.
Diverse America is in trouble
and all we do is whine.
Have we become too affluent,
or too politically savvy, even fearful for our own security to invest ourselves in
putting a stop to this craziness?
What do you think? Please let me know.

Can't we, each one of us, find a way to make a good difference? I'm trying each day.
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