I watch
with horror as the events in Ferguson, Missouri unfold. I will not pretend I know exactly what
happened but I know as sure as I am a white middle class woman from the East
that a white youngster jay walking or being a smart mouth would not have been
shot dead. And if you differ I want to hear the details of those incidents that
parallel the deaths of so many young black men in this country.
How many
times can this happen in this country before we find a solution. I feel
helpless. I like to take action . To DO something. But for the life of me I
can't think what.
I live in
New Jersey and can tell you that the standing comment as we drive on major
highways like the NJ Turnpike or Garden State Parkway and see cops pulling
someone over is," Oops driving while Black." Years ago a study came out citing that the
police in New Jersey were profiling. ya think! It continues.
I wonder
if we need to look at what prompts someone to become a policeman. Is it a need
for power and control? Is it suppressed rage? I don't know but I wonder if
there is an intersect between the psychology of who chooses that career and
their behavior on the job.
I worked
in psychiatry for years. Patients sometimes got upset and were unpredictable.
We didn't have guns. We "talked"
people down. Maybe police offers need to lose their guns and figure out how to
deal with people in other ways.
I guess
we are still giving lip service to community policing. To knowing the community
you serve in intimate ways. And now thanks to " political
correctness" it is harder to really know what a police officer may
"really think" while patrolling a community like Ferguson
Missouri.
I don't mean to disparage an entire group of police officers as most do a difficult and dangerous job remarkably well. We need a well trained group of law enforcement professionals to keep society running smoothly, and in fact to protect the store owners in Ferguson from a small group of looters doing damage to an already raw community.
Answers
have to come. In the meantime those of us who don't know what to do to help
can do what we can to promote understanding
and dialogue and opportunity in the communities where we live.
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