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The Crumbling Michael Brown Movement in Ferguson, MO

On August 9, 2014, just after noon, Michael Brown and Dorian Johnson were walking in the middle of Canfield Drive in Ferguson, Missouri, when they encountered Darren Wilson, a Ferguson police officer. Minutes later, Brown, who was not armed, was fatally shot by Wilson.

Michael Brown was a black teenager; Darryl Wilson is a white cop…

And that was all the information many needed to attempt to kick the “white cops hunt black males” crusade into high gear.

Almost immediately, the effort to portray Michael Brown as a college-bound “gentle giant”, complete with endearing life images:

Michael Brown, cap & gownMichael and brother

was underway, similar to the campaign that followed Trayvon Martin’s death. There were efforts to link Michael Brown’s demise to that of NYPD Chokehold victim Eric Garner.

And, sadly, and predictably, the violent reaction began. On August 10th, the day after Michael Brown’s death, looting broke out. On August 11th, it got worse, despite the pleas of Brown’s family. Police responded with riot control tactics, firing high-velocity bean bags and tear gas at protesters, including an elected official. By the 13th, SWAT officers were dispatched and journalists arrested; the situation looked, well, out-of-hand.

Which prompted Missouri’s Governor to declare a state of emergency and impose a curfew in Ferguson, actions sure to manage tensions…not.

By then, enough “chum” was in the water to attract the country’s two largest race sharks: Al Sharpton appeared in nearby St. Louis on August 12th; Jesse Jackson arrived in Ferguson on the 15th.

However, those visits did not go entirely as planned. A crowd booed Jackson off the stage at an event after he requested donations. Ferguson’s mayor said neither he nor his city’s black leaders wanted Sharpton’s “help”. A former NBA player labeled Sharpton a “coon”. Others had choice words as well, not only for Sharpton, but also for the president of whom he is, and they once were, so fond.

While Jackson’s, Sharpton’s, and Obama’s popularity waned among Ferguson residents, regard for the Ferguson police apparently strengthened, judging by an August 14th call to the Rush Limbaugh program. Perhaps it is because the police arrest the rioters and looters who are mostly out-of-towners with no connection to Michael Brown or to Ferguson; those arrested for felony looting on August 10th already had criminal records.

Those expecting to ride a wave of racial discontent to effect change, beginning in Ferguson, must now combat a wave of apathy now moving through that emotionally-fatigued community. What went wrong?

Winston Churchill once said, “A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.” Well, the lies associated with the “Michael Brown Police Execution” account seem to have run their course. Now the truth appears on the move as well.

Let’s begin with the shooting. Early “accounts” indicated Brown, ran from Officer Wilson then, after being shot in the back, turned and faced Wilson with his hands raised in surrender…and then Wilson opened fire again, killing Brown. The assertions that Brown’s killing was an “execution” conjured notions that he was shot at close range. Then, Brown’s family requested an autopsy…

Which Dr. Michael M. Baden, former New York City chief medical examiner, performed at no charge. Baden’s report showed:

    • Brown was shot at least six times,
    • No bullet wounds to the back of Brown’s body,
    • No gunpowder residue on Brown’s body, suggesting the shots were not fired at close range, and
    • An entry wound to the top of Brown’s head, of which Baden said, “It can be because he’s giving up, or because he’s charging forward at the officer.”

Afterward, Dr. Baden said, “People have been asking: How many times was he shot? This information could have been released on Day 1. They don’t do that, even as feelings built up among the citizenry that there was a cover-up…”

Indeed. Information available on August 9th was withheld, like the surveillance video of the robbery Brown allegedly committed shortly before his death. Not only was release of that video delayed, the federal government opposed its release altogether. And there is yet more unreleased information.

In response Dr. Baden’s report, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said the Justice Department would conduct its own autopsy, and Jesse Jackson told CNN, “This is bound to escalate tensions. This is a very provocative report.”

Translation: the report did not say what they wanted.

There is no reason yet for federal involvement in resolving the shooting, unless the feds have a vested interest in a particular outcome. And why is an ostensibly objective and scientific report considered provocative?

And why weren’t these images of Michael Brown available earlier, to give a more complete picture of the “gentle giant”?

Michael Brown, gun & cashMichael Brown robbery

And why are Sharpton and Attorney Benjamin Crump (of Trayvon Martin family fame) yet stirring up a violence-racked community with speeches that cannot soothe?

This is no longer about Ferguson, Missouri, and at least some of the residents know it. It can no longer be about Michael Brown; he becomes less useful as an icon the more that emerges about him and the circumstances of his death. And, if in killing Brown, Wilson did not act improperly, then this can no longer be about police brutality or the use of excessive force.

So what does that leave?

It leaves people who want to impose a political result, by violence if necessary, because they believe it is for the greater good, or because it means they will get paid. It leaves Civil Rights veterans like John Lewis calling for federal troop deployment in Ferguson, somehow equating criminal looters in 2014 with nonviolent activists in the 1960’s, and Missouri’s governor calling the National Guard to Ferguson.

This is about control, not of Ferguson, but of the political narrative in America, and of the American people. Someone believes they can stir up enough racial unrest to force a political change that will make martial law not just a local phenomenon, but the national norm. Their narrative, in brief, is this:

    The police cannot be trusted; they will kill you and deny all of your rights. Your only hope is to put all of your confidence in the federal government to protect you from the police.

They are unlikely to succeed this time in Ferguson, Missouri, but they are certain to try again, and again, believing you will lose the resolve to remain free and instead acquiesce to the government plantation.

Regarding One Thing Missing for Black Males

Since Trayvon Martin’s death, momentum builds toward a racial “showdown” in this country, with one side outraged that a “white” man got away with “murdering” an innocent black child, while another side counters:

    1. Zimmerman is not white,
    2. A jury found there was no murder, and
    3. A teen-aged MMA enthusiast with ongoing school and drug problems is not everyone’s definition of an innocent child.

The first side, Side “A”, makes racism the issue, though the FBI and the Zimmerman jury said race was no factor. The month after Martin’s death, his parents formed a foundation to advocate for crime victims and their families (though the jury effectively said there was no crime), and, with the Congressional Caucus on Black Men and Boys of 2013, to challenge “Stand Your Ground” laws, though Zimmerman never invoked Florida’s version, and such laws are popular.

How did Side “A” come to create its own issues while dismissing others? In 3 acts:

ACT 1. In 1995, the Nation of Islam sponsored the “Million Man March” on Washington, D. C., to focus attention on black issues. Varying attendance estimates distracted from the event’s message, and determining what it accomplished is more problematic now than was counting heads then.

ACT 2. Nevertheless, the Million Man March inspired Washington, D. C., Congressional Representative Eleanor Holmes Norton, in 2001, to form the “D.C. Commission on Black Men and Boys” to reveal and help resolve issues that (D. C.) Black men face, such as high school dropout rates, criminal justice issues, HIV and AIDS, and marriage and family issues. The commission met many times over the next decade. However, like the Million Man March, its accomplishments are difficult to find.

Homicides, district-wide, decreased to a 50-year low 88 in 2012, but the credit belongs to local government and police. However, in D. C.’s 93% black Ward 8, unemployment averaged 22% in 2012; in 2000, it was 21%. Regarding other Ward 8 “measurables”, between 2000 and 2009:

    • Poverty went from 35% to 34%,
    • Child poverty went from 46% to 48%,
    • Persons lacking a High School diploma went from 33% to 20%,
    • Overall unemployment went from 21% to 17%,
    • Unemployment for those 16 years old and older went from 45% to 48%, and
    • Average family income decreased 5.2%.

And between 2000 and 2012:

    • People on Food Stamps increased 75%, to 42,888 (total Ward 8 population: under 71,000), and
    • People receiving TANF increased 6%, to 17,579.

Lastly, black illegitimacy in D. C. was 77% in 2002; in 2008, it was 79%.

While these things occurred:

    • The D.C. Commission on Black Men and Boys of 2012 discussed Lessons from the Life and Death of Trayvon Martin and focused on local experience with and problem-solving for the negative branding of African American youth and men because of the color of their skin,

    • The D.C. Commission on Black Men & Boys of 2011 featured former rival gang members and violence intervention workers, and accepted testimony from residents,

    • The D.C. Commission on Black Men and Boys of January 2010 took 17 young fathers out for an afternoon of mentoring and job preparation,

    • The D.C. Commission on Black Men and Boys of August 2010, responded to the particularly difficult time Black men are having in a job market that is sometimes unreceptive to them, especially in today’s unprecedented economy,

    • The D.C. Commission on Black Men and Boys of 2007 discussed national efforts to support the “Jena 6,” six Jena, Louisiana high school students, all African American males, who face discriminatory treatment in the criminal justice system…

ACT 3. The Congressional Caucus on Black Men and Boys of 2013, formed after Zimmerman’s acquittal, was modeled after Norton’s D.C. Commission on Black Men and Boys. Its mission: to be a “vehicle for raising consciousness” on issues disproportionately affecting black men and youth including job training, HIV/AIDS and the breakdown of the family. Sound familiar?

So, organizations, modeled after gatherings which did not resolve issues in the last decade, which were inspired by an event that did not resolve issues in the decade before that…will resolve issues today? What is Einstein’s Definition of Insanity, again?

Meanwhile, Side “B”, seizes on black illegitimacy and family decline, the criminality of young black men, etc. They cite statistics with irrefutable implications. They identify a “grievance industry” which they believe facilitates and exploits the adverse state of black affairs, and frustrates honest race discussions. They also show little fear of the nuclear option of political discussions: being called “racist”.

Unfortunately, Side “B” mis-spends their courage. Standing up to Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson, and national NAACP official won’t influence the majority of blacks for whom those gentlemen do not speak. Side “B” needs to take its message to suffering black communities, showing the respect of direct conversation, not just the courage of broadcast monologues.

Side “B” also fumbles their facts, letting spinmeisters confuse issues and change subjects. If Side “B” says, “Blacks commit 93% of black homicides“, Side “A” counters with “Whites commit 86% of all white homicides“; that blacks, at 13% of the population, commit 52% of all U.S. homicides, including 59% of felony murders, gets lost in the noise. Should one say, “Black illegitimacy is at 73%“, another will counter, “White illegitimacy is increasing at a faster rate“…and so it goes…

Both sides miss the point: Side “A”, by putting energy into window-dressing events and off-topic efforts that do not improve the black condition; Side “B”, by being courageous with the wrong black people, and by letting objective facts become subjective banter.

The point? The black community does not hold black males accountable for their behavior.

For contributing to black illegitimacy, he appears, not before other black fathers, but before family court, while by-standers laugh:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t_vcsJ5KNQQ[/youtube]

He is not taken “out back”, but taken in, to criminal courts:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uQy6KNx4d-s[/youtube]

Dealing with this young black man fell to a judge because his community did not check him long before. When a man abuses a woman publicly, it is not the first time, and his behavior is no secret. People knew, and gave him a pass, because “he could ball”.

Black male misdeeds are not even privately considered by the black community; they are broadcast via social media:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gelk2eIWsPY[/youtube]

These things happen also to whites, hisanics, and asians. However, those groups do not have 3 of every 4 children born out-of-wedlock, nor does any of them, alone, commit more than half of U. S. homicides.

Black communities used to deal with their young men, handling complex issues and dispensing consequences that punished and deterred bad behavior. Now, they outsource that responsibility to schools, police, and courts. The result:

    • The schools are less safe;
    Blacks fear the police, perhaps more than they respect them; and,
    • In 2009, there were 2 black males incarcerated for every 3 in college.

Such is the legacy of black communities not holding black males accountable for their behavior.

While Sides “A” and “B” debate, the men of a great people lack what they need most to succeed, or even live well. It is not employment, not education, not acceptance by whites. It is accountability, to those who best understand them. Accountability, to those who can best build and correct their character. Accountability, to those who look like them. Should that return, the other issues will heal, quickly.

There are communities that manage their young men by the power of community expectations. Blacks should strive be one of them…again.

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