April 15 is the anniversary of the day Jackie Roosevelt Robinson broke into the big leagues 74 years ago today. All ballplayers, coaches and umpires will honor Jackie Robinson by wearing 42. It is a well deserved honor.
75 years ago, in 1946 a black man could not play in the major leagues. In 1947 one black man was allowed in. This two years after American black men fought for the United States (in a segregated army) and died for a country that would not let them use the same bathrooms, eat in the same restaurants, sleep in the same hotels, and allow their children into the same schools as white people.
The question we are pondering is how much things have changed? Bathrooms, restaurants, schools (mostly) all go without saying as being integrated. But our streets are not as this horrible video shows:
Angry Staff https://twitter.com/i/status/1382119550985048068
And then there is George Floyd and Daunte Wright. First, when did Minnesota become North Mississippi? Who knew the frozen tundra hid such vehement racism? And second- we admit to thinking after George Floyd (and the many police killings before Floyd-remember the epidemic of killings during the last year of the Obama administration?) "well this will change things."
But things are not changing. An African American man or woman can go into any restaurant, but they cannot walk down or drive down every street. Two things appear to be at play here. First, systemic and perhaps unconscious racism. A strange man walks in a neighborhood where he is unknown and nobody pays much attention, unless he is black. Then problems start ala Travon Martin, et.al.
Second and more insidious are the actions of the police, They are reaching for their guns during misdemeanor traffic stops and minor felony arrests more and more when the suspect is black. Let's assume Daunte Wright resisted arrest- that he ignored the order of the police and wanted to get back into his car and drive away.
Police appear to have this attitude that they are never going to allow that to happen even if that means killing the person, which they are doing with alarming alacrity. What can be done so that police do not treat these encounters as personal?
And yet the other point of view is that the person has committed a crime, has a warrant, may well be dangerous and the police are not doing their job by letting them go and arresting them at another time.
There has got to be a way to resolve this because it is ripping our country apart. We have experienced it here in Miami in the Officer Lozano case in which a city of Miami police officer shot and killed Clement Lloyd who was on a motorcycle in 1989. Ovalle wrote about it here in 2014 when Pandemic was just a word under "P" in the dictionary.
By now we realize this is not going away. Police are killing people during minor stops and encounters and although they are being prosecuted with increasing frequency still the killings continue. Eric Garner was put in a choke hold by police in NYC in 2014 and killed despite the fact he said "I can't breathe eleven times". His crime was selling single cigarettes. Michael Brown (18) was killed in Ferguson Mississippi in August 2014 for suspicion of stealing a box of cigars. Tamir Rice (12) was shot and killed in November 2014 in Cleveland, Ohio when police saw him with a toy gun. Walter Scott was shot in the back five times by a white police officer for driving a car with a broken taillight in Charleston South Carolina in April 2015. Philando Castile was killed by police while driving his girlfriend in St. Paul, Minnesota in July 2016. Stephon Clark was shot seven times by police officers in March 2018 while he was carrying a cell phone in his grandmother's back yard in California. And of course there is Breonna Taylor who was shot eight times and killed by police while she was in her apartment in March 2020 in Louisville, Kentucky.
It just goes on and on and on.
If we are keeping count, who will be this tragic number 42?
7 comments:
That's Officer Lozano.
There needs to be some historical perspective on Jackie Robinson. He was not a historical one man show. The heavy lifting in the struggle to integrate baseball was done by the hundreds of black minor leaguers who meandered their way through the minor leagues in places like Tidewater, Savannah, and Macon. What they experienced was a lot worse than what Robinson went through. Check out "1964" by David Halberstam. He documents the history very well.
Can still remember my grandmother crying when she heard the news about Robinson's death.
The Captain Reports:
Judge Tunis:
It may be time to update your information on the Member's page with The Florida Bar. You have been out of office for more than three months:
Dava J Tunis
Justice Building
1351 NW 12th St Ste 624
Miami, FL 33125-1628
Office: 305-548-5168
dtunis@jud11.flcourts.org
Cap Out .......
The irony of it is that the last MLB team to integrate as in that “center of liberalism” Boston. Pumpsie Green played for the Red Sox in 1959!
We were at the Marlins game last night as the son of good friends was debuting for the Fish as starting pitcher. Every player wore 42 and the stadium announcer would say, "now batting, No. 42, Starling Marte" and then "pitching, No. 42 Anthony DeSclafani." On the scoreboard, every player was listed as No. 42.
It was really just very sweet, kind of understated, a fine testament to a determined, courageous Robinson.
While at that, Joe Mansfield also has his address at the court house until just a week or so ago. So does Sam Slom and we got rid of him years ago.
Run the federal judges and see how many don't pay dues and are not members of the Florida Bar anymore.
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