Gadfly interrogating BLM

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Gadfly is still pondering the work of Individual-1 in a 4000-word email/essay that he has called the most vigorous local attack on systemic racism that he has encountered, that completely contradicts Councilman Reynolds’ rationale for the Community Engagement Initiative, and who seems to speak for many of our residents.

Individual-1 titled his essay “Systemic Racism is a Lie.” Councilman Reynolds has said that progress toward the lofty goals of the CEI depends on how many people believe that “systemic racism is real” and are willing to fix the systems that “cause so much damage and pain.”

Game on.

So far you have seen Gadfly interrogate two aspects of Individual-1’s essay: first, what sometimes triggers violence in Black/police confrontations, and, second, the claim that no facts supporting systemic racism were presented at the August 11 Public Safety Committee meeting.

Yesterday Gadfly turned toward a major thrust of Individual-1’s argument: the roots of the notion of systemic racism in the Black Lives Matter organization. BLM according to Individual-1 is an anti-American Marxist terrorist organization — “criminal thugs,” “radical extremists,” making “outrageous demands.”

Strong stuff.

And Gadfly, who knows BLM only through often conflicting media reports, admitted yesterday not having a clear picture of the organization.

Thus, time to investigate and interrogate.

Gadfly spent 4-5 hours last night reading around — tip o’ the hat to Michele for providing some resources with which to start — and will need some time this morning to pull his thoughts together.

Please stay tuned.

The Kenosha alarm clock

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In a much more happy mood, for a week or two Gadfly suggested that we start our day with a Lehigh Valley anthem. Somber now, and recognizing that possible changes in Bethlehem policing are on our plate, Gadfly suggests we wake up in a different manner, listening to those seven shots. The president in Kenosha today.

How should Gadfly feel about the Black Lives Matter organization?

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Individual-1’s argument against the reality of systemic racism is largely based in his claim that the notion of systemic racism originates with the Black Lives Matter organization, which he claims is a severely tainted organization.

Can anyone better versed in these matters discuss the kinds of arguments he makes about BLM in such points listed below?

Gadfly feels very comfortable with the idea that black lives matter, but he is not sure what to make of the claims about the nature and roots and goals of the organization.

Does anybody else feel such a conflict?

Is Individual-1 right here? Or partially right?

Would anyone take a crack at that?

Or recommend something to read?

Gadfly just doesn’t know enough about the BLM organization itself to comment on these arguments and statements. And he would like to know more.

———–

4) “The racism today is coming from politicians on the left and terrorist groups such as BLM and Antifa.”

11) “Police officers are being wrongly portrayed in the media based on the lies of certain politicians and radical terrorist groups like BLM.

22) “The ‘systemic racism’ narrative is a complete lie and that BLM is nothing but a bunch of criminal thugs doing more harm to the black community than good.”

25) “Black Lives Matter or BLM is a criminal group, a domestic terrorist organization.

26) “Any support to BLM is an invitation for chaos and destruction to come to your area. . . . Get ready, because there is one restaurant business in town inviting BLM to come to Bethlehem and they should be condemned for doing so.”

27) “The entire BLM narrative is based on lies and has a long history of violence.

31) “The founders of BLM are self-described ‘trained Marxists’ who have called for outrageous demands to be met or else. One BLM leader said in July 2020 that if demands are not met, ‘then we will burn down this system.’ BLM has also openly advocated for the killing of police officers (we all heard pigs in a blanket, what do we want, dead cops). . . . Do any of you have children who are in law enforcement who may be a pig in a blanket someday, killed just because of a bunch of lies?”

32) “Black Lives Matter (BLM) was founded by radical extremists who use rioting, looting, vandalism, and violence as tools.

33) “The false narrative politicians and BLM want you to believe is that there are innocent people of color continuously being harassed and murdered by the police ‘every day.’

Systemic racism: the case for and agin’

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Back and forth on systemic racism, as promised:

Pro:

Ruth Marcus, “If you don’t believe systemic racism is real, explain these statistics.” Washington Post, June 12, 2020.

Con:

Heather Mac Donald, “The Myth of Systemic Police Racism.” Wall Street Journal, June 2, 2020.

Quiz tomorrow!

Some examples of systemic racism

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Gadfly has lived all his working life in a world of words.

Recently new words relevant to our in-process national reckoning with race have entered his world.

defunding the police

systemic racism

Like many new words and maybe like many of you, Gadfly has not always felt comfortable with these new words.

You’ve seen Gadfly whine on these pages two or three times about the way Chair Colon missed the opportunity to alleviate some confusion and give “defunding the police” a precise definition at the top of the August 11 Public Safety Committee meeting.

Gadfly’s sense is that “systemic racism” lives also in a state of imprecision.

Gadfly had been looking for a succinct list of examples of what people mean when they use the term “systemic racism,” and he tips his hat to Greg Zahm for the following link.

7 Ways We Know Systemic Racism Is Real

Ben and Jerry (Ha! Gadfly loves it!) say systemic racism is “less about violence or burning crosses than it is about everyday decisions made by people who may not even think of themselves as racist. As sociologist Eduardo Bonilla-Silva has said, “The main problem nowadays is not the folks with the hoods, but the folks dressed in suits.”

See if the short discussions of wealth, employment, education, criminal justice, housing, surveillance, and healthcare will help give you a more concrete idea of what people mean when they say systemic racism and see it as a problem.

The reality of “systemic racism” is certainly controversial, certainly questioned, so Gadfly will try to give you a pro and con reference in his next post to further help our understanding of both positions.

Sharing what I know about trauma

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Michele Downing is a Social Worker and RN, a grandmother of two, interested in social and environmental justice, a resident of the Lehigh Valley for fifteen years, the last six years a resident of West Bethlehem.

Gadfly:

I’ve been pondering much of the discussion that’s been flying around centering on Black Lives Matter and calls for changes in policing/addressing police brutality. I admit to jumping to the conclusion that people should “Just know” and frustrated at “How could they not know???” So I’m sharing what I know, hoping that when we know better we will all do better.

Yes, Black Lives Matter, and I completely understand “Back the Blue.” I’m not anti-police, and I have never personally had a negative interaction with any Bethlehem police officer. But I know this: police officers can go home, take off their uniform and resume their life. Black and brown folks can not remove their skin.

Let me tell you about a good friend of mine.

She is white, her husband is black. From the outside looking in, they are living the American Dream, and they did it “the right way.” They put each other through school.  They are both hard-working, law-abiding college-educated professionals. They go to church, volunteer in their community, donate copiously.  They waited to plan their baby until they felt they could afford to have a family.

When their child was born, after much agonizing and arguing, they came to the decision that they could not name their baby the name they had chosen because there is just too much evidence proving that schools and employers look at resumes with “ethnic names” differently (see links below for context). They hoped that racism would be a thing of the past when their baby is grown, but they couldn’t count on it.

Sit with yourself a moment and imagine being robbed of the chance to name your own baby.

That feeling you just felt is trauma.

Michele

———

“Are Job Candidates Still Being Penalized For Having ‘Ghetto’ Names?”

“Harvard Study Says Minority Job Candidates Are ‘Whitening’ Their Resumes When Looking for Jobs”

“Study: anti-black hiring discrimination is as prevalent today as it was in 1989”

“The Causes and Consequences of Distinctively Black Names”

Why do they run?

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Let’s call the writer of that strong denial of systemic racism individual-1.

Individual-1 poses a long and challenging series of arguments and statements in his denial of systemic racism. Let’s keep the focus on what he says not who he is.

His email is virtually a go-to, one-stop resource for understanding a position completely contrary to the one Councilman Reynolds articulated for the Community Engagement Initiative.

His position must be faced. It must be understood. And, if necessary, it must be answered.

Gadfly has numbered Individual-1’s key arguments and statements for easy focus, and he invites followers to focus, for and agin’, in their replies. Always better to be specific, says the prof.

Because of the theme you’ve seen Gadfly following — that is, Black parents giving “The Talk,” the Black high school student with death at the traffic stop on her mind — these three points in Individual-1’s essay jumped first to his attention.

17) “If only all subjects who interact with police would just follow directions and not resist. When a subject resists, law enforcement officer immediately go into a mind state to defend their life.”

19) “We need to teach our youngsters early on to respect the police. We need to strongly suggest a push to educate all children, just like we do with the DARE program, on what to do when interacting with the police, stressing cooperation and the following of orders. It needs to be stressed during a class that the police officer is in charge at the time of interaction and any issue one may have with the incident or process is not going to be sorted out in the middle of an arrest or police action. There is a process for either a citizen’s complaint or an internal affairs complaint in the following days. Parents need to continually stress this notion to their children.”

34) “Remember, the important admonishment, and one that you all should be repeating to our youngsters, the police are in control of an incident and you should listen to and respect all commands during any encounter. An illegal stop, an illegal arrest, or alleged racism can be sorted out later and there should not be any escalation of the situation. The vast majority of people know this, comply with the police, and there are no issues with the encounter. Blacks however are four times more likely to resist arrest than whites and Hispanics combined.”

Gadfly has a lot of things running around in his mind on this subject begging to be sorted out.

Maybe the question “Why do they run?” will help bring a focus. “They,” meaning the Black males confronting the police.

George Floyd resisted being put in the police car. Claustrophobia, he said. Rayshard Brooks talked calmly to police for about 1/2 hour, but when it came time to put the cuffs on, he fought with immediate vigor — a complete transformation — and ran. Irrationally so. Why the quick, astonishing reversal in attitude? How could he expect that he would ever get away? We don’t know the full story yet, but Jacob Blake was heading to a car. Was he thinking he could drive away? Where did he think he could go? Was he going after a knife? If so, what could he possibly, possibly hope to gain with it? What the hell was he thinking?

Are you with the Gadfly here? There’s a kind of mystery in this “running” behavior, isn’t there?

Why do they run?

Mr. White Gadfly was born lower middle-class. Shanty Irish. Lived in “Tin Town,” near but not on the other side of the tracks. He was taught to respect the police. If Mr. White Gadfly then or now was detained or arrested by the police, he would act just as Individual-1 suggests. In Gadfly’s mind, if he were arrested, rightly or wrongly, he imagines being treated respectfully, being able to secure a lawyer, and eventually sorting things out reasonably if not painlessly in the long run. Mr. White Gadfly has been brought up in and has experienced a criminal justice system he can trust. He could not imagine running. Except in to a system designed to protect his rights. He would expect to trust the whole system even to the police self-policing themselves if he was involved with a bad apple. He has no reason to think otherwise.

Gadfly hopes no one is listening. As a teen, he was once brought home by a policeman who found him around midnight a bit stuporish leaning up against the wall of Novino’s Luncheonette at the corner of Union Ave. and Baltimore Ave., Lansdowne, Pa., put him in the patrol car, walked him to his front door, and ushered him in with a pat on the butt and with advice to be quiet and hit the sack.

Gadfly hopes no one is listening. Gadfly has six sons. He’s had “talks.” He knows about nighttime anxiety, the night sweats. He remembers a “Hello, Dr. Gadfly” phone call and then retrieving one son from a local township police station where he and his wayward son were treated respectfully, though the “feeling-his-oats” son had certainly delivered some imprudent sass. The officer delivered the son from a dangerous situation. For which we can be forever thankful.

Gadfly trusts the police. He can look beyond a traffic stop gone bad and trust in a good outcome. Gadfly can trust the system.

Individual-1 says, “Blacks, however, are four times more likely to resist arrest than whites and Hispanics combined.” And you might remember Chief Di Luzio saying quite clearly August 11 that it’s the resistance that is the reason for the violence. A bit scarily, Individual-1 says that resistance puts “the officer immediately . . . into a mind state to defend their life.”

Ok, it’s a fact that Blacks are four times more likely to resist arrest than whites and Hispanics combined. And violence occurs thereupon and therefrom.

But the conversation shouldn’t stop there.

That fact should naturally lead to this question: “Why are Blacks four times more likely to resist arrest than whites and Hispanics combined?”

Are we to think the answer is that Blacks are by nature ornery, uncontrollable, evil, animal . . . racist?

Please.

So what is the reason Blacks resist, run more than others? Running sometimes right into their deaths or life-long disability.

Perhaps because they have no trust in the system, a lack of trust based on hundreds of years of “tribal” experience.

Perhaps because they know from a kind of collective consciousness, a kind of in-bred instinct that if you go with the police, you may not come back. You might literally disappear.

The back of a police car a black hole.

Perhaps because they know from an oral tradition hundreds of years old that if you go with the police you may not come back. You might literally disappear. The New York Times video a few posts back began with a Black father remembering “My grandfather talked to me as a black man from Augusta, Georgia, growing up in the Deep South.”

From father to son in a long unbroken chain of “talks” reaching back to 1619.

Sound like Gadfly psycho-babble?

Maybe it is, and maybe others can explain it better or differently.

But Gadfly taught literature and film by and about Blacks for fifty years. He’s read their journals, their autobiographies. The white power structure is not to be trusted. You literally might disappear.

Gadfly has seen the data.

The data is there for all to see.

Prof Holona Ochs reminds us that the origin of our modern police forces is in the slave patrols of the South. There is such a thing as cultural memory. Blacks know their history.

There is, frankly, a not so subtle undercurrent in Individual-1’s essay that the Blacks should be helping themselves (the reference to Affirmative Action, for instance), that the charge of systemic racism is an excuse for not succeeding, a crutch.

Certain people blame Blacks for their lowly condition. Justly celebrated Black hero Frederick Douglass (he didn’t have a real name) suffered years of ignominy as a slave but finally courageously risked his life to escape to the “free” states in the north and better himself, only to find that he was subject to the Fugitive Slave Law and could be captured and returned to his “owner” in the South with the blessing of the national government.

Imagine.

That is systemic racism.

And there is plenty of it still in operation today.

Gadfly understands why they run.

Gadfly invites civil and courteous discussion of Individual-1’s challenging statement from any perspective.

Good conversation builds community.

Unable to change the system, the judge quits

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To make her point, Dantos poses a question to white friends: “How often have you been pulled over for driving away from a curb without using your turn signal?”

The judge says most white people would be surprised at how often the police narrative in the arrest of a young black or brown man begins with that offense. The next sentence on the report usually states that the arresting officer smelled marijuana. Handling these cases has left Dantos increasingly frustrated.

———-

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See John Perez case video here.

———–

Floyd 31

See complete transcript of the Judge’s remarks in the Perez case here.

———-

from Laurie Mason Schroeder, “Backlash to comments about police brutality cements Lehigh County judge’s decision to retire: ‘I felt betrayed’,” Morning Call, August 27, 2020.

Judge Maria L. Dantos is done.

But the judge is, and always has been, a woman who speaks up.

And what she’s said, especially over the last few months, about police brutality and systemic racism in the justice system, has made some people very angry.

“I felt betrayed by people and institutions I had bled for,” Dantos said. “It had become all about me.”

Dantos, who turns 60 next week, said her retirement was on the books long before February, when her post-trial remarks about the prosecution of a Latino man who was accused of fighting with Allentown police officers turned her toxic in many courthouse circles.

John Perez’s violent arrest by Allentown police officers might have gone unnoticed, but for Dantos’ scathing words after his trial.

Moments after she dismissed the jurors who acquitted the 36-year-old Allentown man of resisting arrest and disorderly conduct, Dantos went on a 10-minute verbal tear, calling the cops’ conduct “shameful,” saying they lied on the witness stand and chiding them for fist-bumping each other in the courthouse hallway.

A transcript of the judge’s remarks was published in The Morning Call within hours of the verdict, touching off a fight between the judge and the Allentown Police Department that persists to this day.

“The retribution for me personally has been severe, swift, unwarranted and unacceptable, fueled not by the truth, but by an anger at the speaker of the truth,” she said.

Despite the furor, Dantos said she does not regret a single word of her speech. But there is one maddening question she can’t shake:

“Other than coming after me, what did the Allentown Police Department do about a judge telling the chief that four of your officers committed perjury in this courtroom and conducted themselves in a manner that is inappropriate for a police officer?”

Though the controversy over her comments after the Perez trial have made her last six months on the job less comfortable, Dantos said it’s also given her more freedom to discuss topics like systemic racism in the criminal justice system. A close friend of hers calls it “The emancipation of Maria Dantos.”

To make her point, Dantos poses a question to white friends: “How often have you been pulled over for driving away from a curb without using your turn signal?”

The judge says most white people would be surprised at how often the police narrative in the arrest of a young black or brown man begins with that offense. The next sentence on the report usually states that the arresting officer smelled marijuana. Handling these cases has left Dantos increasingly frustrated.

Unable to change the system, Dantos says she’s getting out and making room for the next generation. As she made her final speech in the courthouse last week at the Bar Association ceremony, she urged others to do the same.

“When I started to feel complicit in the flaws in the system that I represent, I could no longer be silent. To quote my man Einstein, if I were to remain silent, I would be guilty of complicity.”

The Kenosha alarm clock

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In a much more happy mood, for a week or two Gadfly suggested that we start our day with a Lehigh Valley anthem. Somber now, and recognizing that possible changes in Bethlehem policing are on our plate, Gadfly suggests we wake up in a different manner. Still more (unofficial) details about events leading up to this moment are starting to come out, but here’s where we still need to focus our attention.

“Antiracism is about action”

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With the country in the midst of a racial reckoning, many Americans are eager to
take a stand against racism. But to truly be an ally, members of the black
community say it’s not enough to simply not be racist. True allies, they say,
are “antiracist,” and there’s a key difference between the two.

CBS News, June 25, 2020

The difference between being not racist and being antiracist
(short video)

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is
action

listen . . . understand . . . act . . . then live your life in a new way

Many thanks to Linda Wiggins-Chavis for this video and other great resources during the Bethlehem Area Public Library 4-part workshop “Dialogues on Racial Justice.” BAPL is doing a great job of providing “educational” materials to help us think through the national reckoning on race that we are experiencing and to prepare us for what we hope will be significant action by City Council and the City Administration on the local level. In addition to the workshops and lectures, see BAPL’s “Antiracist Resources.”

“We need to listen and do our utmost to understand”

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Dana Grubb is a lifelong resident of the City of Bethlehem who worked 27 years for the City of Bethlehem in the department of community and economic development, as sealer of weights and measures, housing rehabilitation finance specialist, grants administrator, acting director of community and economic development, and deputy director of community development.

ref: “The traffic stop as death trap”

Gadfly,

There are some who think that multi millionaire athletes and entertainers should keep their mouths shut, but they enjoy the same freedom and constitutional rights that the rest of us do. And contrary to Charles Barkley’s claim that professional athletes are not role models, many of them are. I look at my own life and the influence that Bill Russell, Willie Mays, and Bart Starr had on me beyond my parents and grandparents.

Doc Rivers is that kind of professional athlete, a one-time star player and now a successful head coach. He once coached the Boston Celtics, so I admit an affinity for him because of that.

However, all of that success and notoriety cannot protect his or any other black athletes’ or entertainers’ sons when they’re out in the world minding their own business. My one black neighbor works at a well known downtown Bethlehem business in a management position. He is ordinarily fun loving, and we joke around a lot when we see each other. His one son is 11 years old, and when we discussed “the talk” his face grew serious. He realizes, because he has been there as well, what his 11-year-old boy is approaching and that eventually his 4-year-old son will as well. Imagine having that hanging over your head. I can’t.

Whether it’s Doc or my neighbor Robert, we need to listen and do our utmost to understand that in our society there are different strokes for different folks, and it’s usually unfairly so. When they speak, it is imperative that we take their words very seriously, just as their sons must.

They are mentoring each of us, just as Russell, Mays, and Starr did this young white kid from afar as he was growing up.

Dana

And Gadfly would add one important element to Dana’s good words: we must listen . . . understand . . . and then act. Act. Do. Gadfly is expecting significant action from City Council and the City Administration. If not now, when?

“My biggest worry was getting the right prom date”

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Michele Downing is a Social Worker and RN, a grandmother of two, interested in social and environmental justice, a resident of the Lehigh Valley for fifteen years, the last six years a resident of West Bethlehem.

ref: “The traffic stop as death trap”

Gadfly:

Wow, sharp comparison to my high school experience in 1987. We did all the same things I am hearing about today’s students. We fought sometimes, cussed out an occasional teacher, cut class, and even sold some marijuana . . . on school property (pearl clutching!). Yet never once was I in fear for my life. As I have jokingly mentioned, my biggest worry was getting the right prom date. I’m not sure how today’s environment is fostering learning — sounds more like surviving.

Michele

The Kenosha alarm clock

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Kenosha 3

 

 

In a much more happy mood, for a week or two Gadfly suggested that we start our day with a Lehigh Valley anthem. Somber now, and recognizing that possible changes in Bethlehem policing are on our plate, Gadfly suggests we wake up in a different manner. More (unofficial) details about events leading up to this moment are starting to come out, but here’s where we still need to focus our attention.

The traffic stop as death trap

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“Our Voices Matter! Students from Allentown, Emmaus and
Parkland School District speak their truths!”

What are your thoughts on the funding of police, and
the policing in schools?

(min. 15:09 and min. 59:50)

“School Resource Officers: “They’re not there to help us”

for context and perhaps better sound quality,
go the the link above for the full video and begin at 59:50

Gadfly gasped so loudly at this section of the conversation among students facilitated by Allentown Councilwoman Ce-Ce Gerlach a month or two ago that Mrs. Gadfly came running.

The discussion is about School Resource Officers. The student lack of connection with those officers was not so surprising.

But the way a student’s mind went right to being killed at a traffic stop did.

The value of an SRO, she says, without irony, might be to give advice about how not to be killed at a traffic stop.

Being killed at a traffic stop. Such a reality in her mind that it comes right out in almost casual conversation.

Imagine.

What a way to live.

Black parents have “The Talk”

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“We’re the ones having to talk to every black child. What white father has to
give his son a talk about being careful if you get pulled over?”
Doc Rivers

“I’m Ariel Sky Williams,
I’m eight years old,
I’m unarmed, and I have nothing that will hurt you.”

The Kenosha alarm clock

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In a much more happy mood, for a week or two Gadfly suggested that we start our day with a Lehigh Valley anthem. Somber now, and recognizing that possible changes in Bethlehem policing are on our plate, Gadfly suggests we wake up in a different manner.

“An incident . . . that really changed my life”

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I’m so often . . . reminded of my color.
Doc Rivers

Why did Rivers say that?

What did he mean?

Many white people will probably not understand.

That’s what it means to be white, to be privileged. White people do not think about their color.

All Rivers wants to do is be a coach, just wants to go about his life as a coach. Yet he must always deal with his color.

White people in city government should be trying to understand that fully as we reckon with a worthy city response to the events with George Floyd, Rayshard Brooks, and now Jacob Blake.

Gadfly as well as several other white followers have in the recent past chronicled here personal narratives of racial awareness.

Listen now to Councilman Callahan describe his first recognition that he was white, that he was different.

Bethlehem City Council minutes, July 7, 2020, p. 23

Mr. Callahan thanked Councilwoman Crampsie Smith and Councilman Reynolds for bringing this forth. He does not know what the will is of the rest of Council and if they maybe want to table this and get more feedback from some of the people that spoke tonight. He had an incident probably around 1984 that changed his life. Like many white people we just walk around and think there is no racism in the world and we do not know that it can be felt without even a word being said or an act. His oldest brother was a basketball coach at Syracuse University and he went there when he was in college and he had been at parties and meetings up until that point in his life many times with one African American person or one Hispanic person but never in his mind did he think that there was any racism in the room. After there was a basketball game someone took him to a party that night and he told his brother that he was going to take him out because they were the same age and they were going to a few parties. Before the party they stopped by another party in a little condo and when we walked in he was overwhelmed with an uncomfortable feeling, not because anything was said or anything was done to him, we walked into an all-black party. Mr. Callahan noted that was the first time in his life that he was the only white person in a room with all minorities. There were some really nice people who came up to him and introduced themselves and offered him a beverage.But there were some who just gave him a look, there was nothing said but there was the feeling that maybe he was not really supposed to be there. His friend went upstairs and he was basically left alone in this place for 15-20 minutes. He knew no on in the room and they were all African-American but that changed his life forever because he never will forget that feeling he had or just feeling that there are feelings of racism out there. From that point forward anytime he is in a room with anybody that is not of the majority, whether they are African American or Hispanic or Asian, he always tries to go out of his way to welcome them and make them feel as comfortable as possible. He again wanted to congratulate the Council Members that brought this forward.

July 7 was the meeting at which the Reynolds/Crampsie Smith resolution was adopted.

Do you have a story to tell?

Doc Rivers: “I’m so often . . . reminded of my color”

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Doc Rivers, head coach for the Los Angeles Clippers

  • What stands out to me is just watching the Republican Convention. They’re spewing this fear, right? You hear Donald Trump and all of them talking about fear.
  • We’re the ones getting killed. We’re the ones getting shot. We’re the ones that were denied to live in certain communities. We’ve been hung. We’ve been shot.
  • All you do is keep hearing about fear.
  • It’s amazing to me why we keep loving this country, and this country does not love us back. It’s really so sad.
  • I should just be a coach. I’m so often . . . reminded of my color. It’s just really sad.
  • We’ve got to do better, but we got to demand better.
  • Yo, it’s funny. We protest and they send riot guards, right? They sent people in riot outfits. They go to Michigan with guns and they’re spitting on cops, and nothing happens.
  • The training has to change in the police force.
  • The unions have to be taken down in the police force.
  • My dad was a cop. I believe in good cops.
  • We’re not trying to defund the police and take all their money away. We’re trying to get them to protect us, just like they protect everybody else.
  • That video, if you watch that video, you don’t need to be black to be outraged. You need to be American and outraged.
  • How dare the Republicans talk about fear? We’re the ones that need to be scared. We’re the ones having to talk to every black child. What white father has to give his son a talk about being careful if you get pulled over?
  • It’s just ridiculous. It just keeps getting … It keeps going. There’s no charges. Brionna Taylor, no charges, nothing.
  • All we’re asking is you live up to the Constitution. That’s all we’re asking, for everybody, for everyone.

Gadfly is choosing videos and texts to highlight that he thinks will help (force?) us to think from varied perspectives about the significant issue on the table before the City — our participation in the national reckoning about race spurred by the killing of George Floyd. If you have a text or video you think we should highlight, please pass it on.

At least we’ve had a press conference in Kenosha now.

The Kenosha alarm clock

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Kenosha 3

 

 

In a much more happy mood, for a week or two Gadfly suggested that we start our day with a Lehigh Valley anthem. Somber now, and recognizing that possible changes in Bethlehem policing are on our plate, Gadfly suggests we wake up in a different manner.