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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/wp_mjgj8c/racefiles.com/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114\nUntil the killing of Black men, Black mother’s sons<\/p>\n
Is as important as the killing of White men, White mother’s sons…<\/p>\n
…We who believe in freedom cannot rest<\/p>\n
We who believe in freedom cannot rest until it comes<\/p>\n
— Ella’s Song<\/em>, Bernice Johnson Reagon<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n
The following post was written by my friend Shana Turner<\/strong>, a resident New Orleans.<\/em><\/p>\n
The strategy of gun safety advocates has lately turned upon using the shock and awe of mass murders of those who we don’t expect to see listed on police blotters to win tighter gun safety regulations. I agree that we ought to do all we can to curb the power of the gun manufacturers’ and retailers’ lobby in Washington, and in that effort, focusing on assault weapons, large capacity magazines, and mass murders is strategic. We also do honor to those lost in these murders and dignify the grief of their loved ones when we demand that our government take immediate action to do whatever is possible to prevent such incidents in the future.<\/em><\/p>\n
But what is too often overlooked in this debate is the ongoing violence and staggering casualty counts in low-income communities of color, where gun violence is all too commonplace. In fact, for too many of us, accepting the inevitability of violence marks us as poor, urban, black and brown. And even while so many are dying, the deaths of poor folk are not triggers of change. <\/em><\/p>\n
If there is one thing that the NRA has said in the course of the current debate that I agree with, it’s that regulating guns will not end violence. What Shana describes as “street violence” makes that clear. The kind of violence she describes is about much more than guns. It’s the kind of violence that hopelessness, poverty, deprivation, and anger breeds. This kind of violence has little to do with the size of the gun or the mental health of the shooter. This is social violence requiring social, society-wide solutions. But those solutions won’t come until we value the lives of those who too often die “easy” as much as we do the lives of middle class folk who, let’s just be real about this, could have been family to policy makers and “likely” voters.<\/em><\/p>\n
The Easy Death of Human Beings, by Shana Turner<\/strong><\/p>\n
The shooting that maimed nineteen people on Mother\u2019s Day in New Orleans has been classified as \u201cstrictly an act of street violence\u201d by the FBI. This hurts my heart.\u00a0\u00a0Calling the violence inflicted upon our lives \u201cstreet violence\u201d disregards the precious value we hold as human beings. When violence takes place in a working-class\u00a0neighborhood\u00a0or\u00a0community of color, by a member of that community, it is called street violence. The treatment the community receives is vastly different than when it is classified as a mass shooting or act of terrorism.<\/p>\n
Who\u00a0am I and where am I\u2019m coming from? I am\u00a0a sister of a homicide victim, whose stolen life was classified as street violence. I\u2019ve helped to bury young bodies, raise money for surviving families, stayed up many long nights, lighting candles, cooking, rubbing backs and holding space for grief to come out in gut-wrenching wails from the deepest hollows of lungs. I\u2019ve supported a few through the trenches of court proceedings and felt the agony of having to just sit in the devastation and pray to come out the other end alive.<\/p>\n
This piece comes from a place of love, empathy and respect for all survivors and victims of violence.<\/p>\n
What gets defined as terrorism? As a mass shooting? As street violence? Those of us impacted by \u201cstreet violence\u201d often use the term as short hand. It\u2019s our code to witness for each other how our communities experience oppression.\u00a0We know\u00a0what happens to\u00a0your soul and your heart from being stuck with sub-standard schools and housing, poverty, the war on drugs, high rates of incarceration and lack of resources for grief counseling, substance abuse and general mental health.\u00a0\u00a0Street violence happens in the wake of state-sanctioned violence* on people surviving in underground economies created by capitalism.<\/p>\n
When outsiders in the media, police and courts classify a violent incident as\u00a0“street violence,”\u00a0it is code for\u00a0“criminal,”\u00a0for troublemakers; for people who are used to violence, desensitized to it and able to cope with little-to-no space to process grief, fear, anger and pain. These outsiders are so wrong.<\/p>\n
When it is called street violence, the police often interact with the families the way they do suspects. When it is street violence, some jury members conclude that the victim was, \u201cinvolved in\u00a0that <\/em>life, so they got what they had coming.\u201d Family members get fired or reprimanded for missing work, siblings get in trouble at school for acting out or withdrawing into themselves. When it is called street violence, the community it happened in is expected to resume life as normal after experiencing a soul searing, life-changing trauma.<\/p>\n
Words like \u201cstrong\u201d and \u201cresilient\u201d are codes that people internalize as badges of honor to wear with high chins and puffed chests. Even though the weight of those badges help lead to higher rates of depression, high blood pressure, heart disease, substance abuse, dreams interrupted, goals unrealized, retaliation and suicide. And let\u2019s be careful when we highlight and celebrate those who do accomplish greatness in spite of severe hardships, to not ignore the masses of people whose potential gets chopped down instead.<\/p>\n
The phrase \u201cwhatever doesn\u2019t kill you makes you stronger\u201d is something we say to amp ourselves up to survive adversity. But really the phrase is only partially true. Most people struggling with drug addiction, with abuse, with harmful and dangerous lifestyles have been through the ringer. Most people who live like this may be stronger and more resilient as a result of their hardships, but it is just as real that\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0survival\u00a0\u00a0has untold costs for even the most resilient spirit .<\/p>\n
We must always remember that any person – no matter how accomplished, how strong, how well loved- has the human potential to be as hurt, lost, vicious and broken as\u00a0those\u00a0we consider to be low-down, evil monsters. None of us\u00a0is\u00a0better than anyone\u00a0else. And none of us can know for sure what we would do if our life was made up of the same experiences and circumstances as someone else\u2019s.<\/p>\n
No matter how monstrous we might feel the act of shooting into a crowd on Mother\u2019s Day is – it is never in fact a monster that shoots into a crowd on Mother\u2019s Days, tearing through the bodies of nineteen people.\u00a0\u00a0Love demands that we know they are a fellow human being.\u00a0\u00a0To name them as a monster requires that the community forfeit its humanity. Only when we remember the shooter is a person \u2013 one of us \u2013 are we able to hold them accountable. Only then do they have the opportunity to make any restoration for the harm.<\/p>\n