Let me state emphatically, “Black lives matter!” The
overwhelming majority of white people believe black children’s lives are
precious. Most of us understand the blow back that causes blacks to
protest and remind us all that black children
are being abused by the system. We get it.
We understand the charges of police brutality.
We agree that there are many incidents where police officers over- extended their privileges and used excessive force to take control of a
situation. We understand that no one has the right to take someone else’s life,
particularly when they are charged with protecting lives.What is it that black Americans think white Americans don’t understand?
Why is it that we are all implicated as complicit to feelings of white superiority.
Why do they think that we are all responsible for the actions of a few.
Why are some blacks so angry at all white people?
Some police officers have been shamefully abusive to
suspected law violaters and they should be held accountable for their actions. There
is a thin line that officers of the law are required to walk and it is often
obliterated when a situation gets out of hand. Peace officers are frequently
forced to make quick decisions in order to restore order. Sometimes, they make
bad choices, wrong assessments and over-reactions to a situation out of hand.
Maybe they always have. Maybe they always will. The senseless acts of gunning
down unarmed suspected felons cannot be tolerated.
I was born into a prejudicial society which “taught” it’s
youth that white people are superior to black people. I had close relatives who
abused and degradated persons of color in every possible way. The turmoil of
the mid-50’s through the 70’s really did change American society as a whole. In spite of what many would like you to believe, America has dramatically evolved over the past 50 years. I know because I have lived through the experience. No longer do black Americans drink from separate public water fountains, no longer are they forced to sit in the balcony at a movie theatre, no longer are they forced to sit in the rear of the bus, no longer are they forced to sit in a separate section at a restaurant, or even denied entrance to a diner, no longer are schools segregated. All of these things I witnessed as a child. Even though there are a few who retain deep prejudices, the
world we live in today is not the world of my youth. It is not
just a matter of becoming racially tolerant, we are now a society that genuinely embraces racial
equality. Just because I have never been black does not mean that I can’t
understand the injustices that have been unduly inflicted on blacks. But I
assure you that even though today’s world may harbor an excessive number of
bigots, it is not the shameful, oppressive American society of my childhood. The older
hard-line, bigoted generation of my youth does not exist as it did then, most
have taken their prejudices to their graves.
Without doubt, there are many who
would cling to the extreme prejudice of earlier generations, but they are not
the mainstream of America. The vast majority of the white population in this
great country have either been taught from their youth to be non-prejudicial or
they have experienced the transition of the 50’s through the 70’s which taught
us that we are all truly equal in ability, opportunity and in every other
aspect. It took a thousand years to forge those prejudices, it might require more than 50 years to completely dissolve them.
As Americans we should unite to a rallying call that every
life matters, regardless of color or ethnicity. Black children’s lives matter,
hispanic children’s lives matter, asian children’s lives matter, arab children
matter, native American children's lives matter, and yes, white children’s lives
matter. All children’s lives matter.
None more valuable than the other.
"Jesus loves the little children, all the children of the world,
Red and yellow, black and white, they are precious in His site,
Jesus loves the little children of the world"
And so do I.
And so do I.
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