Chicago’s citizens are speaking out because they are angry. Regardless of whether an unarmed Trayvon Martin was aggressive toward a fellow Floridian, or whether an unarmed Michael Brown charged toward a police officer, or whether an unarmed Eric Garner was “resisting arrest” after being suspected of selling individual cigarettes on the street, or whether a 12-year old boy was shot to death in a playground for holding a toy gun, the fact remains: it is statistically more dangerous to be a black male interacting with the police. This stands as an egregious violation of civil rights and should unite people of all political philosophies.
However several in the media, backed by substantial public support, criticize efforts to call attention to the notion that there is a significant problem within our law enforcement. It’s commonly suggested that protesters should focus their anger toward black on black violence, which is far more prevalent than racial abuse by police. But this is a false equivalency. Just as people don’t block intersections to protest child abuse, they also typically don’t use this to stand up against violent crime between civilians. People are protesting aggression that directly stems from the police, who are paid to protect us. Thus, as a last resort peaceful civil disobedience is the primary call to arms against such violations.
The main obstacle to achieving equal rights under our law is shifting public opinion on this matter, by teaching that perception is not a substitution for fact. Though it appears that justice is blind to race, and that we all perceive the police force to be virtuous, it is immoral to ignore these statistics as they glaringly highlight a momentous racial disparity between the treatment of whites and blacks under our law. Accepting these statistics while claiming that our law enforcement system is fair toward all is an untenable position.
Chicagoans brought anger peacefully to the streets because they have lost faith in our law enforcement. Regardless of whether one agrees with the protests, for this system to function properly a trust must exist between law enforcement and the people they are paid to protect. And given the aforementioned numbers, there is no reason or factual foundation for this trust to exist. Therefore, it is the duty of the police to address this and until these numbers change it is reasonable to expect peaceful civil unrest, driven by anger that all US citizens are in fact not equal.
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Brian T. Murphy is an Assistant Professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He earned degrees in chemistry from the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth and Virginia Tech. After spending two years of postdoctoral training at the University of California San Diego, he was hired into the Department of Medicinal Chemistry and Pharmacognosy at UIC in 2010. Brian currently resides in Chicago and runs a drug discovery research program (www.uic.edu/~btmurphy) that has been featured in Chemical & Engineering News, NPR, Science Daily, and The Toronto Star, among other publications. He is a freelance writer who covers politics and issues of social equality.