Thursday, April 9, 2015

Human tragedy through the prism of a cellphone video .


Here we go again...

How did we get to this place where a man can hunt and shoot a man by any means necessary?
The real question is: has human evolution increased vertically as the homo-erectus stood tall from the antiquity to the first man on the moon, as "shooting for the stars" or human evolution is circular and hence we are on the downward trend now, going back to our most savage era where Nero and roman elites devoured delicious animal legs while enjoying the gladiators taking each others heads-off?.

Whether it is one of the many man-on-man killings in terrorist attacks, police shootings black men or others, the scheme is the same: human hunting season is upon us... Has it being always that way or is this a new phenomenon?

How is it possible that in the most evolved society by most standards, human being, white or not, policeman or commoner, gets to aim at another human being fleeing from its reach, obviously scared and he draws a deadly weapon,that he knows, is meant to end the life of its counterpart as surely as death and taxes, and to unload 8 rounds of led into his flesh for no reason other than broken tail lights... and maybe missed child support payments?
So many questions and so few answers, but we must not give up because giving up means giving up on ourselves, on human race.
Two human emotions are at the root of this epidemic of white cops killing black men:


  • Ignorance
  • Fear

    Ignorance, according to Webster is "the state or fact of being ignorant: lack of knowledge, education, or awareness", is the quintessential driver of cruelty to others. How can a police officer be ignorant? Before putting a cop badge, what is the exposure of the police officer to people that he is supposed to police?... Let's not mention of race here or not now, because we choose, in this instance to ignore superficial attributes and focus on more useful human embedded characteristics... Racism comes also from ignorance. So if the Police officer has no way of learning, in his education and awareness, that the person in front of him is just like him, how is he going to care if his death is of any importance to him? He cannot then veer from his prior teaching in the police academy where your survival is all that counts.

    What is the rules of engagement for the police in most cities(ROE)? Is it published and taught as a public service to the administered? No; how many people know that each escalation of behavior has a ROE consequence in the police "handbook". Nowhere, on search of ROE for Police, do we see a clear list of ROE published on Police's websites or bulletin boards, if not for Wikipedia, that listed 5 or 6 escalations ROE. A bad cop is using this "hidden" ROE learned in the academy to act upon it... Using it to exorcise his own demons and prior prejudices. The truth is that this ROE seems to be inherited from the army, and even then the army's ROE is specific to War prisoners and mostly enemies combatants, not normal citizens in their daily lives.
    What adds to ignorance is fear, the fear of unknown, the addition of racism, the estimation of raw power that a black or ethnic male seems to exhume in the sub-consciousness of white male, the renaissance of the Oedipus complex at its phallic phase where a man is afraid of loosing their manhood by another dominant male figure, and the desire to get ride of that competition. The cop possesses the weapon to satisfy that primal desire, and he executes it usually, too frequently nowadays.

    Fear is what made the victim also to flee at the last moment, realizing that he just became the hunted, like a duck... like in a game, a cynic one: the real "hunger game", hunger for knowledge and peace and no one is home; no adult is in the room.

    An account needs to be made, and accountability needs to be taken by authorities and precincts in every city or town in this country, by raising more awareness, education of core principles of community policing, which centers around the knowledge of people in their environment when a cop is charge to maintain order. It is essential that the blue uniform regain its prowess by getting ride of ignorance and fear... Knowledge is power, let us use it.

    Here is at last and again what happen at Charleston, South Carolina...


    "Life was looking up for Walter Scott. The 50-year-old father of four, who had gotten a job with a trucking supply company about nine months ago, had just proposed to his girlfriend and bought a car. On Saturday morning, he set out in his newly acquired Mercedes-Benz, an older model, for an auto parts store in North Charleston, S.C. But whatever new beginning Scott had in mind for himself or his family would never materialize.


    At about 9:30 a.m., North Charleston police officer Michael Slager pulled Scott over near the auto store for allegedly driving with a broken tail light. Within minutes, a routine traffic stop had escalated into a pursuit. “Chasing on foot down Craig Street,” Slager called into his radio. “Black male, green shirt, blue pants.”

    Scott had a family court warrant out for his arrest. He owed back child support, the family’s lawyer, Chris Stewart told The Washington Post. That may have been on his mind, his brother Anthony Scott told the New York Times. And so he allegedly fled and was killed by an officer that morning.

    How that happened is the subject of two different stories. The first was given out by police in the hours immediately after the event. The second was in a video made public Tuesday night.

    Together they make a third story, about the gap between what police originally said and what the world has now seen in the video. It’s what makes the events in North Charleston so different from the chokehold death of Eric Garner in New York, and the fatal police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. And it’s got people wondering, does it take a video? And what if there is no video?

    “The video is so shocking,” said Victoria Middleton, executive director for the ACLU of South Carolina. “I think one of the concerns that immediately comes to mind is the discrepancy between the initial story, the kind of rush to judgment, the rush to say that procedures were followed and this was justified, and then when the video surfaced that quickly unraveled. That could raise concerns about other incidents in which we’ve been assured that there nothing was out of order and the officer acted completely properly but there were no witnesses or video documentation to dispute that.”

    “It raises questions” indeed, said the family’s attorney, Chris Stewart. “Would the police department have let this go if we hadn’t released it?”

    But the way police ultimately handled it, charging the officer with murder, gives hope to some.

    [South Carolina police officer charged with murder after shooting man during traffic stop]



    “I am surprisingly and gratifying shocked because to the best of my memory I cannot think of another occasion in which a law enforcement officer was actually prosecuted for something like this in South Carolina,” said the Rev. Joseph Darby, first vice president of Charleston’s NAACP branch. “My initial thought was ‘here we go again. This will be another time where they were will be a cursory investigation, it will be the word of law enforcement versus those who are colored as vile perpetrators. People will get very mad but at the end of the day nothing will change.’ This kind of changed the game,” Darby said of the video and Slager’s arrest.

    The original police version of what happened next in North Charleston, as reported April 4 by the Post and Courier, was this: “…A man ran on foot from the traffic stop and an officer deployed his department-issued Taser in an attempt to stop him. That did not work…and an altercation ensued as the men struggled over the device. Police allege that during the struggle the man gained control of the Taser and attempted to use it against the officer. The officer then resorted to his service weapon and shot him.”

    “I believe once the community hears all the facts of this shooting, they’ll have a better understanding of the circumstances surrounding this investigation,” said Slager’s attorney at the time, David Aylor, hours later. “Officer Slager believes he followed all the proper procedures and policies of the North Charleston Police Department.”

    What police did not know then was that yards away from the shooting, a bystander was recording the incident on his cellphone. He would ultimately turn the video over to the family.

    The video, which does not show the traffic stop, begins with Scott and Slager making physical contact, as if they’re slapping hands. An object then falls to the ground. Suddenly Scott turns and takes off running, his back to Slager. Slager pulls his weapon and fires eight shots toward Scott’s back as Scott moves further and further away from him. Five shots reportedly hit him — four hit him in the back and one in the ear, family attorneys said.

    Scott slumps and falls to the ground, face down. Slager approaches him. “Put your hands behind your back,” he shouts. He handcuffs Scott and walks out of the frame. Seconds later, another officer arrives, pulls on blue surgical gloves and kneels down beside Scott.

    Slager then jogs back towards something on the ground, perhaps his Taser. He reaches down and picks it up, and then drops it near Scott’s body.

    “Shots fired,” Slager said into his radio moments after the shooting, according to the police dispatch audio, as Scott lay motionless on the ground. “Subject is down. He grabbed my Taser.”

    Two minutes later, Slager called in again: “Need someone to come behind pawn shop with a kit. Gunshot wounds to chest, to the right thigh, not responsive.”

    In contrast to weeks or even months of uncertainty over the Garner and Brown deaths, the investigation into Scott’s death seems to have transformed dramatically within a few days, thanks to the video. Armed with what they seemed to regard as unambiguous evidence, prosecutors and police reversed course, arresting the 33-year-old cop and charging him with murder.

    “When you’re wrong, you’re wrong,” North Charleston Mayor R. Keith Summey said at a news conference. “If you make a bad decision, don’t care if you’re behind the shield … you have to live with that decision.”

    Community leaders, citing other recent shootings of black men by white cops in the area, said they were cheered by the quick turnaround in this case.

    But it raised other disturbing questions across the country Wednesday morning as people digested the news from North Charleston. Does it require a video to get at the truth? What if there is no video? Why do such incidents continue?

    North Charleston is South Carolina’s third largest city, but bares little resemblance to its more scenic neighbor to the south. Over the past two decades, as Charleston has emerged as a foodie’s paradise of restaurants and boutique hotels, North Charleston suffered massive job losses with the closure of a Naval base. As housing prices went up on the Peninsula, as Charleston is called, many African-Americans moved to North Charleston.

    “What has happened in Charleston proper is that there has been a lot of gentrification,” said Bernard Powers, a history professor at the College of Charleston. “A lot of people have been pushed out of downtown Charleston and will frequently move into the adjacent area of North Charleston.”

    Today, Charleston and North Charleston are starkly different cities. Only 25 percent of Charleston’s population is black, compared to 47 percent in North Charleston. Per capita income in North Charleston is just 61 percent of that in Charleston, according to U.S. Census data.

    As in Ferguson, Mo., however, those demographics are not reflected among the ranks of North Charleston’s police. According to the Post and Courier, roughly 80 percent of its cops are white.

    Tensions between North Charleston’s mostly white police force and its black population have been high in recent years, according to both Powers and Darby. The city was labeled one of the nation’s most dangerous in 2006, and aggressive police tactics have riled residents since then, the Post and Courier has reported.

    “There have been lingering concerns for years about racial profiling,” said Darby, “things like broken tail lamps or license plates or mirrors not there. People have been intercepted because they happen to be driving nice cars. Things like not coming to a full stop versus a rolling stop at stop signs. Bizarre stuff like that.

    “It’s not like we are unaccustomed to this stuff. There is no great surprise and moral outrage when a black person dies at the hands of a white police officer. It’s not just true of the Charleston police department. It’s true of the Sheriff’s department, it’s true of the Charleston police department and the North Charleston police department.”

    “So this came as a surprise,” about Tuesday’s developments, “and it’s a welcome surprise because it gives hope that we might get a wee bit more balance.



    SOURCE:
    Miller, M., Bever, L., & Kaplan, S. (2015, April 8). How a cellphone video led to murder charges against a cop in North Charleston, S.C. Retrieved April 8, 2015, from http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2015/04/08/how-a-cell-phone-video-led-to-murder-charges-against-a-cop-in-north-charleston-s-c/


  • Sunday, March 24, 2013

    NOUVELLE POESIE DU BENIN

    Pour Memoire ...

    CLUB "ECRITURE NOUVELLE DE COTONOU" ANTHOLOGIE RECUEIL DE POEMES Acheve d'imprimer en Septembre 1986 sur les presses du Castellum, 8, Rue de Berne a Nimes, FRANCE.

    Saturday, January 12, 2013

    In despair, doves fly away(Ode to Sandy Hook massacre).

    A new day,

    A somber day

    Another day,

    A fear Day


    In the East, after Sandy’s wrath, we took

    After it sowed its destruction with jab and hook

    The tears shed, not dry, and already Sandy hook!

    Are these plagues from Exodus in the good book?


    We believe despair and desolation are for adulthood

    Not for little children and faculty in the neighborhood

    Bracing for mercy, when at their presence, the fallen angel stood

    hornless but hoisting machine guns, the demon emulates boyhood


    A new Dawn

    In a new town,

    A town called Newtown

    Another massacre done


    Do we have any chance against evil?

    When hammered like fire on anvil

    Human loses the soul and acts like a devil?

    O man, give them no ammunitions to bedevil


    The Principal leaped when the children cried

    But the beast has no empathy and no pride

    And teachers and children, riddled with bullets, died in vile homicide

    And powerless, the cops came late to end the terror of the matricide


    A new Dawn

    In a new town,

    A town called Newtown,

    The dark cloud is not gone


    One time too many; too many of this heyday doomsday

    Please get the message and put assault guns away

    Let's find each other and care for our sicks everyday

    We grieve and hug in peace, then let our love fly away


    A light in the sky is bright, like a shining dove: it’s “Principal” light

    Few lights clustered in one, behind the main light: it’s “Faculty” light

    There go many teenie-beenie lights as one fiery third light, its “Pupil” light

    Three lights from the Orient, bring us hope, drowning our hate with delight


    It’s a holy day

    A peaceful day

    It’s a new day

    because in despair, doves fly away


    ________________________________________
    © Copyright 2013, JORLIS, "Thoughts in the wind."

    Sunday, December 16, 2012

    Reaganomics vs. Obamanomics over the fiscal cliff...

    Can we all get along?

    Without sticking to our views because of politics, what I can say as an independent and practical thinker is this:

    Supply-side economics has worked for some people, but not most... The reality is that only 2% makes over $250,000 a year in this country; so over 294 million people(from over 300 millions) are making under 250000 a year, after that many years of Supply-side economics.

    Economic viability is about growing the pie not to shrink it and government has a duty to make sure more and more people are getting richer... because in this case the wealth pie size is not changing anymore or the wealth per person is growing but the number of persons is shrinking... What do you do as a government? There is in fact economic crisis only for the middle class and the poorer; there is, really, no crisis for rich, usually there are always opportunities to become richer... So you needs to face the crisis of the poors and the middle-class... Cutting the tax for everybody increases for sure the deficit for everybody and that is why S&P downgraded US credit rating.

    One of the conservative idea, that I believe in, is that family is the center of everything; in fact we should use our family structure to guide us in making political and economical decision. Imagine that you have 3 children, Tod is 13, Haddy is 7 and Coddy is 2... You want to raise them well to be all they can be, and to treat them equally. How do you feed them when they are hungry?Don't you let Tod go to get his own food in the refrigerator or make his own toast, but you may help Haddy to make her Peanut-Butter and Jelly, and definitively won't you have to get Cody, the milk and honey?

    This is just to say that our government should not treat us the same, when during the campaign, some were calling Obama, "the redistributor-in-chief", I chuckled ... because that is what he suppose to do: devise a way to bring more poor people to middle class and middle class into riches... Not cutting tax for everybody, but only for people who needs it... And if we need more revenues, why not ask the rich to chip-in? Why not raising the capital gain tax? If you don't do that you are not being fair, not to little "Cody", not to the little girl "Haddy".

    Per Catherine Rampell: "In other words, compared to the last generation, wealth has been become more concentrated in the hands (and bank accounts and houses) of the richest Americans. Exactly why is debatable. The global markets for labor and capital have changed, of course. And the lower tax rate on capital gains — which disproportionately helps richer people, who have more capital to invest — has helped the richest amass ever higher net worths."

    Source: http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/07/10/richer-rich-and-poorer-poor/

    In conclusion even though going over the cliff is good for supply-side economics, it is bad for Republicans and worse for over 294 millions people in this country earning under $250,000 a year, but while democrats gain on both side of the cliff, President Obama cannot preside over an economical comeback if a deal is not reached... by this week or next.