Opinion Advocates for ideas and draws conclusions based on the author/producer鈥檚 interpretation of facts and data.
This Is America
We鈥檙e not asking you to shoot them like you shoot us, we鈥檙e asking you to NOT shoot us like you don鈥檛 shoot them… 鈥揇avontae Harris, @wichkid
Some called it a protest.
Some called it a mob.
Some called it an insurrection.
But what we witnessed Jan. 6 on full display for the world to see was a demonstration of White supremacy, the belief held by far too many White people in the United States that the country is theirs鈥攕辞濒别濒测.聽That demonstration was not a result of months鈥攐r even years鈥攐f violent rhetoric as some have said, but聽centuries of violent rhetoric聽and actions鈥攁nd the tolerance for both.聽
Some would have us believe that what happened at the U.S. Capitol is a direct result of one lone bad actor鈥擠onald Trump, the current president of the United States. Yes, the election of Donald Trump emboldened the vileness that has been building over the past several years. But if they can allow themselves to finally鈥攁nd for once鈥攂e honest, they will admit that the madness at the Capitol鈥攖he thousands of mostly White men and women who 鈥渟tormed the Capitol鈥 desecrating the building, its halls, offices, and chambers鈥攚as actually a result of hundreds of years of making the wrong people the enemy.
White people, and admittedly even some Black and Brown people, have for too long painted the Indigenous peoples of this country and the enslaved Africans and their descendants in this country as the wretched of the earth. As inferior. As 鈥渘o rights which a white man is bound to respect.鈥 As animals even, vermin to be exterminated.
When we ran away to gain our freedom, we were hunted down, beaten, castrated, lynched, and put on display. When we marched and protested for our franchise, we were bullied, threatened, beaten, and lynched. When we marched and protested to have our basic rights, civil rights, human rights acknowledged, respected, we were hosed, attacked and bitten by dogs, billy-clubbed, beaten, jailed, and killed. When we marched and protested against police violence in our communities, we were tased, tear-gassed, beaten, shot, run over with cars, and in some cases killed.
All of this has been done with the protection of the U.S. executive, judicial, and legislative institutions.
When we showed up in numbers to demand our rights not only as U.S. citizens, but as humans, these institutions responded with armed guards in military gear鈥攇uns pointed at us and our children. When we said take your foot off our neck, a law enforcement officer choked the life out of one of us with his knee. Our children have been shot down鈥攊n a park, in a store, on the street, in their own home. Our men and women have been placed in chokeholds and gunned down while driving, eating, sleeping, walking, shopping, standing, existing.
Again, all of this has been done with the protection of the U.S. executive, judicial, and legislative institutions.
And with the complicity of the people鈥擶hite people鈥all White people.
So many were 鈥渁ppalled,鈥 鈥渋n disbelief,鈥 鈥渟addened,鈥 by what they saw. I could muster only anger鈥and fear. Like no other time before, it was proven to me that I am not protected by the institutions that govern the country of my birth.
That privilege has only been fully afforded White people in this country. The people of this country have reinforced the idea time and again that these United States of America are for White people.
This is why we hear words like, 鈥減rotest,鈥 and 鈥渋nsurrection,鈥 and 鈥渟edition.鈥
This is why D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser’s of the National Guard was initially denied. And why the Capitol police 鈥攔emoving blockades, stepping aside, posing for selfies, and barely using force.
It is why when thousands of White men and women showed up at the Capitol and made their way inside, looting and vandalizing鈥攄esecrating what鈥檚 been called our symbol of democracy鈥攎ore than 100 members of Congress can still go along with and politicize baseless claims of election fraud.聽
White people are scared. Some are afraid of being the minority. And the others are afraid of those who are afraid of being the minority.
White Americans talk about bravery and courage but cannot even stand up to their own enemy within.
I keep hearing, 鈥淭his is not America.鈥 鈥淭his is un-American.鈥 That is not true. This is America. This country was founded on violence and desecration.
But if you want this to no longer be America, if you want Americans to be 鈥渂etter than this,鈥 then prove it.
Congress moving forward with the confirmation of the Biden/Harris administration was the democratic thing to do鈥ut is only a start.
Show your courage and bravery now by removing Donald Trump from office鈥攅ven if for these last two weeks鈥攁nd removing those members of Congress who participated in and encouraged this 鈥渁ttempted coup.鈥 Find鈥攁nd it should not be difficult with all of the technology at the disposal of the federal government鈥攅very single person who entered that building and bring federal charges against them.
For those who live in so-called red states and disagree with this demonstration of White supremacy, prove it: organize, mobilize, do not re-elect people who support and uphold White supremacist ideology. (Georgia has given us a blueprint. Follow it.)
It鈥檚 one thing to have political difference on policies.
But when it comes to the very lives of all the people in this country鈥hite leadership in this country must do better.
Enough is enough.
Zenobia Jeffries Warfield
is the former executive editor at 大象传媒, where she directed editorial coverage for 大象传媒 Magazine, 大象传媒 Media鈥檚 editorial partnerships, and served as chair of the 大象传媒 Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Committee. A Detroit native, Zenobia is an award-winning journalist who joined 大象传媒 in 2016 to build and grow 大象传媒鈥檚 racial justice beat, and continues to write columns on racial justice. In addition to writing and editing, she has produced, directed, and edited a variety of short documentaries spotlighting community movements to international democracy. Zenobia earned a BA in Mass Communication from Rochester College in Rochester, Michigan, and an MA in Communication with an emphasis in media studies from Wayne State University in Detroit. Zenobia has also taught the college course 鈥淭he Effects of Media on 大象传媒,鈥 as an adjunct professor in Detroit. Zenobia is a member of NABJ, SABJ, SPJ, and the Ida B. Wells Society for Investigative Reporting. She lives in Seattle, and speaks English and AAVE.
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