The head of a Fairfax County
police union called for a boycott of a popular pumpkin patch because a “Black
Lives Matter” sign was displayed in the window of a home nearby. [...]
In the initial [Facebook]
message, Carruthers posted a photo of the sign and wrote that displaying it was
a “slap in the face” to the Fairfax County police.
“When Black Lives Matter emerged,
it was a small group trying to do the right thing,” Carruthers said in an
interview. “The fact of the matter is it seemed like that movement got hijacked
toward anti-police sentiments.”
The post has since been deleted,
but this premise that the Black Lives Matter movement is
"anti-police," as opposed to a civil rights movement that doesn't
want unarmed black Americans getting shot, is a position that can only be held
if you believe that not shooting unarmed black Americans constitutes being
"anti-police." At the very least, that's a position of ignorance, but
far more often (e.g. Fox News) it's utterly predictable racism.
The same people that think black
Americans are getting "free stuff," or that yes indeedy unarmed black
Americans count as super-dangerous and "armed" simply by the virtue
of having limbs, or that a black child walking down the street with a toy gun
is an obvious reason to panic even while we huff and puff and celebrate the
brave patriotic scruffy white unhinged people that wander the streets with
their real weapons just to show other Americans that hell yeah, they're allowed
to carry weapons—if you already have believed every other racist thing that
someone, somewhere has shoveled your way then you of course are willing to
believe that Black Lives Matter is not a good and noble civil rights effort
along the lines promoted by the inspirational Martin Luther King, Jr., but
instead is a violence-minded and subversive anti-authority effort, like the
ones promoted by that sketchy troublemaker Martin Luther King, Jr.
What do you see, when you look
out on the crowds of black American faces with their signs? For too many
Americans, they see only what they are primed to see. Or what they have always
seen.
There is a good ending to this
story, or at least a better one than you might have expected. The post came
down, though only after receiving outrage from many and a sturdy defending from
others, people who scuttled out of their holes convinced that Black Lives
Matters has been "calling for police deaths" and for whom no amount
of saying otherwise would ever do.
The family that owns the pumpkin patch and in whose home the sign was displayed in wrote a damn fine response defending and explaining the Black Lives Matter movement.
The family that owns the pumpkin patch and in whose home the sign was displayed in wrote a damn fine response defending and explaining the Black Lives Matter movement.
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