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Tag Archives: Michael Brown

Ferguson and the Republican base: whose anger management issues matter most?

30 Sunday Nov 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Conservatism, Darren Wilson, Ferguson, grand jury, guns, Michael Brown, missouri, Obstructionism, racism, republicans, right-wing, riots, Robert McCulloch, Roy Blunt

Ferguson went up in flames last week when a grand jury decided that there was not sufficient evidence to hold accountable the white police officer who killed unarmed, black teenager, Michael Brown. It was the finding that the most seasoned and, hence, cynical observers expected, although there was also a tiny, but persistent hope that those expectations would be disproved. No one should have been surprised that the reaction to that disappointment resulted in what the Guardian characterized as “one of the worst nights of race-related rioting in the US for a generation.”

Angry people act out in the way they did last week when they feel powerless to affect events and to make themselves heard in less violent ways. It’s de rigueur for folks like me to piously declare that we don’t condone the violence and that it only hurts the innocent. The first point is obvious and the second only partly true, but the fact that violence is usually bad should not be used, as seems to be the case locally, to obscure the nature of the provocation. It would be great if we could all emulate the Ghandis and Martin Luther Kings of world, but Malcom X had a point when he observed that “the chickens would come home to roost.” That given, there’s no way I’ll overmuch criticize Michael Brown’s stepfather who greeted the grand jury decision with exhortations to “burn this bitch down.”

Nor does it help that after the transcripts documenting the Grand Jury deliberations were made public, they suggested a flawed process which news sources often politely referred to as “exceptional.” There are by now many analyses of the problems with this particular grand jury. (I’ll try link to some of those that I’ve read in a separate post.) The upshot seems pretty clear: It starts with a prosecutor who should have either recused himself or been replaced in order to insure that the local perception of his bias against African-Americans and in favor of the police not be allowed to taint the process. It continues with a grand jury supervised by that prosecutor in such a way that, as the Guardian concludes, it looks like he “conducted what amounted to a secret trial with no adversary to challenge what was presented to the jurors.” Did anyone ever doubt what the response to the failure to indict would be from those who live with a sense of ongoing injustice and who are now told that the grand jury has done its job and they need to just suck it up and get on with business as usual?

Meanwhile, those of us who have observed the level of incompetence that has characterized the handling of this situation by all levels of state and local officialdom are expected to devote our energies to hand-wringing about the damage done by the the more volatile elements that rampaged through the streets of Ferguson. Sure, the refrain goes, it’s bad for hair-trigger cops to shoot unarmed young black men – a relatively common event, incidentally – but let’s spend our time talking about the riots because damaging property is so bad that it mitigates our need to take the anger over the death of Michael Brown seriously.

Oddly, however, when another group of mostly white folks threw a far more prolonged – and still continuing – temper tantrum, one that has had vastly more negative consequences than the rioting in Ferguson, it hasn’t generated nearly the same degree of pious sermonizing.  I am referring to the ongoing social and political tantrum that got rolling about the time of the election of the first African-American president.

The fear that Barak Obama’s election has inspired has been both instigated and exploited by the Republican party and the various corporate funded right-wing groups for whom the GOP does due diligence. No matter how many indignant denials it elicits, it’s pretty clear that among the 20% of Americans that form the hard-core Republican base, racism is an animating force. These are the folks for whom code words and phrases such as “welfare-queen,” “black-on-black crime,” Mitt Romney’s “47 percent” comment, and Newt Gringrich’s “food-stamp president” dig were devised. The success of these race-baiting dog-whistles has created an environment wherein some politicians feel empowered to make overtly racist comments of the type that would have forced them from office just a few  years ago.

But our angry conservatives have gone even further down their furious rabbit hole. These are also the folks who began arming themselves against their fellow citizens, the ones they consider “other,” the liberals (just as frequently designated communists, socialists, or, in defiance of logic, facists or Nazis) along with the various dark-skinned people who, in the mind of many such people, make up Romney’s 47 percent. After Obama’s election, they rushed out to buy more and more guns, and, in increasing numbers, join right-wing “patriot” groups in response to the paranoia inspired by a liberal black president. The increasingly triumphalist gun culture has encountered little opposition and so terrified any politician inclined to oppose it that it has entrenched itself to the extent that we may never recover.

Worse yet, the rage against President Obama that these people express also provides both the motivation and the cover for the GOP’s corporate-serving obstructionism – never doubt that ALEC types were first and foremost among the people funding the incipient efforts to stir up what became the undeniably racist Tea Party. They’re the reason we cannot have a rational response to energy and climate-change, or address issues of income inequality that are destroying our middle-class. They’re the folks who, in the name of discredited free-market theology, have restrained economic growth with their failed austerian policies, and who scheme to destroy Social Security and Medicare, not to mention their continuing hysterics about Obamacare. It is true that they are bought and paid for by the big money boys, but they get away with it because of the enthusiasm of the overtly and covertly racist Obama-haters whose fear and fury they placate manipulate and occasionally share.

When the local columnists and op-ed writers, news show hosts, and average Joes spend as much time decrying the destructive GOP-enabled gun-culture that surrounds us, the refusal of Republican politicians to address our welfare while instead fighting against Obamacare, which is, sorry folks, fait accompli, I’ll take seriously their far too self-righteous condemnation of angry, hopeless, and ultimately helpless people in Ferguson, Missouri. When local media tries to make Roy Blunt accountable for telling racist jokes about “monkeys” in order to please the “family values” crowd, I’ll express some indignation about a few nights of rampage. We all know that lots of innocent people were hurt by the fire in the streets last week, but why does that trump the many more innocent people who have been devastated by injustice and the complacency of the well-off and powerful – and why is it more important than the political ravages the right-wing has perpetrated in their quest to neutralize the black man in the white house and render powerless the black men in the streets.

Gov. Jay Nixon: special legislative session – Ferguson

29 Saturday Nov 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Tags

Ferguson, General Assembly, Michael Brown, missouri, Special Session

A press release from the office of Governor Jay Nixon:

Gov. Nixon to call special legislative session to provide critical funding for ongoing Ferguson-related security measures

November 28, 2014

Jefferson City, MO

Gov. Jay Nixon tonight announced he will call a special session of the Missouri General Assembly to provide critical funding for the ongoing operations of the[ ]Missouri National Guard and the Missouri State Highway Patrol in Ferguson and the St. Louis region. The Governor said that with the ramped up presence and role of the Guard and Highway Patrol in the region, financial obligations are on track to exceed the current appropriation authority for emergency duties.

In a call with legislative leaders tonight, the Governor emphasized the importance of taking action quickly to ensure that Guard members are paid on December 15. Additional details regarding the timing and scope of the special session will be released in the coming days.

“The dedicated men and women of the National Guard and the Missouri State Highway Patrol are playing a critical role in keeping people safe and protecting property in the St. Louis region,” said Gov. Nixon. “Time is of the essence.  It is vital that we act quickly so that we can fulfill our obligation to the men and women who are so bravely and capably serving their fellow citizens.”

The Fiscal Year 2015 state budget approved by the legislature included $4 million for National Guard state emergency duty response costs and $3.4 million for the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) for expenses incurred by state agencies, including the Highway Patrol, in responding to disasters and emergencies between July 1, 2014 and June 30, 2015.

“This was a productive discussion,” said Gov. Nixon regarding tonight’s call with legislators. “It’s clear these legislators share our commitment to public safety and understand the need for prompt action. I look forward to working with legislators in the coming days to ensure these vital resources are available.”

Gov. Nixon said that in addition to obligations that have already been incurred, other activities such as debris removal could result in additional costs.  Exceeding the emergency duty appropriations would also limit the ability of the state to respond to other emergencies that could arise.

Unlike during prior emergencies, a special session is necessary for Ferguson-related obligations because the appropriations for the state’s emergency duty costs no longer include an “estimated” designation. Without the estimated designation, the Governor must ask the legislature to appropriate additional amounts when needed.

Meanwhile:

Robert Cohen @kodacohen

Center court carousel picked for die-in by protesters at Chesterfield Mall. Stores shuttered. #Ferguson #BlackFriday [….] 8:34 PM – 28 Nov 2014

pd_shutterspeed ‏@pd_shutterspeed

More than 100 protesters left Shaw park, converged on the Galleria Mall in #ferguson protests [….] 2:29 PM – 28 Nov 2014

Cathy Sherwin ‏@cathysherwin

Amazed by the righteous indignation about a protest at a mall. Malls aren’t sacred and #BlackFriday is a bunch of sales not a nat’l holiday 8:01 PM – 28 Nov 2014

“….a bunch of sales not a nat’l holiday….”

You’d probably be surprised by the number of people who don’t comprehend that.

Anticipation

27 Thursday Nov 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Ferguson, Michael Brown, missouri, Petition, protest, White House

Over the years turning on the holiday lights in a shopping district on Thanksgiving has become something of a sacred holiday tradition in the Kansas City metropolitan area. Think about that for a moment.

We can usually find live coverage on one of the local television stations. Depending on the weather upwards of 250,000 people crowd into the Plaza to wait for the appointed hour when the strings of lights outlining the buildings are turned on.

A quarter of a million people will probably be there. In a shopping district. Again, think about that for a minute.

Several Kansas City television news outlets have been running stories expressing concern that people protesting the Ferguson grand jury decision could protest at or disrupt this evening’s Plaza lighting event:

Worries of protests ahead of Plaza lighting

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Kansas City police prepared as fears grew that more protests might occur in Kansas City.

One, rumored to occur during the 85th Plaza Lighting Ceremony, has some families now wondering if they should attend the annual celebration….

[….]

….Some Plaza merchants are nervous too after people across the country watched protesters in Ferguson grow violent and burn down businesses….

[….]

….But the Kansas City Police Department said all protests in the metro have stayed mostly calm.

On Tuesday night, a demonstration worked its way around the Country Club Plaza and Westport and grew to nearly 200 people. Officers arrested only five who became unruly….

[….]

The possibility of five “unruly people”. In a crowd of 250,000? What are the odds?

Any number of people larger than five would be a significant logistical achievement. What do you think would be the impact? More or less than the number people who will be publicly drunk?

Meanwhile:

We petition the Obama Administration to:

Bring justice to Michael Brown by federally charging and prosecuting Darren Wilson for first-degree murder

[….]

Created: Nov 25, 2014

Issues: Criminal Justice and Law Enforcement

Signatures needed by December 25, 2014 to reach goal of 100,000 0

Total signatures on this petition 117,892

 [emphasis added]

If all those people showed up it would be quite a different crowd dynamic.

And another:

We petition the Obama Administration to:

It should be unconstitutional for officers of the law to kill unarmed citizens. Please amend the constitution.

I’m asking for a revision of our constitution. It does not protect the average American citizen from the use of excessive, lethal, or deadly force to resolve citizen/police conflicts. Police officers have an array of non-lethal weapons but choose to murder unarmed citizens as they deem necessary. This murder with no trial or conviction is unconstitutional and should be out-lawed. Without amending the constitution to provide protection to vulnerable citizens, our lives are in the hands of officers who are authorized to be the jury, prosecutor, and judge when facing confrontation on duty.

Created: Nov 25, 2014

Issues: Civil Rights and Liberties, Government Reform, Human Rights

Signatures needed by December 25, 2014 to reach goal of 100,000 98,024

Total signatures on this petition 1,976

[emphasis added]

Same country, different worlds.

Previously:

White House Petitions: Ferguson, Missouri (November 26, 2014)

The Unanswered Question (November 25, 2014)

The Ferguson Commission: Change agent or spinning wheels? (November 24, 2014)

White House Petition: and stuff (October 16, 2014)

Missouri is an interesting place with interesting people (October 21, 2014)

#NMOS14 Moment of Silence Kansas City Mike Brown Rally (August 16, 2014)

Kansas City moment of silence – August 14, 2014 – part 2 (August 15, 2014)

Kansas City moment of silence – August 14, 2014 (August 14, 2014)

WTF? (August 13, 2014)

And we wonder why (August 12, 2014)

White House Petitions: Ferguson, Missouri

26 Wednesday Nov 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Ferguson, Michael Brown, missouri, Petition, White House

There are a number of open petitions pertinent to Ferguson, Missouri at the White House petition site:

We petition the Obama Administration to:

Bring justice to Michael Brown by federally charging and prosecuting Darren Wilson for first-degree murder

On August 9th, Michael Brown, an unarmed 18 year old black male, was shot and killed by police officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Missouri. On November 24th, a grand jury failed to indict Darren Wilson on any charges. While Michael Brown, a college-bound teenage boy, no longer has a future, Darren Wilson has pocketed hundreds of thousands of dollars in donations & can live his life freely.

Bring justice to Michael Brown and the hundreds of other black boys killed for the color of their skin by federally charging & fully prosecuting Darren Wilson. The grand jury decided not to indict Darren Wilson because of “conflicting evidence”, which is why a trial is necessary to guarantee the legitimacy of our justice system. Darren Wilson must held accountable for the murder that he committed.

Created: Nov 25, 2014

Issues: Criminal Justice and Law Enforcement

Signatures needed by December 25, 2014 to reach goal of 100,000 36,089

Total signatures on this petition 63,911

[emphasis added]

That’s almost 64,000 signatures in one day.

We petition the Obama Administration to:

Force all law enforcement officers to wear body cameras.

All over the country, innocent men and women are being murdered by police, a predominant number of whom are black. And every time, police walk free, many without even a trial or even a punishment. This is because the police departments claim a different set of events than eyewitnesses and say that other evidence is false.

This petition is to force all law enforcement officers to wear body cameras. These cameras need to be on at all times while the officers are on duty, and the videos need to be publicly available when officers shoot or otherwise seriously harm someone. If no video is available, the officer needs to be charged with the appropriate crime, assault or murder.

This petition is to ensure the safety of all people and ensure that officers uphold the law as they are supposed to.

Created: Nov 24, 2014

Issues: Criminal Justice and Law Enforcement

Signatures needed by December 24, 2014 to reach goal of 100,000 92,552

Total signatures on this petition 7,448

We petition the Obama Administration to:

Open a Civil Rights Case Against Darren Wilson

Attorney General Eric Holder,

The US Department of Justice (DOJ) has monitored proceedings after the murder of 18 year old Michael Brown, an unarmed black male in Missouri, by Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson. You visited Ferguson, gave the American people assurances of a full, fair, and independent investigation.

We are concerned that the grand jury process was hampered by highly unconventional proceedings, including leaks. There is no confidence in state/local authorities to capably handle the results.

In light of the return of a non indictment, we implore the DOJ to act swiftly, stand for justice and file civil rights charges against Wilson for Michael’s murder. We contend that he deprived Michael of the most basic constitutional civil rights – the right to life.

Thank you

Created: Nov 24, 2014

Issues: Civil Rights and Liberties, Criminal Justice and Law Enforcement, Firearms

Signatures needed by December 24, 2014 to reach goal of 100,000 99,756

Total signatures on this petition 244

[emphasis added]

We petition the Obama Administration to:

NO JUSTICE, NO PEACE

“Darren Wilson Remains Free: Our demand for justice for Michael Brown continues. We must act now for justice to be served. A grand jury has decided not to indict Officer Darren Wilson in the shooting death of Michael Brown.This does NOT mean a crime was not committed when Michael was shot – it means we must keep fighting for justice. Urge the Department of Justice to complete their federal, criminal civil rights investigation into Michael Brown’s slaying. Justice for Michael is still possible if we act today.”

Created: Nov 25, 2014

Issues: Criminal Justice and Law Enforcement, Defense, Environment

Signatures needed by December 25, 2014 to reach goal of 100,000 99,690

Total signatures on this petition 310

[emphasis added]

Something has to change.

Previously:

The Unanswered Question (November 25, 2014)

The Ferguson Commission: Change agent or spinning wheels? (November 24, 2014)

White House Petition: and stuff (October 16, 2014)

Missouri is an interesting place with interesting people (October 21, 2014)

#NMOS14 Moment of Silence Kansas City Mike Brown Rally (August 16, 2014)

Kansas City moment of silence – August 14, 2014 – part 2 (August 15, 2014)

Kansas City moment of silence – August 14, 2014 (August 14, 2014)

WTF? (August 13, 2014)

And we wonder why (August 12, 2014)

The Unanswered Question

25 Tuesday Nov 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Digby, Ferguson, Michael Brown, missouri

A speaker at the National Moment of Silence – August 14, 2014 – Kansas City, Missouri.

Tom Sullivan, at Digby‘s place:

….One has to wonder what sort of dynamic led from asking two men to walk on the sidewalk into a deadly shooting….

Previously:

Kansas City moment of silence – August 14, 2014 (August 14, 2014)

Kansas City moment of silence – August 14, 2014 – part 2 (August 15, 2014)

#NMOS14 Moment of Silence Kansas City Mike Brown Rally (August 16, 2014)

The Ferguson Commission: Change agent or spinning wheels? (November 24, 2014)

Speaker Tim Jones (r): not particularly helpful or enlightening

24 Monday Nov 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Eli Yokley, Ferguson, General Assembly, Michael Brown, missouri, post racial society, Speaker, Timothy Jones, Twitter

Speaker Tim Jones (r) [file photo].

Today the outgoing (due to term limits) Speaker of the Missouri House, Tim Jones (r), took to Twitter with a retweet:

Tim W. Jones retweeted

UnhyphenatedAmerica @UnhyphenAmerica

“The black elite are more dangerous than the The Klu Klux Klan, to Black Americans.” ~ Arthur BigBully Savage…. [….]

He received a media response:

Eli Yokley ‏@eyokley

My other question, @SpeakerTimJones, is what do you mean by this tweet? That’s quite an assertion. #Ferguson 12:15 PM – 24 Nov 2014

And that’s just part of a longer exchange.

A few other reactions about Speaker Tim Jones’ (r) Twitter feed today:

Tony Messenger @tonymess

A city is on edge, and #MO’s Speaker of the House is trolling editorial writers about black-on-black crime. Think about that. #Ferguson 11:35 AM – 24 Nov 2014

Eli Yokley ‏@eyokley

I’m candidly more interested in what @SpeakerTimJones means that Black ldrs have been “more dangerous” than the KKK [….] 12:24 PM – 24 Nov 2014

SharkFu ‏@SharkFu

Re: that last tweet. That’s the Speaker of the Missouri House. [*]sets down iPhone…backs away slowly[*] 2:37 PM – 24 Nov 2014

SharkFu ‏@SharkFu

Sorry, my mind is still blown by that. I had to check it twice, y’all!! Just when you think you’ve seen it all… 3:03 PM – 24 Nov 2014

Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

17 Monday Nov 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

executive order, Ferguson, governor, Jay Nixon, Michael Brown, missouri, Missouri National Guard

Governor Jay Nixon signed an executive order today activating the Missouri National Guard:

Missouri National Guard to support law enforcement efforts in the event of unrest in the St. Louis region, Gov. Nixon announces

November 17, 2014

Jefferson City, MO

Gov. Jay Nixon today signed an executive order activating the Missouri National Guard to support law enforcement during any period of unrest that might occur following the grand jury’s decision concerning the investigation into the death of Michael Brown.  The Governor said the Guard will provide support for law enforcement’s objectives of maintaining safety and protecting constitutional rights.

“As part of our ongoing efforts to plan and be prepared for any contingency, it is necessary to have these resources in place in advance of any announcement of the grand jury’s decision,” Gov. Nixon said. “These additional resources will support law enforcement’s efforts to maintain peace and protect those exercising their right to free speech. The National Guard is well-suited to provide security at command posts, fire stations and other locations as well as perform other functions that will free up law enforcement officers to remain focused on community policing and protecting constitutional rights.”

Gov. Nixon’s executive order also establishes that the Missouri State Highway Patrol, St. Louis County Police Department and St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department will operate as a unified command to keep members of the public safe and protect property, while allowing citizens to exercise their constitutional rights.  Under the executive order, the St. Louis County Police Department will have command and operational control over security in the City of Ferguson in areas of protests and acts of civil disobedience, should such activities occur.

“All people in the St. Louis region deserve to feel safe in their communities and to make their voices heard without fear of violence or intimidation,” said Gov. Nixon. “Public safety demands that we are fully prepared for any contingency, regardless of what the St. Louis County grand jury or the U.S. Department of Justice decides.”

The St. Louis County prosecutor has said publicly that an announcement of the grand jury’s decision will be made later this month. The United States Department of Justice, which is conducting both civil and criminal investigations of the death of Michael Brown, has not announced when its investigations will be concluded.

“Our department, like other police departments in the region, has a full time job keeping our neighborhoods safe.  We are used to working with other agencies in times of necessity,” said St. Louis Metropolitan Police Chief Sam Dotson. “Having the support of the National Guard available will enable local officers to continue to respond promptly to calls for service.”

“We have taken tremendous strides over the past three months, as our officers have undergone thousands of hours of additional training and reached out to build strong relationships across the community,” said St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar. “These additional resources will enhance our ability to achieve our key responsibilities: keeping the public safe, protecting property and enabling people to exercise their constitutional rights.”

Requests from local law enforcement for duties to be performed by the Guard will be handled through the Missouri State Highway Patrol.

“These past three months have been challenging for our community but we have come together in many measurable ways,” said Captain Ron Johnson, commander of Missouri State Highway Patrol Troop C. “The power of communication within the community has allowed us to take steps toward peaceful change that demonstrate the true character of North County. The availability of the National Guard will ensure that law enforcement has the resources to protect three things vital to our community: public safety, property and the constitutional rights of all.”

The Missouri National Guard has been deployed a total of 32 times since 2001 to assist local communities with emergency preparedness and response, from shoring up levees during floods to providing security following the Joplin tornado. The Guard will be commanded by Brigadier General Gregory Mason, a retired 30-year veteran of the Missouri State Highway Patrol.

[….]

 

Not a great day yesterday

12 Wednesday Nov 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Ferguson, Jay Nixon, Michael Brown, missouri

The sarcasm forecast is still high:

Top Conservative Cat ‏@TeaPartyCat

Gov. Jay Nixon: “Violence will not be tolerated after the Michael Brown jury decision. Except by police of course; that doesn’t count.” 6:05 PM – 11 Nov 2014

White House Petition: and stuff

16 Thursday Oct 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Ferguson, Michael Brown, missouri, White House

A petition at the White House site:

We petition the Obama Administration to:

Let police do their job in Ferguson MO!

We the people are sick and tired of the protestors, rioters, and looters! These people are criminals and need to be arrested and prosecuted! Police cannot work to their full potential and are getting harassed and assaulted! Trespassing and vandalizing are against the law! There have been threats to even kill cops and white people up there! There is a difference in peaceful protesting and the stuff that is happening there.

Created: Oct 13, 2014

Issues: Criminal Justice and Law Enforcement, Economy, Family

Signatures needed by November 12, 2014 to reach goal of 100,000 99,093

Total signatures on this petition 907

[emphasis added]

The creator of the petition is from Cape Girardeau, Missouri.

“We the people are sick and tired of the protestors…”

Well, there is that pesky First Amendment, which by they way, the petitioner exercised with this petition. We suppose the lesser known “until other people are sick and tired” clause could be invoked for petitions to the White House, too.

“…There is a difference in peaceful protesting…”

Wait, didn’t the petitioner write that they were sick and tired of protesters?

We give up.

Racism redux

08 Wednesday Oct 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Ferguson, Michael Brown, missouri, Protests, racism

The Ferguson incident: A young unarmed black man, Michael Brown, was shot several times by a white police officer, Darren Wilson. Several witnesses have publicly stated that Brown  had his hands up and was facing Wilson who continued to shoot him. There was an explosive reaction to this event on the part of black residents of the city, leading to a military-style police overreaction. Most of this is now accepted as true.

In the aftermath, there’s been some official effort to understand and explain why one shooting among so many shooting deaths generated such a reaction. There’s also been plenty of backlash towards those efforts to understand and deal with the anger among Ferguson residents in any way other than denial and suppression. The instinctive reaction of many in the area seems to be to “support” the police no matter what they do, as long as they’re doing it to “those people.” Consider the following when you hear anyone telling you that the Ferguson events are exceptional and folks mostly get along in St. Louis:

— An online fundraiser to cover “expenses” for the police shooter. Among the comments left by donors:

“Ofc. Wilson did his duty. Michael Brown was just a common street thug.”

“Waste of good ammo. It’s my privilege to buy you a replacement box.”

“Black people can be their own enemy and I am not white…He was shot 6 times cause the giant wouldn’t stop or die. Evil people don’t die quick”

“All self-respecting whites have a moral responsibility to support our growing number of martyrs to the failed experiment called diversity.”

“I am so sick of the blacks using every excuse in the book to loot and riot.”

“I support officer Wilson and he did a great job removing an unnecessary thing from the public!”

The fundraiser was shut down when it seemed that there might be legal, tax-related issues about how the money could be used – but not until it had raised $400,000 dollars from sympathizers for the shooter. Did you know you could shoot an unarmed boy and collect a big reward for doing it?

— Until the U.S. Justice Department stepped in, some law enforcement officers working to contain the protests in Ferguson thought it was helpful to express their opinion of the shooting by obscuring their name badges and wearing “I am Darren Wilson” bracelets.

— Residents of Wildwood and other West County locations made it their priority  to organize a food and water drive for the policemen who were moving all their heavy military surplus equipment into Ferguson to put down the protests. According to a police spokesperson, this effort to express appreciation for police efforts to shut down the turmoil as forcibly as possible rendered the police “ecstatic.”

— St. Louis Cardinals fans really showed their colors when they responded to peaceful protesters at Monday night’s game:

At one point, an older white man starts yelling at the protesters, shouting, “That’s right! If they’d be working, we wouldn’t have this problem!” Then, the Cardinals fans begin chanting “Let’s go Cardinals!” which morphs into “Let’s go Darren!” referring to Darren Wilson, the police officer who fatally shot Brown.

Later on in the video, a woman shouts, “We’re the ones who gave all y’all the freedoms that you have!” which is a tidy way of identifying with slavers and Abraham Lincoln at the same time, covered in a thick layer of modern racism.

— There have also been more refined expressions of distaste for activists’ efforts to keep the issues surrounding Michael Brown’s death alive. SMP’s Michael Bersin wrote about the events at the St. Louis symphony Saturday night when a group of symphony goers inserted a “Requium for Mike Brown” before the beginning of the second act of the Brahms Requiem. According to Bersin, “they pulled this off perfectly,” and the audience was mostly sympathetic. No doubt. However, nothing is perfect and in this morning’s St. Louis Post-Dispatch “Letters” section, genteel disapprobation of what the letter writer evidently deemed an unseemly disruption reared its head:

Is Powell Hall a proper venue for a protest? I assume the protesters bought tickets for this opportunity to have their voices heard. What comes next? Can we expect such events to happen at the art museum? At Circus Flora? At a school graduation? The experience saddened me profoundly. Just like the Ferguson situation, I was left tensely unresolved.

Imagine. A man was murdered, his shooter is very unlikely to be punished, and this individual is horrified that he/she had to sit “rigidly for what felt like an eternity” during the brief protest. If he/she was left “tensely unresolved,” as opposed to as blandly indifferent as his letter implies he wishes to be, then it’s high time that the protest has invaded this refuge for well-off St. Louisians.

You want to know what is behind the events in Ferguson, read the list above and think about what it implies about the St. Louis zeitgeist. While folks do mostly get along, I suppose, it’s also true that things are not always just what they seem to be at the surface. The water can get mighty dirty when we start fishing in the depths.

* Last sentence of last paragraph and last sentence of 4th paragraph edited for clarity and style.  

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