Days before social unrest in Baltimore reachedĀ levels unseen in decades, Dan Rodricks, the Baltimore Sunās resident liberal columnist, painted a picture of Saturday afternoonās march against police violence. Peaceful. Family friendly. An expression of justifiable anger.
But he concluded somberly: āAnd as I write those words, the Freddie Gray march turned violentĀ .Ā .Ā .ā
āThe dream of the Next Baltimore is cracked.ā
What was the cause of Rodricksās lamentations? The destruction of a handful of police cars, it seems, and the smashed windows of some businesses in Baltimoreās Inner Harbor.
And the āNext Baltimoreā occupying his imagination? A vision built not on pouring investment into long-neglected communities, but attracting young professionals and tourists. Itās a vision that left intact racial and class inequality ā even as itĀ trumpeted inclusiveness and opportunities to come.
Baltimore, then, is like so many other cities with their own Freddie Grays: a place in which private capital has left enormous sections of the city to rot, where a chasm separates the life chances of black and white residents ā and where cops brutally patrol a ādisposableā population.
Yesterdayās uprising occurred the same day Gray, the twenty-five-year-old whose spine was almost completely severed while in police custody, was laid to rest. Protests havenāt ceased since his AprilĀ 19 death.
TheĀ rebellion beganĀ when police amassed at a West Baltimore mall, citing calls by students on social media for aĀ āpurgeā and after issuing histrionic reports of a āgang partnershipā to injure police. In the acuteĀ (ifĀ imbalanced) melee that ensued, police sprayed tear gasĀ and shot rubber bullets; the young crowd threw bricks and water bottles. (Some police responded by chucking the objects back.)
Spilling into adjoining neighborhoods, the demonstration escalated through the late afternoon and early evening. When I arrivedĀ around 5:30 at Pennsylvania and North, about a mile south of the mall, a pall of smoke obscured the road. I passed a couple burned-outĀ police vehicles.
The source of the smokeĀ wasĀ a looted CVS at the intersection. Some protesters screamed at the line of police arrayed across the road, but the crowd had thinned substantially. The occasional demonstratorĀ boltedĀ back after getting pepper sprayed. An assortmentĀ of packaged snacks,Ā presumably from the pharmacy, were strewn across the ground.
Intent on dispersing the remaining demonstrators and spectators, riot police fired flaming smoke bombs. They advanced in unison, wooden batons clacking against their plastic shields, chantingĀ an unnerving cry: āMove back, move back, move back.ā
Further down, at the next intersection, it was aĀ picture of catharsis and unadulterated joy: two youngĀ menĀ dancing to Michael Jackson ā one in the middle of the street, the other on top of a yellow truck ā the music mixing with the sounds ofĀ fire engines.
But of the entire scene, the most salient thingĀ wasnāt the destruction wrought by protestors ā the cop car demolished, the payday loan storeĀ smashed up ā but byĀ capital: the decrepit, boarded-up row houses, hovels, and vacants in a city full of them.
These are the streets inĀ which Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan has now declared a state of emergency, the same streets that would suffer from his austerity. TheyĀ are the streets that have endured astronomicĀ unemployment rates for decades, even as Democrats have run the city unrivaled.Ā And they are the streets where police folded upĀ Freddie Grayās body ālike origami,ā then restrained him with leg irons in the back of a police van andĀ delayed calling for an ambulance.
After Saturdayās protests, Baltimore officials blamed property destruction on āoutside agitatorsāĀ (a charge that reeked of both red-baiting and hackneyed desperation). On MondayĀ night, Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake embracedĀ a new term of abuse ā āthugsā ā and imposed a weeklong curfew. And still theĀ results of the Gray investigation have yet to be released.
Through it all, the local governing elite has dancedĀ the liberal two-step: denounceĀ the extremists, then placate with reassurances that reform is on the way ā that grievances are justified, but onlyĀ orderly marches are legitimate acts of protest. Anything else would beĀ a ādisserviceā to the memory of Freddie Gray.
Yet the unrest in Baltimore is aĀ response to the unmitigatedĀ failure of this approach. The snails-pace of police reform at the Maryland Legislature didnāt spark an uprising. When Tyrone West died at the hands of police, and when Baltimore Police Commissioner Anthony Batts insistedĀ that they wereĀ āchanging and adapting the organizationā after the cops got off scot-free, Baltimoreans didnāt revolt. And whenĀ police faced no charges in the death of Anthony Anderson, Charm City residentsĀ showed remarkable restraint.
ButĀ police immunityĀ and dehumanizingĀ poverty can only coexist for so long. If the future is uncertain, one thing is clear: it is only through resistance and struggle that a new, more just Baltimore will be born.
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2 Comments
smoke signals arise from the fires along the eastern shores witness to the ravages perpetrated by the usual culprits’ right hands held out in salutes of mutual respect and non-aggression while their left hands under tables pay off the enforcers of their previous robberies and usurpations and their mouths articulate sharply syllables of complacent and complicit moralities of occupation and exploitation with shouts of unity for common consumption and private whispers of beatings and broken bones to squelch the unbreakable spirits of peoples indignant and weary of daily outpourings of injustice and criminal expropriations of wealth extracted from flesh and blood through means legitimated by uncommon assumptions of right and propriety and moral prevalence and provenance
it is the ubiquitous lie we can no longer sanction
“A riot is the language of the unheard.”
“… when the guns of war become a national obsession, social needs inevitably suffer. ”
“A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.
āThose who passively accept evil are as much involved in it as those who help to perpetrate it. Those who accept evil without protesting against it are really co-operating with it.ā
āSilence is the voice of complicity.ā
Dr. Martin Luther King Jnr.