April 18, 2021
GREATER HOUSTON EDITION
Vol. 26, Issue 12
who police the police? âAddressing Current & Historical Realties Affecting Our Communityâ
BLACK LIVES DONâT MATTER
By: Roy Douglas Malonson
Iâm tired of seeing Benjamin Crump at the microphone. Iâm tired of seeing him on television holding news conferences. Not because I donât like or respect the man, it is because I now know that when I see the civil rights attorney, it means another Black person has been killed in either a racially-motivated incident or at the hands of police. Seeing Crump is a constant reminder that a bounty is still on our heads and BLACK LIVES STILL DONâT MATTER! If it is not clear to you yet, it should be. How in the hell is it that while, what could possibly be the trial of the decade is being held in Minnesota (the murder of Houstonâs George Floyd), another police officer in the state killed an unarmed Black man. But no matter where you are from, the eyes of the world are upon the police, yet they still have no problem gunning down a Black man or woman - for no other reason - than being Black. This time, the picture looked slightly diďŹerent, the crying mother standing next to Crump was not a Black woman, but she joined the ranks of the other âBlack lives matterâ parents because her biracial son, Daunte Wright, had Black blood and in the eyes of the police, his life did not matter.
Katie Wright, the victimâs mother, described the last day she spoke to her 20-year-old son. He called to tell her he had been pulled over by the police, and she said she had no idea it would be the last time she would speak with him. She wasnât plagued, however, with the fear Black mothers typically have when they hear the words âpoliceâ and âson,â she thought everything would be OK. âI said âOK, when the police officer comes back to the window, put him on the phone and I can give him all our insurance information,ââ she said. âA second goes by, and I hear the police officer come back up to the window and ask Daunte to get out of the car. Daunte asked, âFor what?â The police officer said, âIâll explain to you when you get out of the car.ââ The mother said she could hear the police and her son struggling. âThen the police officer asked him to hang up the phone. Three or four seconds went by. I tried calling back to back to back because I didnât know what was going on,â she said. Still, the mother did not think her sonâs life was in danger. She thought, worst case scenario, Black Lives contâd page 3
THEY STILL DONâT CARE By: N.L. Preston
Do you need further proof that we donât matter? The Kenosha, Wisconsin police officer who shot Jacob Blake seven times, leaving him paralyzed, is back on the job. On August 23 last year, officers responded to a 9-1-1 domestic disturbance call. When they arrived to the scene, they tried to detain Blake, who was not cooperating with them and, instead, continued to try to get inside his SUV, in which officers saw children inside. That is when Officer Rusten Sheskey shot at Blakeâs back seven times when Blake opened the driverâs door of his vehicle. Three of Blakeâs sons were in the backseat at Donât Care contâd page 6
âOUR VOTE AND OUR MONEY ARE THE TWO MOST POWERFUL THINGS WE HAVE. BE CAREFUL WHO YOU GIVE THEM TO.â - ROY DOUGLAS MALONSON