Thursday, September 29, 2011

OAKLAND COUNTY BLUES - PART THREE

(continued from: 9/28/11)

I took his advice; kept my mouth shut and played the, ‘who can hold the stare longest’ game with him. Suddenly the uncertain Oakland County cop (still holding his handcuffs) literally screamed in my face: “WHAT IF IT HAD BEEN A BLACK POLICEMAN THAT STOPPED YOU? WHAT IF IT HAD BEEN AN AFRICAN AMERICAN FEMALE OFFICER, WOULD YOU CALL THEM RACIST PROFILERS TOO?”



He looked at me as if he’d just scored a point. Summoning my most arrogant manner I smiled contemptuously. “Are the other Oakland County cops as ignorant as you” I asked, “or are you the only one who doesn’t know that it’s the race of the detainee not the race of the detainer that makes it profiling?”


“That’s it,” he snapped, moving as if to take me into custody. I pointed to the store entrance. The other cop stood there trying to get my captor’s attention. “It’s not him,” he shouted, making a slicing motion across his neck. “It’s not,” asked my disappointed pursuer, deflating like a balloon with a hole in it.


He looked at me defeated. Trying to save face he spat out: “we didn’t stop you for shoplifting. It was for prescription fraud.” As I turned to go, soaked to the skin he added, I didn’t profile you, the pharmacy did, I ain’t no racist.”


Turning to face him I inquired, “just so I’m clear how did the pharmacist describe me?” “Black man, white shirt” he replied as if that explained everything. I looked at the shirt I had on. It was as tan as my brown face. I looked back at the glaring, staring dummy with a badge and wondered how long it would take him to figure out that the alleged prescription fraudster, now long gone, would be glad to know that another black man was at the big box ‘we sell everything store’ at the same time he was.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

OAKLAND COUNTY BLUES - PART TWO

(continued from: 9/27/11)

“I wanna know what’s in the bag”, the florid faced cop repeated, his breathing returning to normal. I stood looking at him glare at me with the rain beating down on both of us as his partner caught up. “I’ll go get loss prevention”, he shouted, hustling back into the store. “Hold him here” he advised the flush faced cop, who positioned himself as to cut off my escape should I attempt to flee.



“Hold me here for what” I said not moving a muscle, hostility edging into my voice. “I didn’t steal anything”. Narrowing his red-rimmed eyes to slits he retorted, “shut up and let me see some I.D.” Stunned by his anger I slowly shook my head no. My view widened to take in the on-lookers, whispering to each other, gawking at the scene like freeway motorists who slow traffic to a crawl in order to view the wreckage from a recent collision.


“I’m not showing you anything’ I replied, you ever hear of the 4th amendment? He stood there slack jawed, infuriated and puzzled by my response. Before he could say anything I added, “What is this racial profiling? Is that why you’re holding me?”


The old cop went ballistic. I could tell he wanted to get physical but there were too many eyes on us. Instead he took out his cuffs, stepped even closer and hissed, “I ain’t no racist. You better not call me a racist profiler.” Stepping back from the spray of his venom I countered, “I didn’t call you a name. I asked you a question.” “Just keep your mouth shut and wait smart boy” he threatened. ‘I’ll have your I.D. as soon as my partner gets back.”

(To be continued: 9/29/11)

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

OAKLAND COUNTY BLUES - PART ONE

The rain was a daylong drizzle that by 3PM on a recent Monday had lessened not a bit. I was walking out of one of those big box, ‘we sell everything stores’, deep in the heart of Oakland County Michigan. I remember thinking that the computerized robotic scanners would soon put the check out clerks on the unemployment line; there to join the bank tellers, postal workers, journalists and others whose jobs have been usurped by the gizmos of technology.


Exiting the building I noticed two Oakland County cop cars pulled right up to the entrance parked nose-to-nose forming a V. My mind jumped off the robots and on to alert; something was going down in the store.

As I walked to my car, parked at the far end of the vast lot, I saw two brown-suited cops running fast across the expanse, dodging cars and shoppers like fullbacks sprinting for the goal line. ‘They’re chasing somebody’, my startled brain informed as my eyes began to search the area.

I spotted no one, and as I reached for my keys I received a shock I hadn’t experienced in a while, but its jolt was all too familiar. It was me they were chasing; me to whom they shouted, “hey you, stop right there!”

I did, turning warily to face the one who arrived first. He was panting from the effort, sweating in his bulky outfit. His face was mottled, his thin gray hair plastered to his scalp. With narrowed beady eyes he demanded, “what’s in the bag”, indicating with a jerk of his head the parcel I held. “ Why” I replied, wondering why they had targeted me.

(To be continued on 9-28-11)

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Corruption in Metro Detroit: Sh*t Rolls Down Hill





Those mired in ‘the under’ in Metro Detroit aren’t just stuck in the muck. They’re also buried up to their necks by the truckloads of crap dumped daily on their heads by the actions of self serving “leaders”, put in place to light the path leading up; smothered by the fallout from the greed of the “best & the brightest”.

Christine Beatty, Glenn Blanton, John Clark, Monica Conyers, Stephen Hill, Rayford Jackson, Karl Kado, Kwame Kilpatrick, William Lattimore,  Derrick Miller, DeDan Milton, Kandia Milton, Lou Pavledes, Sam Riddle, James Rosendall, Dr. Gwendolyn Washington, Sherry Washington, Mary Waters, and too many other so called ‘role models’ to list here are now confessed liars, felons, jailbirds. Some stole from the schools, some robbed the pensioners, others sold out their office, some bribed the politicians and all of them ripped off our trust.

 As we bemoan the folks trapped in ‘the under’ who steal copper or scraps from the bottom of the heap, those at the top steal opportunity from us all.

While we lament the lack of jobs or credit or adequate housing or quality schools, those whose job it is to provide them instead line their own pockets at our expense.

As we decry the lawlessness, illiteracy, and lack of shared values by those that exist on the margins of society, those we look to fix what ails us just keeping oozing their putrid filth onto our heads.

Sh*t rolls down hill goes the old saying, and in Metro Detroit it’s no wonder ‘the under’ can’t find its footing; that slippery slope people are trying to climb has been made even more so by the waste of lost potential, and the sheer volume of the discharge from above. 







  

Monday, September 12, 2011

In Michigan It’s Women, Children and Old Folks First


There has been much wailing and gnashing of teeth about the forty eight month welfare cutoff in Michigan, initiated by the Republican Legislature, quickly signed by the Republican Governor and decried by every Democrat close to a microphone.

Come October 1, 2011 families that have received welfare benefits for four consecutive years will no longer be eligible for cash assistance. They’ll be cut from the rolls; a Bridge Card perhaps and Medicaid but no more cash payments. Ever.


An estimated 12,600 families, many of them women-led with vulnerable children. Who will take care of them, asks the Catholic Church. What about the helpless kids, cry the Baptist Ministers. This is heartless, cruel and inhuman say the social activists. It’ll be a catastrophe, warn law enforcement officials. How can those Republicans be so mean, scream the powerless Democrats?

Sit down and shut up, retort those responsible. Welfare is short term, not lifetime. Welfare is meant as a temporary hedge against hard times. Those we cut off should go get a job or go back to school; we don’t have the money to take care of them anymore.

“But what about the children”, murmur those who still don’t get it? ‘Not our problem’ respond those who need the funds to sustain the $1.8 billion tax cut for Big Business. ‘They chose to have them, let them take care of them’.

‘Besides’, one of the bureaucrats added, ‘we plan to spread the pain. We’ll start to tax the pensions soon, then it won’t just be about the young vulnerable folk; it’ll be about the old vulnerable folk too’.


Tuesday, September 6, 2011

INVISIBLE IN “THE UNDER”




This is ridiculous. It’s 2011, but if you walk or drive the streets of urban America, you’ll see millions of Black Americans existing not much better than they did in 1911 when Jim Crow was in vogue, or 1811 when the “massa’s” voice was the only one that mattered. Shackled back then by racism and slavery; shackled now by illiteracy, poverty, segregation and a peculiar inability to form the bond of trust.


This is ridiculous. Explore the industrial cities of the greatest nation on earth and you’ll find hundreds of thousands of Black girls and boys, Black men and women living in conditions equal in squalor to Haiti or South Africa, or Cuba. Failing parents, failing schools, terrifically flawed political leaders; apathy and ignorance have spawned an attitude of hopelessness, while creating a cauldron of fear, anger, ruthlessness, and victimization in inner city America.

This is ridiculous. Waiting for someone or something to change it. Waiting for the next King, or the next plan, or the next scheme. Waiting for them to drop some money, or create an opportunity or provide a chance. Waiting for the heavens to part or hell to freeze over.

 
We can’t wait anymore its time to act, now. No one is coming to the rescue of our brothers and sisters, mothers and fathers, nieces and nephews, trapped in “The Under” of urban America. We’re the only ones that can save their lives (and improve our own in the process) but like the rest of America we choose to ignore them too.


That is truly ridiculous.


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