An article written by Kirsten West Savali she discovers the relationship with the African American population and police brutality. According to the article, Kristen states, “ Thirty cases of state sanctioned or justified murder of Black people in the first 3 months of 2012 alone have been found.” (Savali 4) Black Americans are overwhelming faced with corruption, violence, and profiling more than any other racial or ethnic group: There is a huge racial dimension to this problem. This is because many police officials look at the African American race as violence and terror. According to a survey taken by the ACLU, it shows that the Latinos and African-American group in particular show that confidence in law enforcement is relatively low, and…
These are only five cases that are known, so many more may exist. At what point do we call to action the officers meant to protect us? Police brutality disproportionately affects African-Americans more than any other racial group in America. An FBI study of “justifiable homicide” shows that from 2005-2012, white officers used deadly force against a black person almost two times a week. Of those killed, one in every five was 21 years old or younger.…
In the Summer of 2013, the Black Lives Matter movement came to fruition in the wake of George Zimmerman’s acquittal in the shooting of Trayvon Martin, a young and unarmed black male. Since then, the movement has demonstrated against other deaths of many black men believed to have been victims of police brutality. Despite the scrutiny behind police practices such as the chokehold and racial profiling, which are both deemed illegal, the police have not changed these practices and instead made them legal under different names such as the “headlock” and the “drug courier profile”. In response to the Black Lives Matter movement and the 2014 killings of NYPD officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu, the Blue Lives Matter movement was created. Instead…
In recent years police brutality against unarmed African American males have been a common headline in the news. Unfortunately, with every tragedy it seems as if another one follows shortly after. According to the Businesses insider, “Since 2005, just 11 cops have have been convicted of fatally shooting somebody while on duty even though thousands of people have died from police-involved shootings...54 officers charged in connection with the fatal shootings, only 11 have been convicted, according to the analysis from the Washington Post and Bowling Green State University... Thirty-three of the 49 victims were black, and 43 of the officers were white, the study found”(Gorman).…
The history of violence against African Americans in the South is long, tragic and varied. While this history is made up of many different forms of extra judiciary violence, I would argue that off these acts the lynchings carried out during Jim Crow were some of the most heinous and politically impactful. Seeing brutal images of a town gathered around a hung body provide those studying the political history of the American South with a vivid depiction of what systematic disenfranchisement really meant. These acts of group violence were carried out to maintain the political system of white supremacy. The two states with the highest rates of lynching per capita during the Jim Crow era are Mississippi and Arkansas.…
Police Brutality On African-Americans Lives Imagine being black in American, walking down the street with no weapons yet you still being seen as a criminal, lawbreaker or felony in the eye of the people who are suppose to be protecting the country and never knowing when a police officers will stop you and check for weapon or drug just because of the color of your skin or the way that you have dressed? Nobody said that being African-Americans in America was going to be easy especially when you a black man in a white man country but nobody said it was going to this bad either. Brutality on African-Americans lives have been happening and the whites have been getting away with it since Emmett Till in 1955, when a young black man were killed…
“Black Lives Matter” Movement & Police Brutality As much as the subjects of “Black Lives Matter” and police brutality are getting stale and cliché, unfortunately it is still an issue that will not be corrected by hushed complaints and sweeping under the rug. However, this problem is not brand new; it has only escalated. Racial discrimination began in the times of slavery and has been an issue since—well forever. The discrimination has been toughest on minorities—like the African-American community. Along with the racial discrimination from society itself, some police and law enforcement figures have often abused their power and taken advantage of their place in the majority race.…
“I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands one nation under, God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for ALL.” Everyday millions of African American children pledge allegiance to a country that has no allegiance to them. It is a sad day in America when the justice system say it is ok for a white man to kill a black man, in cold blood However, If a black man kills a white man, a dog, or shoots a gun for any reason he is automatically sentenced and serves time. Police brutality towards young African American males is a horrifying reality that thirty percent of this country has to face. It is sad that the election of a black president did nothing to enhance to progress our race.…
Police Brutality and Racial Disparities Introduction Police brutality against African Americans is a widely discussed topic across the states. However, what cause the police to be so? Why do they use excessive and deadly force against them? And is it really only about African Americans or does the other ethnicities encounter the same problem?…
Police Against the People Police brutality against black individuals has skyrocketed in the past several years causing an outrage within the community. Although the distinction between the privileges of white people and colored people have been going on all throughout history, nowadays, it’s getting a bit out of hand. Astonishingly, nearly one thousand people have been killed by the force of police brutality in 2015 alone, three out of every five deaths belonged to those of Hispanic and black race (Ribas)! Therefore, with this being said, writers from the past such as Malcom Holmes and the present, Kim Lersch, Thomas Bazley, Thomas Mieczkowski, and Kristina Childs; plus, Folusho Otuyelu, Warren Graham, and Shakira Kennedy have vigorously criticized…
White people are automatically protected and given the benefit of the doubt when confronted by the police by having white privilege. White privilege works in our world in many ways; it provides white people with many advantages and immunity to challenges people of color face. The protection of whiteness shapes the world we live in and is not easily deconstructed in any system. For example, a person of color, especially a black person, is not guaranteed the same treatment by cops that are given to white people. In Philando Castile’s case, he did everything the officer asked of him.…
As a society the United States of America have endured numerous social issues where the country has been able to identify the issue and move forward accordingly with a resolution put in place. However, in recent accounts, one social issue in particular has become quite successively one that the United States of America have not been able to find a solution to. Police brutality is one of the major social issue that is impacting many communities within the United States of America today especially the African American community. What is police brutality exactly? As Garry Rodgers stated in the article What’s Considered Police Brutality.…
Racism seems to be one definite explanation as to why so many police encounters end with an officer using excessive force on an African American individual. Racism is fueled by hate, and decays our morality. This hate causes people to dehumanize certain groups of people, which…
1.Ethical Problems in law enforcement Us versus Them Let’s understand what are ethics, ethical problem could be a circumstance in which the police officer is unsure of the proper or right action to take, or the action is right however the police officer found it difficult to do. A circumstance where you have taken the wrong action because in was enticing. There are several ethical problems the police officer faces in the community, here we will be discussing ’us verse them”. It appears that through the media many police officers have that “Us versus them” attitude while the communities are more and more fearful their actions, and thus this us versus them attitude is currently widespread in most African American neighborhoods. When law enforcement…
Prejudice or racial tensions have become a fore fronting scapegoat for police brutality. Individuals have accused police officers and vice versa of being racists and treating them of lesser quality as other races. “Although black men make up only six percent of the U.S. population, they account for forty percent of the unarmed men shot to death by police this year.” (Kimberly, Fisher, Tate, Jenkins) That means that African-American males create a little over half of the population shot by police officers this past year.…