James R. Fisher, Jr.,
Ph.D.
© June 26, 2020
An author whom I respect was
appalled watching Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s television rant on CNN
about the systemic racial injustice and inequality in America, justifying all
the riots, violence, looting, toppling of statues and renaming of military
bases and mascots. I did not see this
program but wondered why politicians of whatever political persuasion put
political gain above social sensitivity and civic responsibility.
He is right. It is an American problem but to characterize
it simplistically as the Speaker of the House is alleged to have put it does
more harm than good. That said, I look
at the situation differently than that of my friend.
Nearby my home which is in
the area of the University of South Florida where I went to school as did our daughter,
during the recent riots commercial buildings were torched and main roads
blocked with looting and
plundering. It terrified us as we have
never seen such behavior so close to our home, yet responsible African American
families live in our area, people we know and respect.
For ten years (1970 – 1980),
I was a consultant to police organizations along the East Coast of the United
States, and while I encountered a few rogue police officers, more than 90
percent were exemplary in their conduct under sometimes considerably difficult
circumstances. I know because part of my
work was riding with them during their working shifts.
By the coincidence of
timeliness, philosopher and former police officer Charles D. Hayes has written
a brilliant, comprehensive and compelling guide to police officers on the job
in this most explosive and emotionally combustible period in American history.
The
book is titled, BLUE BIAS (2020), and it doesn’t spare one iota of apology for intemperate
behavior of those committed to protect and serve. On the other hand, I have never read a more useful
manual on human behavior, and I’ve written a few myself. I not only recommend that this book be in every
Police Academy across the United States, but in every University Criminal Justice
college curriculum. Indeed, I think
every American citizen who is a reader would find it useful. Hayes doesn’t only go into human behavior,
but provides a comprehensive and understandable exploration of neuroanatomy and
how our brain works.
My family and all my
progenitors were what we call “Yankees,” yet I’ve never been offended by the
display of the Confederate flag or monuments to that cause which took the lives
of a quarter million Confederate soldiers.
Slavery was despicable but slavery was not the principal reason for the
Confederate rebellion, but states’ rights.
Unfortunately, the economy of the South was built on the manual labor of
slaves with which these United States will forever carry as its original sin.
Sure to be made a cause by some
African Americans, given the temper of our times, is the fact that with the
exception of President John Adams, and his son, President John Quincy Adams,
all of the Founding Fathers, to my recollection, were slave owners. Does that mean elements in our society will
be plodding to tear down the Washington and Jefferson monument, and that of
Andrew Jackson, among many other monuments in the Nation’s Capital?
A civil society is always
close to madness for sanity is a luxury that can never be taken for
granted. Politicians of whatever stripe
are flawed human beings and often not as wise as they purport to be or as we
would like to think they are. We elect
people with whom we can identify, people who tell us what we want to hear, and
who flatter us with the bromide that we are wise and responsible citizens, yet
nearly half of eligible voters never find time to vote.
As readers familiar with my
books, I have called children born in the 1950s and 1960s the “spoiled brat”
generation, citizens who benefitted from the victorious West in World War Two,
but mainly children of Americans as the United States was able to dictate price
and to provide virtually every commodity necessary for life and well-being to
the rest of the world, devastated by that war.
A consequence of this
development was the emergence of the white
working middle class where workers in steel mills, chemical plants,
automotive factories, and the building trades came to be making as good a
living as it had taken a person sacrificing four, six to eight years attending university
to be equally affluently situated. I
know this on good authority as many of these workers were my customers, and they
often invited me into their homes.
My four children were all
born in the 1950s and 1960s, but missed this “spoiled brat” designation as I
retired from the equivalent of six figure income in 1969, as I’ve indicated in
other missives, leaving my children no longer in the arms of affluence.
Young as they were, however,
they remembered how a family is treated with a little wealth and a little
power, which made a permanent scar on their psyches. Most children of this “spoiled brat”
generation, once adults, inadvertently created self-indulgent children, who
became remembered in terms of the alphabet as Generation X, Generation Y, and
then the Hippies and Yuppies, down to the millenials and now cententials.
What I have failed to
mention in this critique is that this has been mainly a Caucasian or white
phenomenon with people of color seldom participating in it to any considerable
extent while being essentially law abiding and submissive citizens.
If we want to declare shock
at this current cultural unraveling, look no further than the hidden prejudices
in policing to which author Charles D. Hayes refers, hidden biases that
permeate the wider society because a community gets the policing it inherently
prefers.
As always, and Nancy Pelosi
is no better than the rest of us, problems are attacked at the content and
context level, or in this case, at the level of the police, which will
ultimately go nowhere because the problems are buried in the community in its
collective subtext. While the focus is
on police, it should be on the American community-at-large.
That hoodlum and his son who
killed the African American jogger might have gotten a pass were it not for the
choke hold death of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer with his knee
choking the life out of the man prostrate on the ground before a worldwide
television audience.
Society doesn’t like to see
itself naked, but now that it has, one wonders if any learning and change will
take place. Certainly, destroying
symbols of society won’t solve anything, nor will looting, plundering, burning
and destroying commercial buildings.
The “spoiled brat”
generation now rules politics with their self-indulgent children waiting in the
wing to soon take over. God help us if
we can survive this predicament.
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