Kunta Kinte Had it Coming
"If he didn't want his foot chopped off, he should have just obeyed the law!"
No, I’m not going to watch the video of a young man being beaten to death by police. I’ve seen enough images of the kind of horrific violence our world has to offer – and violence by those in “authority” in particular (I even wrote a not-so-funny comic book about it) – that I get the idea.
I’m also not going to talk about what race the young man was, or what race the officers who murdered him were. Because to do so would be to avoid discussing what is at the root of this kind of violence, and discussing that might enable us to live in a world without it.
And what is that? What IS at the root of this horror? Not racism, not “white supremacy”, but the fact that we have allowed the existence, and the growth, of a segment of society that is above the law. That is empowered to enforce “the law” (whatever that may be, and in some cases, whatever it’s NOT), but is not itself held accountable to it.
As I wrote back in 2015:
I remember watching this scene when it first appeared, in the TV miniseries adaptation of Alex Haley's Roots, in 1977. This scene was particularly horrific, as the two slave catchers offer runaway slave Kunta Kinte the "choice" between being castrated or having the front of his right foot cut off. He "chooses" the foot, and one of the men brings down his axe on it.
The scene was written with the intention of getting across the very real horrors inflicted upon people by the institution of slavery. And it works. It is a horrifying scene that I'm sure stayed with everyone who saw it for many years afterwards.
Watching it 38 years later though in the context of 2015 America, it isn't horrifying, it is chilling.
When one of the slave catchers proclaims "...the man's made his choice" before chopping off Kinte's foot, I can see millions of Americans nodding along in assent and commenting that this was, after all, the man's fourth attempt at running away, and running away from slavery was a crime. I can hear them tsk-tsk-ing: "If he didn't want his foot chopped off, he should have just obeyed the law!" "He should have listened to his masters!" "He should have had more respect for authority!"
Because in 2015 America, we are told that it is perfectly natural, perfectly legitimate, to have one group of people who get to go around giving orders to everyone else. One group of people who can demand obedience at gunpoint, and who are free to inflict whatever punishment they want to on anyone who disobeys them. Or indeed, on anyone who they even suspect might in some way possibly pose a threat to them. Or, in reality, if they just feel like it.
None of this has anything to do with legitimate "law enforcement." None of this has anything to do with keeping our cities and streets safe - just the opposite in fact. With very few (and surprisingly silent) exceptions, police in America have become little more than predators and revenue collectors.
So when Sandra Bland ends up dead in a jail cell because she failed to signal a lane change, and then questioned a police officer's request that she put out her cigarette; when a sixteen-year-old girl is thrown across a classroom because she failed to obey her teacher and a police officer who asked her to leave - we are told that these episodes are part of a legitimate process, and more: that the violence suffered was the fault of the victims themselves, for not being more respectful of authority.
And I guess they're right. If you don't want to get beaten up or killed by big guys wearing uniforms, then you should keep your mouth shut and always do everything they say. Just like Kunta Kinte should have kept his mouth shut and stopped trying to run away if he didn't want to keep getting beaten and have body parts cut off.
Only that's not the world I want to live in. I don't want to live in a society where a group of people gets to demand obedience from another group of people, and gets to beat them up if they don't comply. And I don't care that the majority of Americans think this kind of system is necessary to maintain "order." It is not. it is not necessary and it only creates more violence. Anyone who is paying any attention at all can see that. And no thank you, I do not want to teach my children to "respect authority." I'd rather teach them to respect humanity - and you don't do that by beating up on them when they don't do what you want.
It's pretty chilling when you look around in the year 2015 and realize that a lot of the people around you would have been against the abolitionists. It's pretty chilling to hear people over and over again defend the use of arbitrary authority, the doctrine of might makes right, the virtue of blind obedience. It's pretty chilling when you believe that Kunta Kinte was obviously right to run away and that the slave catchers and the slave owners were obviously the aggressors - and you look around you and you're not so sure everyone else sees it that way.
If you've not yet, I'm sure you will enjoy reading, The Most Dangerous Superstition., The belief in Authority, by Larken Rose.
Thanks,
Mike
Hear, hear!
"Police in America have become little more than predators and revenue collectors."
This is very close to my favorite description of cops: predators and parasites. There is, of course, a non-abusive use for police, when they're apprehending actual criminals (and actual crimes in my book do not include drugs, prostitution, gambling, or any other voluntary activity), but most of the time cops seem to prefer less challenging but lucrative activities, such as pulling over motorists and lifting whatever cash they may be carrying, then using it to buy toys for themselves without ever charging the former cash-carrier with any crime at all. This sort of behavior makes cops the enemy of civil society.