The venerated baseball figure Yogi Berra graced us with many pithy sayings, perhaps his most famous being “It ain’t over till it’s over,” to describe a Major League pennant race in the 1970s.
2020 has presented challenges for journalists and news consumers alike. We have become accustomed to the familiar arc of easy-to-chew stories, or bits of stories, that align with our ever-shortening attention spans. Most have neat endings for the conclusion of a workday or week. But then, along comes a COVID-19, with no respect for our news cycles. And who could have anticipated THAT being eclipsed by the fallout from the shocking death of George Floyd at the hands of, or more precisely, the knee of, a Minneapolis police officer?
The final chapter of both of these is nowhere in sight. Sometimes it takes an extended stretch of pain to make us pay attention. Perhaps it’s God hitting us over the head with a 2x4 (or is it a 4x8?) to teach us perspective.
Is it finally time for a new attitude toward policing? Law enforcement officers are not quite like the rest of us. As has been pointed out, they have a license to kill under certain circumstances. They also have one to deprive us of our liberty if we break the law. We need them. But what kinds of people are we allowing into this profession? Once they put on the uniform, are they too protected by special procedures, union contracts, and a pervasive company culture, from consequences when they cross the line?
Then there are our baked-in attitudes about race. It’s said that the incarcerated population of black people is five times that of whites. Why? We have to dig really deep on this one. Can racism really be overcome, or is it part of the human condition that we just have to work around? We tried Reconstruction once, but it didn’t stick. Are we being prodded to try it again?
That knee has been on the necks of African-Americans for way more than eight-plus minutes, and plagues like the coronavirus have been around for thousands of years. You’d think we would have learned our lesson about these things by now.
While we can’t see the end yet. we can set goals and figure out the best steps we can take now to meet them. We have the opportunity to take one of those steps in November. Let’s try to get it right this time.
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