From the Tampa Bay Times, April 10, 2017:
Police are more likely to shoot if you're black
The interaction of white law officers with black citizens is an issue that isn't going away.
Black Americans have just cause to talk about this issue.
Actually, all Americans have just cause to talk about this issue.
In July of 2016, Harvard economist Roland G. Fryer, Jr. published a study titled An Empirical Analysis of Racial Differences in Police Use of Force.
The study's abstract states, "On non-lethal uses of force, blacks and Hispanics are more than fifty percent more likely to experience some form of force in interactions with police."
In its conclusion, the study states, "On non-lethal uses of force, there are racial differences – sometimes quite large – in police use of force, even after accounting for a large set of controls designed to account for important contextual and behavioral factors at the time of the police-civilian interaction. Interestingly, as use of force increases from putting hands on a civilian to striking them with a baton, the overall probability of such an incident occurring decreases dramatically but the racial difference remains roughly constant."
Yes, statistics alone aren't 100% proof of racism. As the study says, "In the end, however, without randomly assigning race, we have no definitive proof of discrimination."
However, a lack of definitive proof doesn't mean that the possibility of racism has been ruled out.
If anything, the statistics indicate that racism could very well be a factor in the way that white law officers treat black citizens.
Sure, overt and conscious racism in America is nowhere nearly as bad as it was during the previous century. Gone are the days in America when white politicians and government employees enacted blatant anti-black policies.
Still, racism in America is not extinct, and we can't dismiss the possibility of subconscious racial prejudice lurking in the minds of certain public servants.
It is not wrong to bring up this topic. What would be wrong would be to attempt to silence anyone who tries to talk about this topic.
Considering the historical record of race relations in America, black Americans have a reason to have anxiety whenever they encounter white law officers.
White Americans may not understand the reason for the anxiety, but black Americans do.
It does no good for white Americans to dismiss that anxiety as being irrational.
It does no good for white Americans to roll their eyes whenever black Americans talk about the issue.
Even though we are now in the 21st Century C.E., racism isn't completely dead.
Pretending that it is dead doesn't make it so.
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