In Defense of the Ferguson Riots
8.14.14 (Published when Mike Brown was killed & obviously still relevant)
Robert Stephens II is the online editor at OrchestratedPulse.com
Over the weekend, police in Ferguson, Missouri murdered Michael Brown, a black teenager. While details are still trickling in, its clear that during a confrontation with a squad car a block away from his grandmothers house, an officer shot and killed the unarmed teen in the middle of the street. Witnesses say Brown was running away from the policeman and had his hands in the air just before the officer shot him.
Ferguson is a city with a large concentration of poor blacks under the control of overwhelmingly white institutions. The killing immediately struck a nerve. Rallies and protests erupted as people took to the streets eventually culminating in a riot. Crowds went from holding candle light vigils at the site of Browns death to burning down a number of businesses and lighting molotov cocktails during confrontations with police. How did we get here?
Far from a mindless, violent mob, the people of Ferguson were engaged in concerted political consciousness-raising leading up to the insurrection. A video taken at the scene shows a number of political agitators talking with the crowd, converting momentary outrage into political unity. One speaker in particular, a young black male, offers a cogent political analysis that frames the injustice of police brutality as a byproduct of the communitys economic dislocation.
"We keep giving these crackers our money, staying in they complexes, and we cant get no justice. No respect. They ready to put you out [if you] miss a bill
You got to be fed up."
Riots, like other forms of political action, can build solidarity. They can create strong feelings of common identity. The outrage in Ferguson quickly attracted marginalized people throughout the region. Rather than evidence of illegitimacy, the presence of these outsiders reflected the magnetic power of the political moment ...
More here: https://www.jacobinmag.com/2014/08/in-defense-of-the-ferguson-riots/