Charlottesville Shows That Nazis Have More Rights Than Black People
It took me a while to figure out what exactly was most upsetting about the weekend’s events in Charlottesville. Beyond the fact that a person was killed and many were injured by a group of white supremacists, and beyond the fact that there are Nazis marching in the streets of America in 2017, something was revealed in Charlottesville that was even more upsetting. On Saturday, we learned that the civil rights of Nazis are more protected than those of people of color.
In Charlottesville this weekend, Nazis showed up and became violent while virtually every institution failed counterprotestors, and especially the black folks who were targeted. The cops did nothing to stop Nazis from committing violent hate crimes. Our government utterly failed to protect people from racial terror.
For two days straight, cops stood by and did nothing as white mobs attacked counter-protesters. Yet when Black Lives Matter peacefully protested in Ferguson, they were met with dogs, semi-automatic rifles, tear gas and tanks.
In other words, when black people show up to protest, they are met with riot gear and assault weapons. When Nazis show up to protest, they are met with cops so reticent to intervene that they don’t even stop the Nazis from beating up counter-protestors.
These white supremacists showed up with their own militia. Can you even imagine what would have happened if black folks showed up to protests in Baton Rouge with a militia? Can you imagine what kind of force they would have been met with?
But despite how horrific these thoughts are, they are not that surprising. While many people have expressed bewilderment about the events which occurred in Charlottesville, I was honestly not even shocked. While Trump’s rise to power did not create the racist element that we saw in Charlottesville, it sure did embolden that element by normalizing the type of racism which was previously only expressed within safe spaces for white people.
While we have seen our share of racial tension under past Presidents, what happened in Charlottesville was different and dangerous. When Trump was asked to make a statement about the events which occurred in Charlottesville, he not only refused to outright condemn the white supremacists who showed up to engage in a campaign of violence and terror, but he tried to muddy the waters by saying that the people who came to protest the white supremacists were also at fault.
We black folks are used to racial trauma in this country. But what happened in Charlottesville felt like a different type of trauma. It felt like an historic trauma; the same type of trauma that our grandparents experienced when they attempted to integrate into white spaces and were beat by mobs as the police looked on with approval. The same type of trauma that they felt when George Wallace stood on the steps of the University of Alabama and declared his support for white supremacy by supporting segregation. The same type of trauma that they felt when thousands of white people would participate in the lynching of black people with the help and support of law enforcement.
If the government will not protect us on the local and federal level, who will? There will supposedly be an investigation done by the DOJ, but I think that we can all safely say that this will probably be nothing more than a dog and pony show.
Let’s face it folks — we have regressed to the days where the federal government will not only tacitly sit by idly while white mobs attack people of color and protesters. We now have people such as Steven Bannon and Steven Miller who will go as far as to enable these mobs.
The cold hard truth is that many of the institutions which are tasked with protecting our rights as Americans have abandoned us – while they continue to protect the white supremacists who live in our midst.
[This piece was penned by @Freeyourmindkid, who has been threatened by white supremacists in the past and for issues of safety has used a pseudonym.]
A message from our CEO & publisher Rachel Fishman Feddersen
I hope you appreciated this article. Before you go, I’d like to ask you to please support the Forward’s award-winning, nonprofit journalism during this critical time.
At a time when other newsrooms are closing or cutting back, the Forward has removed its paywall and invested additional resources to report on the ground from Israel and around the U.S. on the impact of the war, rising antisemitism and polarized discourse.
Readers like you make it all possible. Support our work by becoming a Forward Member and connect with our journalism and your community.
— Rachel Fishman Feddersen, Publisher and CEO