Women's Rights & Issues
Related: About this forumPolice Kill Black Women All The Time, Too — We Just Don’t Hear About It
Police Kill Black Women All The Time, Too We Just Dont Hear About It
Protestors in New York flooded the streets last week, toting signs that blazed with images and phrases about cruel injustice. Just a week after similar events in Ferguson, a grand jury ruled that Daniel Pantaleothe NYPD officer who put Eric Garner, a 44-year-old, black, Staten Island man, in a chokehold that led to Garners deathshould not be brought to trial for his actions. A failure to indict the police officer responsible for Garners unjustifiable, illegal and unnecessary death signifies why theres been a breach of trust between communities of color and those tasked with enforcing the laws. In black American communities, we are holding our breath, waiting for whoevers next. There is no guarantee that the next victim will be a black male, but there appears to be a guarantee that the victim will be marginalized or forgotten by the mainstream media if she is a girl or woman of color.
The Malcolm X Grassroots Movement, a non-profit organization whose mission is to defend the human rights of black people, found that every 40 hours, a black man, woman, or child is killed by police, security guards, or self-appointed law enforcers. In fact, since the killing of Mike Brown, more than 14 black teens have been killed by the police, including 12-year-old Tamir Rice, a boy in Cleveland, Ohio who was murdered less than two seconds after police arrived at a playground to answer a 911 call related to a black child carrying a pellet gun. We know another Eric Garner is coming, and it is impossible to prepare for the onslaught of grief that will accompany the next traumatic injustice.
But one of the largest injustices is how little we collectively discuss the many women of color who are also killed by police. Take Aiyana Jones, 7, who was killed by a Detroit police officer as she slept on her fathers couch. Or Rekia Boyd, 22, whose life ended in Chicago when she was killed by a police officer. Or Yvette Smith, 48, who was unarmed when she was killed by a police officer in Texas. Or Pearlie Smith, 93, who was fatally shot in her home. Or Tarika Wilson, 26, whose one-year-old son was also injured when she was killed by a Ohio police officer. Or Tyisha Miller, 19, who was killed by a police officer in Los Angeles. Or Kathryn Johnson, 92, who was killed by a police officer in Atlanta. Or Gabriella Nevarez, 22, who was killed by a Sacramento police officer. Or Eleanor Bumpurs, 66, who was killed by a police officer in the Bronx. I could go on and on, but you still probably wouldnt recognize their names.
While some news outlets covered these womens deaths, many chose to overlook them because theyre women, and more specifically, black women. Their deaths seem to have little value. As writer Victoria Law explains in Bitch magazine, the names of unarmed black women killed by police very rarely stick in public memory and never gain the same traction as Eric Garner or Michael Brown. Sexism impacts every aspect of black womens lives, including how were treated, or not addressed, in media after our deaths. Yet our experiences with law enforcement are very similar to that of black men.
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http://msmagazine.com/blog/2014/12/11/police-kill-black-women-all-the-time-too-we-just-dont-hear-about-it/