Another One Bites the Dust


A suburbanite. An educator. Having led a fairly sheltered life, even I am not exempt. Even I have been affected by this epidemic that is plaguing our community. What am I talking about is young black men that have been, are, or will be, caught up in the justice system. If we turn on the evening news, we can see how black men are continuously involved in illegal activity that lands them on my T.V. screen, in the courts, and in jail or prison or dead. But for most black people, even sheltered suburbanites like myself, we do not have to turn on the T.V. to learn of another black man that has just virtually ruined his life or at least put a major dent in its progress.

Recently, cousins and childhood friends of this suburbanite have faced charges ranging from terroristic threats, to pimping, to robbery, to murder. And I am sure that it will not take you long to think of someone in your circle with a similar story. So if everyone knows someone, who knows someone, who knows someone, who has this story, where is the black community going? Yes, we have made huge advances…Obama is President, but the state of the black community is in despair.

I was having a lively debate with my cousin who was basically stating that “the system” has set our young black men up for failure. They have put drugs into the community, subjected black kids to poor education, etc. And while I agree that these things definitely contribute to the hardships that blacks, and black men specifically face, I had to ask, where is the accountability? I definitely do not want to negate responsibility that these factors carry, but what does identifying them as a reason for our condition do for our condition? We as a community cannot waste another breath blaming someone for what we are currently facing, but instead we need to look within to find out what we can do to help alleviate some of the affects. We are the ones making black men an endangered species, by killing each other over money, power and respect. We sell drugs to our brothers and sisters, leaving them addicted to crack cocaine. We have numerous babies out of wedlock, signing our children up for the many dangers that come along with a single parent home. We leave our children to raise themselves, thinking that real parenting does not involve being an active parent.

My point is, yes, there are definitely systemic institutions and barriers that have, and continue to hold black people back from truly living a life of greatness, but there are so many things that we are doing that make our condition worse instead of better. There are things that at the bare minimum we can do the place ourselves in a better position. It’s a multifaceted problem with no quick solution. But the time is now…

2 comments:

K.Files said...

I'm of the opinion that black people, in general, start out at a disadvantage relative to our white counterparts for various reasons including,(but not limited to) 1) the lingering effects of systematic racism; 2)lack of education and resources; and 3) the broken black family structure. Each of these factors stem from the fact that black people were brought to this country and treated as a sub-class of human beings for hundreds of years.

The "non-suburbanite," who comes from an impoverished community, has been subjected to a sub-par school-system and been raised by parents who lack the education, foresight, or resources to expose him to the type of life that us "suburbanites" are fortunate enough to accept as our status quo. For the "non-suburbanite," it would be pretty easy to follow the trend of your community instead of blazing a new path (especially when you are oblivious that a new path exists).

However, with that said, empathy and all... accountability is a still a must on all sides of the coin: from the "suburbanite," "non-"suburbanite," and the "system." I think the "suburbanite" has a personal obligation to reach back to educate, expose, and empower the members of our community that are 2 and 3 steps behind...and the "non-suburbanite" has the obligation to accept that each of us are responsible for our own individual decisions...no one forces you to pull the trigger, rob that bank, or sell dope to children ...regardless of whether the "system" dealt cards making the "non-suburbanite" feel that was the only hand he could play. Lastly, we have to continue holding the "system" accountable for creating avenues that work to rectify the past wrongs done to our community.

We are all capable of making choices. For the "non-suburbanite" who feels like they only have one choice, education and an open mind are key to breaking that mentality. Education brings positive options to reality. We need to push push push push real, attainable, options into our black community...If we, the "suburbanites," don't take charge to do that, who else will?

July 9, 2010 at 4:14 AM
Unknown said...

There are so many things we can't control but so many we can put more energy into changing. There is an epidemic and it impacts all aspects of our lives even when it doesn't hit home directly. If the amount of blacks that are in or have been in the system are so outlandish it goes to show that more has to be done, and by more I don't just mean speeches and an occasional TV special. It starts at home, in schools, and communities, that sounds so cliché at times, maybe because that what everyone always says, but it is the truth. The life we had growing up was better than some but to this day we still have strong family support and it has kept us grounded. That one component is directly tied to everything anyone does. That isn't to say those who come up in bad homes will all get caught up, or those who come from healthy backgrounds turn out to be the best, but the responsibility of family and those who impact the lives of others just doesn't seem to be as great. People point fingers and shut others out, and we have more and more black men behind bars then we do in college or heads of families. That leaves young women raising men with chips on their shoulders and young men looking for what only a father can give them. They become a parent and if no one intervenes the sage continues...

July 10, 2010 at 10:43 PM

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