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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsBlack America and the burden of the perfect victim
An information war is being waged in Ferguson, Mo., each salvo meant to shape public perceptions of Michael Brown and Darren Wilson.
Through this war weve learned that the 18-year-old Brown had marijuana in his system when he was killed, suggesting he was of poor character, and that police officer Wilson shot Brown six times, a use of force that could seem reckless or excessive. Weve been told that Brown was a gentle giant who would have started attending classes at a technical college this month, but weve also seen a grainy convenience-store video in which he does not look gentle. We have seen a video of Wilson receiving an award, looking professional and happy, but weve also heard about him cursing at a Ferguson woman who had been maced, weeks before the town began to smolder.
Such snippets and images are efforts to shape public opinion about these men. They could influence St. Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCulloch as he weighs whether to bring charges against Wilson. They could also influence the potential jury pool, showing prejudicial evidence that may not be admissible at trial.
In an information war, the news media is deployed as a weapon, our collective mind becomes a battlefield, and biases are land mines waiting to explode.
I feel confident stating that neither Brown nor Wilson is an angel because no one is. But that doesnt matter, because the two men have been reduced to symbols. Information wars suggest that character is destiny and that character is knowable, as if a handful of snapshots or tweets constitute an autopsy of the soul. They are waged in all kinds of legal battles, from civil suits to contract negotiations to public divorces.
But when theres a black victim involved, the information takes a different and predictable turn: The victim becomes thuggified. This is an easy leap for many minds, given the widespread expectation of black criminality. If you become nervous when you see a young black male approaching on the street, it is not hard to convince you that a kid who was shot was not one of the good ones, that he was scary and maybe did something to deserve it. Information wars thrive on Americas empathy gap the way some people struggle to see any kinship or shared humanity with strangers who dont look like them . . .
read more: http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/black-america-and-the-burden-of-the-perfect-victim/2014/08/22/30318ec2-27d1-11e4-958c-268a320a60ce_story.html
Touré, a co-host of The Cycle on MSNBC, is the author of Whos Afraid of Post-Blackness?: What It Means to Be Black Now.
A prayer vigil to protest the shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. (Charlie Riedel AP)
alcibiades_mystery
(36,437 posts)and words, but I doubt it.
White supremacy is a very insidious thing. Easy to see the Klan guy as doing it. Harder to spot it in oneself.