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  • "Minneapolis on fire."

  • "This is getting serious."

  • "Oh, oh, oh my goodness."

  • You watch the TV news...

  • "We've got a little bit of a fire breaking out on the left here."

  • ...and you're like, oh my goodness, all the protests are riots.

  • "...vandalizing..."

  • "Fires have been started..."

  • "Things got out of control..."

  • We're not gonna pay attention to the protesters in a city

  • that has been wracked by this violence...

  • "No justice, no peace!"

  • ...who are marching peacefully,

  • and chanting names.

  • "George Floyd, George Floyd, George Floyd..."

  • Which is going to get more attention? A group of 35 people standing,

  • chanting names, singing songs, doing the Cupid Shuffle, as I saw one group of protesters doing,

  • or, five people on the ground bleeding and screaming and crying

  • and throwing rocks?

  • Our press is driven by eyeballs, and attention, and clicks,

  • and advertising, and passion, and raising the anxiety of viewers.

  • Dramatic images are money.

  • They keep eyeballs on the screen. So they will constantly show action.

  • You need to understand the limitations of those visuals.

  • I'm a college professor.

  • My doctorate is in political science, I teach in a journalism department.

  • I would say, across the board, the coverage has not been very good.

  • It's passing, but it's not very good.

  • And the reason it's not very good is because there are not enough conversations about

  • the roots of these protests.

  • What they are showing you is what is happening right now on the ground.

  • What those visuals cannot tell you

  • is the entire historical context that has led to that scene on the ground.

  • And one thing that a lot of mainstream media doesn't do well is give you that full context.

  • You can't untangle this moment from where we are, just in this year.

  • Starting with February, with the coronavirus...

  • Ahmaud Arbery's lynching,

  • having people in shelter in place,

  • having people become angry that they are in shelter in place orders,

  • having the economy significantly slow down.

  • There are so many events, just since January,

  • that led up to this moment.

  • Not to mention the hundreds of years before that.

  • This becomes a very complicated story.

  • "Come to me right now. This woman just got tased."

  • Who is to blame for the violence?

  • It is crazy that when we talk about destruction of property,

  • that the presumption is that the unarmed people who are protesting

  • are more likely to cause property destruction

  • than the paramilitary cops who are showing up.

  • Because tear gas canisters are really hot, flash bombs can start fires,

  • tear gas leads people to run and break through windows in order to hide and get help.

  • I'm not saying the police are intending to cause damage.

  • But if you're randomly shooting out tear gas, it's gonna end up in the back alley,

  • with a pile of newspapers and some garbage.

  • Does that mean that there aren't protesters who engage in destruction?

  • Of course there are.

  • To say that that all this is turning into looters

  • is like saying everybody at the party is a drunk driver.

  • No.

  • Some people will leave and cause problems.

  • But you can't say everybody at the party is the worst-behaving person.

  • I think one thing that we actually don't do well,

  • and don't quite understand, is anti-blackness, and how it works in our society,

  • how it is in our language, and how it is used by mainstream media.

  • We have spent the last month watching protests who want the country to open up,

  • and we saw images of these people screaming, and yelling, and spitting on

  • police officers, who were plainclothes officers.

  • They weren't in riot gear. They weren't in masks.

  • Now we see protests based on violence and death.

  • And we see peaceful protesters come out.

  • But suddenly, the cops come out in riot gear,

  • and everything looks like some sort of violent takeover in some 80s post-apocalyptic film.

  • What I'm reminded of are photos in New Orleans

  • of white people leaving stores with food,

  • and the headline being, this is how people are surviving.

  • And black folks leaving the store with food, and calling them looters.

  • This is about a community that is treated differently by the police in our country.

  • Just consuming the news right now in the next five days

  • is not going to give you a good understanding as to why this is happening.

  • The emails I get, where people say, Well, I was in favor of the protesters,

  • and then they turned violent, and it's a problem.

  • Well, why are you more offended by people being violent, in response to state-sponsored violence,

  • than you are by the initial act that caused everything?

"Minneapolis on fire."

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