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Racism
by Hal Brown, LICSW One o'clock in the morning. July. You're a white cop patrolling an affluent section of town. As usual there isn't a car on the road. Typical. Inaction waiting for action. You notice a Mercedes 300D pull into a large colonial and observe a man, woman, and two children exit, open the trunk and begin to take out suit cases. "Back from Disney World" you think to yourself.
Two in the morning, same neighborhood, a BMW with one male driver. He's driving 25mph, exactly the speed limit, not swerving, but, you think, "he's probably had one too many but is almost home". He slows down and you notice one brake light is out, but then he turns into the driveway of another large house. Probable cause to check him out, tell him about his brake light, discover he's impaired right in his own driveway, make absolutely sure this is his house? "A public relations nightmare, forget it," you say to yourself.
Three A.M., you're feeling pretty good. Just had a snack and a bull session with a couple of officers from the next town at the City Line Dinner and heard some juicy gossip about a town official and his secretary. You pull around a corner as see a block ahead a dirty old white van make a turn around another corner. You step on it and race down the bock and see that the van has barely gone a hundred yards. It's cruising at about 15mph. "Lot's of families on summer vacation," you notice on the list of the vacant houses you're supposed to keep an eye on. You hang back and observe, hoping you'll get a better bust than just an expired ops or at best a decent outstanding warrant or maybe a screw driver and crowbar that could be burglar tools (like that would stand up in court). "Come on," you say out loud, "make your move."
"Crap!" He's picking up speed and turning to leave the neighborhood. He's made you. You grab your mike and call in the stop and hit the over-heads. You pull up behind the van, call in the plate, your back-up is a minute away. The van is a beater, a quick count, four equipment violations at least, probably no insurance. At least it won't be a total loss. Already you know they were casing the neighborhood. You approach the vehicle by the book, and then some, gun drawn and out of view behind your leg. You notice inside either:
The question I pose is obvious. What difference does race make in this scenario? It isn't a trick question to root out latent racism, in fact there's no trick here. But your racial attitudes and prejudices will effect your answer and in reality, how you'd respond on the street in a real situation like this. You have to take into account all factors in a stop like this. There are two possible crimes involved, impaired driving with open alcohol; or casing the neighbor with a B and E planned. College students pull B and E's too. Drinking is sometimes involved with amateurs. Blacks and whites pull them. In fact, rich kids rob their parents and neighbors. Poor kids and rich kids drive beat up old vans. They stay out all night and drink beer. They cruise neighborhoods at random.
But, there has to be a reason, even pure chance, that these particular young men are in this particular neighborhood in the wee hours of the morning. Does one of them live there? Are there black families in the neighborhood? Race is an issue here because if there aren't and you know this right off, your suspicions should be raised. But it is just another fact and it doesn't mean you're a racist. Race is only a statistical tool here, a question of what is more likely. It is simply more likely that white kids have a reasonably innocent reason for drainage around this white neighborhood than black kids. Just stats, but nothing you should risk your life over. But like I said, white kids rob their own neighbors too, so the fact that the kids are white shouldn't lull you into complacency. A gun is a gun in anyone's hand. Racism works both ways, pre-judging someone negatively because they are black or positively because they are white makes you not only a racist but a less effective officer. Or a dead one.
Racism is, plain and simple, prejudice. It means one judges someone based merely on their race. It means that race influences how you think about someone's character before you find out who they are. Racism is not taking into account situational factors. For example, what is a white kid in a Lexus doing in a virtually all black neighborhood which is known to have a drug dealer on every street corner? Is it prejudice or reverse racism to consider that there is a good chance he's there looking to buys drugs? Of course not.
Can you be a good cop and still be a racist? If you never act inappropriately on your racist beliefs and define good cop as adequate in most situations, perhaps. But you can't be a great one; not the best of the best. Because racism makes you less of a person, less objective, less self-aware. It clouds and distorts your judgement and impairs critical thinking. Consider, the racist officer in these two situations, both of which have happened:
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