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- <text id=92TT1038>
- <link 93HT0354>
- <link 92TT1348>
- <link 92TT1112>
- <link 91TT0655>
- <title>
- May 11, 1992: The Fire This Time
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- May 11, 1992 L.A.:"Can We All Get Along?"
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 18
- LOS ANGELES RIOTS
- The Fire This Time
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As Los Angeles smolders, black and white Americans around the
- country try to comprehend the verdict and the future of race
- relations
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Sylvester Monroe/Los Angeles,
- Tom Curry and Sophfronia Scott Gregory/New York
- </p>
- <p> For more than a year he had been a writhing body twisting
- on the ground under kicks and nightstick blows in what may be
- the most endlessly replayed videotape ever made. Then on Friday
- afternoon TV finally gave Rodney King a face and a voice--a
- hesitant, almost sobbing voice that yet was more eloquent than
- any other that spoke during the terrible week. "Stop making it
- horrible," King pleaded with the rioters who had been doing just
- that in Los Angeles--and to a lesser extent in San Francisco,
- Atlanta, Seattle, Pittsburgh and other cities. He sounded
- almost dazed by the violence that followed a jury's acquittal
- of the cops who had beaten him: the killing, burning and
- looting, he muttered, were "just not right...just not
- right." As to black-white relations: "Can we all get along?"
- </p>
- <p> Would that the nation's leaders, of both races, could find
- such plain but heartfelt words. Then perhaps the quiet that
- will return after the fires and the fury burn themselves out--whenever that is--could cover healing. Which would make it
- very unlike the totally deceptive quiet that preceded the King
- verdict.
- </p>
- <p> It had not exactly been unknown that race relations were
- worsening; a hundred voices had said so. But not until last week
- did many whites and blacks realize how deep an abyss had been
- opening at their feet. And last week's violence is all too
- likely to make the gulf still wider and deeper. For blacks the
- acquittal, and for whites the aftermath, tended to confirm each
- race's worst fears and suspicions about the other.
- </p>
- <p> Blacks have far more than police brutality to worry about:
- high unemployment, widespread poverty, poor schools, drug
- peddlers and criminals who prey on their neighborhoods. But it
- is no accident that nearly all the great ghetto riots since the
- 1960s have been triggered by some incident involving arrested
- blacks and white cops. To an extent that whites can barely even
- imagine--because it so rarely happens to them--police
- brutality to many blacks is an ever present threat to their
- bodies and lives.
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, few things more vividly illustrate the extent to
- which whites and blacks live in different worlds than their
- reactions to police brutality. A white who was sickened by the
- tape of King's beating would probably have said to himself
- something like, Look what they're doing to that poor guy. A
- black would be almost sure to say, My God, that could be me. And
- nothing makes blacks feel more helpless than the thought that
- they cannot do anything about it. However innocent a black may
- be, and however outrageously he or she may be treated, the
- criminal-justice system simply will not convict policemen of
- using excessive force.
- </p>
- <p> After the King verdict, many blacks said bitterly they had
- always thought the cops would be turned loose. Lester Barry, the
- black emcee of the "Comedy 'n the Hood" show at the Guild
- Theatre in Inglewood, had even been saying in his act that
- "those guys are going to get off." But the shock and rage after
- the verdict belied those statements. This time, many blacks
- apparently hoped, it would be different. After all, this was not
- merely the word of a black with an arrest record against the
- word of one or more cops: this time there was hard evidence in
- the form of a tape on which the jurors, like hundreds of
- millions of TV viewers around the world, could actually see the
- beating. Says Robin Gant, a student at Hofstra University School
- of Law in Hempstead, N.Y.: "When the beating first happened, the
- black community felt this is our chance to show that, yes, we
- do have rights and you can't beat us within an inch of our lives
- and get away with it."
- </p>
- <p> In a TIME/CNN poll conducted last Friday by Yankelovich
- Clancy Shulman, 78% of 200 blacks questioned, and 79% of 798
- whites, said they thought before the verdict that the policemen
- would be found guilty. On many other questions, a majority or
- plurality of one race agreed with a much larger segment of the
- other: 62% of whites, but 92% of blacks, thought they would have
- voted to convict if they had been on the jury. The riots that
- followed were condemned as completely unjustified by 63% of
- whites and 42% of the blacks; an additional 20% of blacks and
- 14% of whites found them somewhat unjustified (though 15% of
- blacks and only 4% of whites thought they were completely
- justified). Blacks also tended to agree with whites that the
- riots were mostly caused by "people taking advantage of the
- situation to justify violence and looting" rather than "a
- genuine reaction to the verdict in the Rodney King case." But
- one of the greatest differences between the races was also among
- the most ominous. Only 23% of whites felt that in an everyday
- encounter with police they ran a risk of being treated unfairly.
- More than twice as many blacks (48%) did.
- </p>
- <p> In any case, blacks found cold consolation in the idea
- that many whites also disagreed with the acquittal of the
- policemen. To them, the white disapproval was pallid and
- ineffectual and showed little real understanding of their
- emotions. "Police terrorism is a form of oppression that black
- people intimately understand, because we are the victims of it,"
- says Steven Hawkins, an attorney for the NAACP Legal Defense and
- Education Fund in New York. "It is something that few whites
- understand, because they are typically not affected by it."
- Herman Collins, an unemployed 26-year-old black in Ohio, says
- more simply, "I don't want to see any white people today. Every
- time I see a white person now I will think, `You think you can
- get away with anything.' I know you can't blame all white people
- for this, but there's only so much a black man can take."
- </p>
- <p> Collins' opinion of the signal that the jury's decision
- will flash to police and other whites across the country is
- widely shared among blacks. On a scholarly level, Robert Starks,
- professor of inner city studies education at Northeastern
- Illinois University in Chicago, asserts, "The message is loud
- and clear. It reinforces the 1857 Dred Scott dictum that no
- black man has any rights that a white man is bound to respect.
- African-American males feel it is open season." Not only males,
- either. Akos Esi, 36, a professional nurse who has immigrated
- from Ghana to New York City's Harlem, says, "I think it's a
- message white America is sending, that you can do anything to
- a black person, even with evidence against you, and get away
- with it." She vows to tell the children she takes care of, "You
- are black; the policeman is an enemy. When you see the police
- officer, go away because no matter what you do you are guilty."
- Gwendolyn Young, executive director of the Louisville and
- Jefferson County Human Relations Commission in Kentucky,
- declared to a hundred people at a protest rally in Louisville
- that "in America black life is meaningless and black rights do
- not exist." To many blacks, the fact that the not-guilty
- verdicts were handed down by a jury that included no blacks
- (though it did have one Asian and one Hispanic) virtually proves
- that the criminal-justice system is ruled by bias and that they
- cannot look to it for fair treatment. They dismiss as a sham the
- official contention that the trial was moved from Los Angeles
- to nearby Simi Valley to guard against prejudicial publicity
- influencing the jury. In their view, the move was made precisely
- for the purpose of guaranteeing that a jury excluding blacks
- would be chosen (Simi Valley is not only almost exclusively
- white but also has a relatively large population of policemen
- and other civil servants) and that such a group of jurors was
- desired specifically because it would be almost certain not to
- convict. Not a few white observers, including some legal
- scholars, are inclined to agree with that judgment, at least
- partly. Says Douglas Colbert, a professor of criminal law at
- Hofstra: "I don't believe it would have mattered what evidence
- was presented or not presented." But again, white sympathy does
- little to reduce black fury.
- </p>
- <p> For the black majority, fear and fury do not translate
- into approval of--let alone participation in--rioting (for
- that matter, Hispanics and whites joined the looters in some
- cities). Apart from moral considerations, blacks realize that
- it is their neighborhoods that burn and mostly their lives that
- are lost. Nearly every black leader of note voiced some
- variation on these comments from Benjamin Hooks, executive
- director of the National Association for the Advancement of
- Colored People: "We vigorously condemn with all the force we can
- muster what has happened. Rioting, arson, looting and murder
- solve nothing."
- </p>
- <p> But there are gulfs within as well as between the races,
- and last week demonstrated that black leaders are not always in
- touch with, much less in control of, all their supposed
- followers. In Los Angeles, even to some usually moderate blacks,
- appeals from leaders to channel their anger into such
- constructive measures as voting in a June 2 referendum for an
- amendment to the city charter that would reform police
- administrative procedures sounded distressingly feeble. Mayor
- Tom Bradley, who is black, drew boos and cries of "Uncle Tom"
- as well as cheers from a crowd jamming the First African
- Methodist Episcopal Church in South Central Los Angeles during
- one of his frequent pleas for peace.
- </p>
- <p> Worse, the riots demonstrated again the existence of a
- group of mostly young, impoverished and angry ghetto blacks who
- no longer listen to the established African-American leadership--or to anybody. "There is a major communication gap between
- our so-called leaders and these people who have taken to the
- streets," says Johnnie Cochran, one of the most prominent
- lawyers in Los Angeles. People leaving the protest rally at the
- First A.M.E. Church on Wednesday night, he relates, were
- confronted by rioters who told them, "Nothing you're talking
- about is going to do any good--so come with us and let's
- burn." Some rioters even shot at the churchgoers. "Black people
- shooting at other black people," says Cochran disconsolately.
- "Nobody can talk to the people in the streets. Even their
- parents can't talk to them. The only thing they're going to
- understand is a show of force, and I hope it's a measured show
- of force."
- </p>
- <p> On the white side of the racial divide, the riots may tend
- to reinforce suspicions--or convictions--that all too many
- blacks are emotionally irresponsible at best, criminals at
- worst. So far, it must be said, there is not much evidence of
- that. With the exception of people calling in to radio talk
- shows--one in New York City called the rioters a bunch of
- "terrorists and anarchists" who would seize on any pretext to
- wreak the destruction they enjoy--most whites were fairly
- circumspect in voicing their opinions.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, according to last week's TIME/CNN poll, whites'
- criticisms of blacks have lessened in the past year, and are
- nowhere near as severe as blacks think they are. In a prize
- example of racial misunderstanding, 65% of blacks believed
- whites thought they "have no self-discipline," but only 17% of
- whites actually said that; 63% rejected the idea. Though 75% of
- blacks believed whites thought them prone to crime, only 34% of
- whites were willing to say that blacks "are more likely to
- commit violent crimes" than whites are; 48% thought that
- description "does not apply."
- </p>
- <p> White opinion, like black, also is divided--even among
- policemen. Like other whites, hardly any cops will say flat-out
- that they approve of the verdict, or of the conduct of the
- policemen who were acquitted. Some, however, do express relief
- and opine that the public got a distorted impression of what
- happened from the tape. There was--there must have been--other evidence that led the jury to acquit. "The trial was much
- more than 81 seconds of tape," says Houston burglary sergeant
- Doug Elder. "The media and politicians took the tape and
- indicted, tried and convicted those officers before they went
- to court." Now, he says, "politicians are helping pour flames
- on the problem."
- </p>
- <p> On the other side, Edwin Delattre, a Boston University
- ethics professor who has written a book on the use of force that
- is widely studied as a police training manual, says he has
- talked to hundreds of officers since the King tape was first
- shown. Says he: "They feel betrayed by the low standards of the
- police in Los Angeles. There is indignation and resentment; they
- believe the four cops in L.A. should have been convicted. Police
- all over the country are appalled that those police used force
- in such a contemptible way." Maybe so, but these officers have
- also been keeping their opinions primarily to themselves.
- </p>
- <p> There is some question, in fact, whether white fear and
- suspicion of blacks may be higher than most will confess to
- pollsters. Some analysts think it is and worry about a vicious
- circle: white fear of black crime is so high as to lead some to
- excuse almost any behavior on the part of the police who are
- supposedly protecting them against it. That leads to verdicts
- like the acquittal of King's beaters, which touch off riots like
- those last week, which further intensify white fear. Scholars
- of both races express this apprehension. Says Henry Louis Gates,
- chairman of Afro-American studies at Harvard: "That [King]
- jury was more afraid of the potential of being mugged by some
- hypothetical black male than it was of the abuse of the
- Constitution, of civil rights." Jim Sleeper, author of the book
- The Closest of Strangers: Liberalism and the Politics of Race
- in New York, is fearful that "we're at the dividing line now,
- where perception becomes reality, where the prophecy becomes
- self-fulfilling. The fact that the looters are out there doing
- the rioting only confirms what people have decided: this is what
- the cops are here to protect us from."
- </p>
- <p> The tragedy is that, if the polls are anywhere near
- accurate, the races have more in common than they think they do:
- the dominant strain in black and white opinion condemns both the
- acquittal and the rioting. That should have offered an
- opportunity for creative political leadership to begin
- emphasizing the convergence and narrowing the differences. In
- particular, it offered a rare chance to President Bush, who when
- faced with a tough choice often tries to go both ways. This was
- one time he could have done so and won the applause of that
- majority disgusted with the acquittal and the riots.
- </p>
- <p> But Bush is also often a half-beat behind the mood of the
- moment, and so he was this time. On Wednesday night, immediately
- after the verdict, he gave reporters an utterly inadequate
- statement: "The court system has worked. What's needed now is
- calm, respect for the law." On Thursday he issued a series of
- statements that were stern in condemning the rioting but
- confusing about what, if anything, he intended to do about the
- verdict.
- </p>
- <p> On Friday, however, Bush finally conferred with black
- leaders at the White House, and when he addressed the nation on
- TV that night--his eighth pronouncement in roughly 48 hours--he at last got the message about right. He announced steps
- to quell the already fading rioting, including federalization
- of National Guard units in the area. And he again unequivocally
- condemned the disturbances, flatly calling some of the rioters'
- acts "murder."
- </p>
- <p> But this time the President also pronounced the tape of
- King's beating "revolting" and spoke of the "anger" and "pain"
- he had experienced watching it. More important, he at last
- announced that the verdict of the Simi Valley jury was "not the
- end." He ordered federal authorities to speed an investigation
- with a view toward starting a federal prosecution of the four
- cops for violating King's civil rights, utilizing a law enacted
- specifically to apply in cases where state courts and juries
- could or would not convict. That move might help convince
- skeptical blacks that they can after all get fair treatment from
- the judicial system. Better late than never--but it remains
- to be seen whether the racial chasm that the King case and the
- riots revealed and widened can be bridged.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-