This post isn’t about the death of Sandra Bland so much as the online debate regarding contentious issues and an experience I had on social media last week. How I feel about Sandra Bland’s treatment by Texas police will be obvious, but there are better places to find information and commentary about it. I suggest starting with the police vehicle dashcam video of her arrest.
Matt Taibbi
at Rolling Stone magazine has published a piece titled “Sandra Bland Was
Murdered,” which states that whatever events unfolded within the Waller County
jail, the police’s treatment of Bland caused her death. The article discusses
how right-wing media has been curiously restrained in its commentary, as if
even the RWNJs have an inkling, and even a sense of shame, that assault,
arrest, confinement and death are a bit much for, we are told, failing to
signal a lane change:
“It's been interesting following conservative news outlets after the Bland case. They've been conspicuously quiet this week, holstering the usual gloating backlash of the 'He'd be alive today, if he'd just obeyed the law' variety.”
I ran across the article in a tweet by prominent activist DeRay McKesson. I retweeted it and included a quote from the article that I thought summarized the ridiculous victim-blaming that is common in these cases, a quote that would also fit within the 140-character limit:
“But nobody yet has dared to say Sandra Bland would still be alive today, if only she'd used her blinker.”
Then something happened. DeRay McKesson retweeted my retweet of his tweet, sending it out to his 189,000 followers, plus anyone else who glanced at his timeline, and my Notifications turned into a steady stream of favorites, retweets and replies that went on for hours. Having only recently approached 2,000 followers, I’m not accustomed to such activity and didn’t know how to react.
The majority
of the attention came from people who agreed with the quote and article’s
condemnation of the way the police treated Sandra Bland, the system that lets
them get away with murder, the politicians and talking heads who work to ensure
this system goes unchanged, and the riffraff that constitutes their base. I’m
happy to have lent this modest support to those upset by Sandra Bland’s death.
A number of
social justice tweeters who replied, however, appeared not to understand the
tweet. They apparently didn’t read the linked article, see the quotes
around the quote, or notice that the original tweet was from one of their most notable voices. Their comments were unkind, implying or outright stating that
I was a racist, an idiot and a troll. They had taken me to be defending the
police and blaming the victim by saying that none of this would have happened
if Sandra Bland had only used her turn signal. That is the exact opposite, not
of what I had said--because I hadn’t added any of my own words to the tweet--but
of the article and the quote from it.
The situation
was a perfect example of dialogue on social media, in that it was a complete
cluster-debacle: a bitter contest of hot air occurring parallel to life offline
(I was out shopping with my family), flippant about matters of
life and death, arising between strangers whose tone is either casual or
vicious, fast-paced and careless, with the most ignorant voices being the
loudest, ambiguous to the point of incomprehensibility, with horrible spelling
and grammar, hampered by character limits and online lingo, filled with snark
and insult, rarely clever, and perhaps worst of all, broken into scattered
threads that led nowhere. And it didn’t help my discomfort to realize that the
quote, devoid of context, does contain some ambiguity.
That made it
all partly my fault.
It was
unsettling--after all, I have tweeted, blogged and donated money in support of
the #BlackLivesMatter movement since August 9, 2014 when Darren Wilson murdered
Mike Brown. I felt the need to run damage control, but family matters called. I
could have gladly done without social media that day, but I couldn’t take my
mind off it: There were all those voices, what felt like masses but in
retrospect was only a handful, publicly saying horrible things about me.
I eventually
realized I was being given a dose of what many outspoken people on social media
experience on a much larger and wickeder scale on a daily basis. The first
examples that popped into my head were DeRay McKesson and Feminist Frequency founder Anita Sarkeesian.
Agree or disagree with them, they are prominent individuals who are on a daily
basis the targets of vile slander and even death threats. How awful it must be
to have that happening all the time--whether due to true disagreement or
misunderstanding.
And, of course, the victims of online attack need not be famous. Given all the vitriol on social media, everyone is subjected to it at some point, perhaps frequently, and some people experience real mental trauma because of online attacks. My heart always breaks when I hear a news story about a teenager committing suicide due to bullying by peers on Facebook or other platforms, but now I understand a little better, by extrapolation from my own minor fracas, how intense their pain must have been. There has been a growing number of voices calling for efforts to save the Internet from trolls. Let us hope some measures are implemented that prove to be successful.
My response
to the attacks was generally to favorite and retweet them, and to reply simply
that the article and quote are critical of the police, not Sandra Bland. I
detest bickering, so I played it flat in tone. I doubt any of you will be
surprised when I add that I never received a simple, “Sorry, I misunderstood.”
When it came to those who appeared to actually believe Sandra Bland was
responsible for her own death, I ignored them, as I did those whose replies
were literally nonsense. This, too, is a regularly occurring phenomenon online.
And I’m not
complaining about what happened to me, because while this post’s focus is what I found to be an illustrative
example of public debate in our time, the more important issue is the way the
police harass, assault and kill the populace with immunity. Of all the ways
Brian Encinia could have handled that traffic stop, he chose an extremely
disturbing one that ultimately resulted in the loss of a woman who, as the
video below shows, was a beautiful soul:
Previous
related posts:
Why It’s Difficult to Talk About the Killing of Police OfficersWhen Is an Unarmed Teen Not Unarmed?
Don’t Look Away from Mike Brown
Identifying with Ferguson as Symptom
Ferguson: How Did We Get Here?
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