Who can question whether President Barack Obama is a master when it comes to speeches? Such a quality literally put him on the map when he mesmerized the crowd at the 2004 Democratic National Convention. He did it again in Selma, Alabama’s 50th anniversary, at the Edmund Pettus Bridge. His central message, “No one can doubt that things are better since Selma, no one.” His speech, delivered with quiet passion, was a masterwork. And yet, and yet, Selma has become sacred in civil rights history, not because of what happened there, but because of what happened thereafter. Public outrage fueled the passage of the Voter Rights Act, the same law, recently trimmed by the US Supreme Court.
Selma is a vivid example of an evil that still lives with us, that of police immunity for their violence. At Selma, Alabama state troopers and so called posse men beat people unconscious. They shattered skulls, broke ribs, knocked out teeth and broke bones. Guess how many of them went to jail? None. Just four years after Selma, Chicago cops broke into the apartment of Black Panther leader Fred Hampton and killed him in his sleep. They also killed Captain Mark Clark. Guess how many cops went to jail? Zero. Zip to our presence and the Mike Brown case—no criminal trial, state or federal. “Too hard,”say federal prosecutors. On May 13, 1985, cops drop bombs from a helicopter and shoot and burn 11 men, women, and children to death and also destroy several city blocks. In that case, 20 years after Selma, how many cops went to jail? You know: none.
Obama could have addressed police immunity, but that would have shattered his “we’re all better” speech. What radicalized and motivated Ferguson was a long train of police impunity and immunity after violence against the community. They had seen it too many times. So, Selma is closer than we think. It continues to trouble us today. From imprisoned nation, this is Mumia Abu Jamal.
These commentaries are recorded by Noelle Hanrahan of Prison Radio.
