I am tired of putting out statements spotlighting the deaths of Black people in America—at the hands of police, at the hands of white vigilantes, at the hands of #COVID19.
The past 48 hours have laid bare once again with stark clarity the entrenched systemic racism that pervades American life.

In Minneapolis, an African American man, George Floyd, was killed by police, resulting in the firing of four officers.
George Floyd’s death comes on the same day a white woman in New York threatened an African American birdwatcher by calling the police & invoking his race.

The next day, Black people protesting the brutal murder of Mr. Floyd were assaulted with police tear gas & rubber bullets.
This police violence stands in sharp contrast to the images of police standing calmly while mostly white protestors—some of whom were carrying weapons—demonstrated for the reopening of businesses.
All while decades of compounding health and economic inequities have made the #coronavirus more deadly for Black Americans than their white counterparts.
America, racism is our underlying disease.

It has permeated not only our economic, social, and civic systems but also our everyday behaviors.

How is that you can put your knee on a fellow human being’s neck and listen to him beg for air and just sit there?
How is that you can call the police and weaponize the words “African American male,” knowing that could very well lead to someone’s death?
It’s been almost 50 years since James Baldwin said to be Black and conscious in America is to be in a constant rage—and yet the words remain acutely accurate today.
Despite the familiar brutality of this past week, and the past 400 years of systematic inequality, Black people will remain resilient.

But this can’t be our fight alone. It must be a collective fight where white Americans join us in fighting for real freedom.
We will continue to find joy. We will continue to speak out against injustice. We will continue to fight white supremacy.

Join us.
You can follow @amprog.
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