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(en) US, San Francisco, An Anarchist Perspective on the “Violence” of the Oscar Grant Riots

Date Tue, 13 Jan 2009 16:53:15 +0200



The news of the riots that followed the shooting of 22-year-old Oscar Grant has sensationally
occupied the headlines of Bay Area newspapers and television programs over the last week. These
reports have focused almost exclusively on the vandalism of local businesses and cars and have
remained chillingly silent on the topic of the police violence that occurred that evening. The
troubling assumption made throughout all of the reportage is that the destruction of storefront
facades and car windows somehow equates to the horrific execution of Oscar, and that it justified
the police violence against demonstrators that night. ---- As anarchists who were involved in the
demonstrations, we fully reject the notion that the vandalizing of private property could ever be
weighed against the violence committed against not only Oscar Grant, but against youth of color
every day by police and the prison system. This way of thinking, that gives property more value
than people, is what allows the violence of the police to become dangerously normalized and
unquestioned.

At the time of this writing, the police officer that executed Oscar Grant in cold blood still walks
the streets without criminal charges, while some of those arrested during the demonstration are
locked away in prison awaiting trial and will likely face harsh sentences. The violent system that
so quickly punishes those who demonstrated while simultaneously protecting the murderer of Oscar
Grant should be the target of our collective criticism and condemnation, not the angry youth who
reacted to the shooting in the streets that night. While Bay Area journalists have presented
themselves as being objective reporters of the aforementioned events, their reports and broadcasts
repeatedly reveal their bias in favor of the police when recounting the evening of the
demonstrations. The endless images of smashed windows and burned cars, and the litany of
condemnations of "lawlessness" and "destruction" serve to obscure the most violent events of the
night, and indeed the only violence perpetrated against human beings: the brutal police beatings of
protesters. One witness described a police officer beating a protester on the head so severely his
bike helmet was split in two. Another described how police made over 70 protesters lie down on
their stomachs in positions that eerily echoed Oscar Grant's pose as he was shot. A visibly
pregnant woman was screaming in pain after being attacked by police. It is clear to us that the
police were protecting private property and not human beings that night. We are disgusted by this,
and we condemn Bay Area journalists for being complicit with police violence by attempting to
justify their actions.

A very distorted and troubling view of what constitutes violence in our society is perpetuated by
the current coverage. A car does not scream in agony when it burns, and similarly a storefront
facade does not sob when its plate glass window shatters to the sidewalk below. It is true that the
cost of replacing cars and windows may be a burden for the working-class people who were affected,
and that is certainly regrettable. However, there is simply no comparison between those costs and
the brutal consequences of police violence. The youth who were brutalized by police the night of
the demonstration will have to live with their injuries and traumas for years to come, and Oscar
Grant cannot be replaced. We call on the public to recognize the real violence in our society – the
violence of the police, the prisons and the politicians. As long as police and corrupt politicians
protect the cop that killed Oscar, as long as youth of color are continuously attacked and
criminalized by the police and court system, as long as property is valued over people - we will
not grieve over the property vandalized on Wednesday night.

Signed,
-Bay Area Anarchists
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