catherineldf: (Default)
catherineldf ([personal profile] catherineldf) wrote2020-05-29 04:40 pm
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Greetings from the war zone...

As I noted in my previous post, I live in Minneapolis, 4 blocks from where members of the Minneapolis Police Department murdered George Floyd, 1.5-3 miles from Lake Street, depending on which part of it you're looking at. I participated in the first march and went down to the vigil site again last night. I shopped at most of the local businesses and other buildings that have been destroyed and know people who worked in many of them.

So far, we have lost:
  • 2 members of our local community, including Mr. Floyd.
  • Countless small businesses, like restaurants and stores run by POC and immigrant folks.
  • Buildings with offices that employed numerous community members
  • Affordable housing and apartments
  • A building housing a 40 year old nonprotit that worked with Native youth, teaching communications, and its entire archive.
  • A post office and its equipment
  • Things I haven't even begun the catalogue.
  • An independent Spanish-language radio station
  • And this doesn't begin to cover the intangibles and the buildings that were badly damaged that will be deemed unrepairable.
Honestly, I would cheerfully trade the 3rd Precinct, which I do not consider a loss, to have any or all of these other things back. "Burn it all down" is for people who don't plan to clean it up.

Is it understandable? The marches and the vigil that's been running 24 hours a day demanding justice for Mr. Floyd, definitely. Some of the attacks on various building, particularly the 3rd Precinct, definitely. But it also sounds as if some of it, the fires in particular, may have been set by agent provocateurs. There are also obviously people just looking to create trouble.
At this point, the fires and looting and so forth have gone well beyond the groups who came together to protest the murder (murders, really, since this was hardly the first) and the likely mishandling of justice for that crime when administered by some of our current officials.

Has some version of this been coming for a long time? Yes. So, honestly, is the decision to have the MN National Guard step in when the police and the city government failed at even basic protections for firefighters fighting the blazes. This has to stop for any kind of dialogue or change to begin. My concern is that we will end up like St. Louis, where urban riots hollowed out the city core in the late 1960s and it still hadn't been rebuild by the mid1980s when I lived there. Where Ferguson is an ongoing crime (look up what happened there after the world's attention turned away - activist assassinations, etc.). And I really don't want to see that.

So here we are, going into the first weekend of curfew, enforced by the National Guard. Things are happening, support networks are getting built, cleanup and fundraising is already happening. Will it be enough to create a new future for this city I fell in love with? I have no idea. But I'm hoping. I'm also hoping that we don't lose any more.

redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)

[personal profile] redbird 2020-05-29 11:14 pm (UTC)(link)
reading and worrying, though I haven't been to Minneapolis in several years.
queenoftheskies: queenoftheskies (Default)

[personal profile] queenoftheskies 2020-05-29 11:36 pm (UTC)(link)
I guess this is a stupid question, but don't you wonder if all the people in such close proximity will raise the Covid-19 cases, too?

After the deaths and all that is lost, it would be so tragic to lose more lives, too.
marthawells: Murderbot with helmet (Default)

[personal profile] marthawells 2020-05-29 11:58 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm so sorry for the people and businesses and jobs lost. It's sick, that they'll let all this happen just to defend the cops' ability to murder helpless people.
transcendancing: Art space scape, blues and purples and shining stars - named 'primordial quasar' (Transcendancing)

[personal profile] transcendancing 2020-05-30 02:46 am (UTC)(link)
I'm so so sorry this is all happening, I'm grateful for your sharing though.
inametaphor: A curious calico cat watches from behind a sewing machine (Default)

[personal profile] inametaphor 2020-05-30 07:16 pm (UTC)(link)
"Burn it all down" is for people who don't plan to clean it up.

Gods, yes. I've been trying to figure out how to say that for the past four years. No other words to say, just solidarity from downtown Minneapolis.