I am relieved that #DerekChauvin was convicted today for murdering George Floyd. I breathe in this rare moment when the public recognized the value of a Black man's life and held an officer accountable for taking it. I am, as always, hopeful. And yet...
I am concerned about the political naïvete in some of the public commentary about the #DerekChauvinTrial. Some well-meaning and excited folks are saying things like, "This sends a message to police departments that they have to respect Black lives."

But... does it?
Think about how extreme #DerekChauvin's actions had to be to elicit this outcome.

Observe that the prosecutor made clear that the case was *only* about the 9 minutes and 29 seconds that Chauvin knelt on George Floyd's neck.
#DerekChauvin's conviction was not about the extreme and harsh police response over $20.
#DerekChauvin's conviction was not about the gun that the initial responding officer pulled on George Floyd when he was still inside his vehicle, terrifying him.
#DerekChauvin's conviction was not about the officers' utter disregard for George Floyd's safety and mental health when he was having an anxiety reaction as they tried to force him into the police vehicle.
#DerekChauvin's conviction was not even about the community members in Minneapolis who saw and were traumatized by his barbarous murder of George Floyd.

Those aspects *might* matter at sentencing, but they are not what produced this conviction.
#DerekChauvin's conviction is only about those visibly brutal 9 minutes and 29 seconds.

Most police violence against Black people is neither that visible nor so obviously, aesthetically brutal.
Most of the incidents that foster legal estrangement in Black communities are akin to the injustices that *preceded* that particular harrowing moment.
Indeed, the prosecutor went to great lengths in his closing to *distinguish* between Chauvin's killing of George Floyd and "policing." "That was not policing," the prosecutor repeatedly stated.
Yes, I hope police departments take away from #DerekChauvin's conviction that officers cannot assault people with impunity. But without sustained movement action alongside federal legislation, the likely lasting impact is more of the same. The pressure has to continue.
This necessary accountability of #DerekChauvin should not distract from the deeper and *more* necessary project of institutional change and societal transformation.
So, I'm relieved and sending love to George Floyd's family and to all affected. But I'm not naïve. And people who have been laboring against police violence and for racial justice for years aren't either.

As the old song says, "keep [our] eyes on the prize."

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More from @monicacbell

11 Mar
One thing I suppose we can be grateful for during this time of pandemic is that Zoom sometimes captures these moments. We need to have more real conversations about manifestations of racism in higher education. TW: blatant anti-Blackness 1/
Some students/alums @GeorgetownLaw are calling for various interventions, but one thing I wish were also on their list is a set of pedagogical trainings for all faculty about how bias may be affecting their teaching, interactions with, and perspectives on students. 2/
The unspoken "justification" for the racist view Sandra Sellers espouses here is, of course, affirmative action -- coupled with Richard Sanders' discredited "mismatch hypothesis." The basic idea is that Black students don't do well because they don't deserve to be admitted. 3/
Read 15 tweets
21 Feb
We need more country people in academia. We need more people who grew up struggling in academia. 1/
Imagine how much richer our theories would be if more country people were in academia. 2/
Imagine how much more grounded and nuanced our ideas would be if more of us were accountable not just to other traditional scholars looking for iconoclastic ideas, but also to loved ones more concerned with truth and usefulness. 3/
Read 6 tweets
15 Jun 20
My new article in @nyulawreview describes how policing perpetuates racial housing segregation. It helps address one conundrum in the current debate: What to do about the routine police violence Black people experience outside central cities? nyulawreview.org/issues/volume-…
Ferguson was a suburb. Ferguson helped reveal numerous dynamics of policing in a predominantly Black suburb that was controlled by white people. Scholars like Alex Murphy @UMSociology, @ekneebone, @berubea1 & others have written about race and class heterogeneity in suburbs.
Many white wealthy suburbs/neighborhoods rely on policing too -- but completely differently from how central cities and predominantly Black areas are under carceral control. Liberation requires focus on how segregation, political jurisdiction, and violent policing intersect.
Read 11 tweets
9 Nov 19
I woke up today thinking about cultural capital in elite educational settings. I'm always inspired by
@tony_jack's work, but today I was thinking about grad school/law school context. If you're 1st-gen, chances of branding as dumb, lazy, or "gunner" are high. #FirstGen 1/11
One of the unspoken rules of elite graduate education is that you're supposed to work very hard, but never appear to be working hard. That is how you establish a reputation as "naturally brilliant." 2/11
Meanwhile, all the unfamiliar and uninitiated see is their classmates spending a lot of time having fun outside of class, while also seeming extremely knowledgeable in class. That's one additional place where the fix comes in. 3/11
Read 12 tweets

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