Photo by Steven W. Thrasher

"I Can Breathe," and the Occasional Fear of Covering Protests

Last night, I shot the above picture, which went far more viral than anything I’ve ever posted to Twitter. I shot it while spending the early part of the evening covering a pro-police “Thank You NYPD” rally at New York’s City Hall. From the advance publicity, it seemed like the kind of event which could quickly devolve into a pro police-state rally, the kind of affair which would doubtlessly draw one of the city’s nightly anti-police brutality rallies (which have been occurring since NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo was not indicted for the death of Eric Garner) into a confrontation.

Which was precisely why I wanted to go. Not only would it be a great place to listen to the protestors I’ve been covering for my column, it would also be a great place to hear from those who think the police have been taking too much heat. I called up Whitney Dow, the director of the Whiteness Project, to go with me. We met when I interviewed him for the Guardian about his fascinating POV interview project on white identity, and we have been conversing about how white people perceive their own race ever since. I knew he might be able to connect with the pro-NYPD demonstrators in a way I, as a black/ mixed race interviewer could not.

Outside City Hall, the pro-police side only had a handful of demonstrators, and were always outnumbered by several factors by the well organized anti-police brutality side. The theater of the whole scene was comically absurd, given that the NYPD — the organization feared by one side, and defended by the other — tried to maintain control over the scene by separating the two sides with barriers. The pro-side then appeared bigger than it was because most journalists and researchers, including me, went to that side. That was where the story was of the kinds of people who were wearing “I Can Breathe” T-shirts, mocking Garner’s final words.

Photo by Steven W. Thrasher
Photo by Steven W. Thrasher

The shirts were made by the man in the above picture, who traveled all the way from Colorado to show his solidarity with the police officers, after reading about it in the New York Post.

As a reporter, I’ve often assumed there is limited value in covering such events. The whole thing is a spectacle, often with people who come out simply to get time in the media. Yet the theater itself can be revealing, and the mechanics of the staged protest informative. For example, there were probably not more than 200 protesters, counter protestors, media and cops combined on the ground, yet the NYPD appeared to have two helicopters flying overhead.

There is also something great in getting to talk face to face with people with whom I agree about little, like those who would go out on a night with sub-freezing temperatures to defend the police in the fall of 2014. Yet, there is something fundamentally scary about being a black reporter in such a setting. I have never been a war reporter, but I’ve felt in danger a couple of times before (in Israel/Palestine in 2008, and while covering an anti-gay marriage rally in the Bronx in 2011). I felt so last night, too. Here I was, surrounded by angry white people with shirts reading “I Can Breathe.” The protesters on the other side of the barrier were primarily people of color. Except for one black woman on the pro-police side (a woman who seemed not especially balanced as she chanted, “The NYPD needs love too! Close ranks!”), they were all very angry white people around me, mostly men and mostly large. One protester grabbed another reporter’s camera next to me and started screaming at us that we were the “scum of the earth” and should be on other side with the “rest of the garbage,” because that’s who “you really support.”

The dialogue between the two sides was not especially nuanced. The people of color would chant, “Whose streets? Our streets!” and the White people would respond, “Whose jails? Your jails!” This went on and on — the Black and Hispanic folks yelling, “Hands up, don’t shoot,” and the White people responding, “Hands up, don’t loot!”

“God Bless America” was invoked by the white side, as if those facing them had no God on their side, along with, “You’re gonna be sorry when the terrorists come for you!”

And, of course, “I can’t breathe” was met with, “I can breathe.”

The latter was extremely offensive, and I had a hard time maintaining body language which wouldn’t make those yelling it clam up around me. It is hard to fathom, even as a reporter, what is going on with folks who will use a dying man’s words against him to prove he was a “thug.” Nothing was as scary as hearing folks shout, “I can breathe! I follow the law!”

I was most scared when I got a retired, large white cop to talk to me. He was trying to convince me that Eric Garner should have known how to submit, because he’d been arrested so often. The man put his hands on me to demonstrate what a chokehold was, and what it was not. I hoped Whitney Dow and CS Muncy, another white journalist friend of mine standing nearby, would step in if anything happened. But I momentarily thought I would panic, and my heart raced.

Here I was, being “protected” by the NYPD on duty, surrounded by angry, white, retired and off-duty cops and their supporters. Who hated the press and, it seemed, Black people — and I was in the middle of them. I wanted them to talk, and I wanted to hear what they had to say, so I didn’t say much back, even to the man trying to convince me that if Garner had been pliant enough, he wouldn’t have died.

I just try to keep people talking in these situations. Whitney could do it a little easier here, because at least he’s White. Sometimes my fear gets the better of me. Sometimes, I worry about walking the line between trying to give visual cues that I am hearing someone (no matter how offensive) and not being willing to give them any indication that I agree with anything they say. I wonder, as I transition from doing interviews for print and radio journalism and into doing interviews for ethnography and social science research, whether this will get harder or easier. Especially, as I’ve found in a decade of interviewing people for media, that those with the most offensive things to say are usually the most aggressive about trying to elicit cues of agreement.

None of this is easy. On evenings like tonight, it’s downright terrifying.

Steven W. Thrasher, a weekly columnist for the Guardian and Contexts board member, is in the American Studies program at NYU. Follow him on Twitter @thrasherxy.

Comments 16

“I Can Breathe,” and the Occasional Fear of Covering Protests - Treat Them Better

December 20, 2014

[…] By Steven W. Thrasher at Contexts Blog […]


Maggie

December 20, 2014

pro-tip: If you're going to be an insensitive bigot with zero integrity, comic sans is the best way to go!


Letta Page

December 20, 2014

This is awesome! Thanks for contributing Steven! Another good one is on our host site, The Society Pages -- "Between Protestors and Police: How One Photojournalist Got 'The Shot'" in the Oakland protests last weekend http://thesocietypages.org/specials/photojournalism


TL

December 20, 2014

The great unspoken truth here is that police, and society largely, actually walk through life with the thought that policemen are "good", that they are self-existing goodness by virtue of what they do for a paycheck. America is in love with large government power. We conduct our whole nation with the assumption of the ultimate good of the law and its priests on the streets. Anything short of worship, and God help you if you disagree, is blasphemy.

Why we remain oblivious is only explained by hatred of our neighbor and our equally assumed moral superiority to people of color and the poor.

We have seen this so many times in history in various packages.

Pharoah to Israel.
Salem.
Sharia.

We are no better. In fact, we are worse.

Repent.


Weekend Reading | Backslash Scott Thoughts

December 21, 2014

[…] “I Can Breathe” and the Occasional Fear of Covering Protests: […]


I don’t know how to talk about politics, so I will talk about Fear and Love instead | myyearonsaturn

December 21, 2014

[…] t-shirts. (By the way, you should check out this blog post from a reporter who attended that rally: http://blog.contexts.org/2014/12/20/i-can-breathe-and-the-occasional-fear-of-covering-protests/ […]


tommy

December 22, 2014

This article is extremely biased. You scorn the pro police protesters for judging your opinion based on color but you also confirm that they were right in the assumption even if they were over aggressive in calling you out. You write how you're terrified of the guy touching you even though he is a retired public servant surrounded by current public servants. You demonize those who support the people who risk their lives every day while their demonstration from your account was no more radical than the opposing ones which occur every single night to criticize those same life-riskinf public servants. White supremacy in 2014 is the hyperbole of a small lasting phenomenon perpetuated by white guilt and insecurity.


Monday Morning Links! | Gerry Canavan

December 22, 2014

[…] * NYPD Officer Repeatedly Punches 12-Year-Old Black Boy As Colleagues Subdue Him, And A Lawyer Sees The Whole Thing. Prosecutor Says He Knew Some Witnesses Were Lying To The Ferguson Grand Jury. Meet the Pro-Slavery Fairview Park Auxiliary Cop. Family of toddler critically injured by SWAT team facing $1 million in medical bills. Woman Tries To Trademark ‘I Can’t Breathe’ To Sell Merchandise. “I Can Breathe,” and the Occasional Fear of Covering Protests. […]


Two NYPD cops get killed and ‘wartime’ police blame the protesters. Have we learned nothing? | TALK REAL SOLUTIONS

December 23, 2014

[…] “Hands up, don’t shoot.” And trust me: that’s when things get ugly. On Friday night, I went to a rally in support of the NYPD , which has been under increased pressure since a grand jury’s decision not to indict in the […]


The Brutes in Blue: From Ferguson to Freedom, Part 3 « Andrew Gavin Marshall

December 24, 2014

[…] “hands up, don’t shoot!” the pro-police crowd chanted, “Hands up, don’t loot!” The pro-NYPD protest was largely made up of retired or off-duty police officers and their supporters, which along with […]


The Brutes in Blue: From Ferguson to Freedom – The HI Blog

January 3, 2015

[…] shoot!” the pro-police crowd chanted, “Hands up, don’t loot!” The pro-NYPD protest was largely made up of retired or off-duty police officers and their supporters, which along with […]


Police Kill Black People, Get Rewarded -

December 31, 2015

[…] This litany of names-become-hashtags is a recitation of black bodies sacrificed at the altar of white supremacy. As Steven Thrasher points out, while it is hard for black people to breathe these days, yet for those who do the policing, they are breathing quite easily. […]


Cheyanne

December 1, 2016

You codnlu't pay me to ignore these posts!


Darryl H. Alvarez

April 29, 2020

Once my teacher told me that leaders are not born rather they are made out of the circumstances. And today when I look at my university I come to know that he was right which I check https://my-assignment.help/ to find out unique task. It is important to create situation so that we can choose a leader.


STRANGE NEWS: Did Members of the NYPD Use 'I Can Breathe' Shirts in 2020 Demonstration? » u-s-news.com

June 1, 2020

[…] Medill School of Journalism, assessed his protection of the December 2014 demonstration forContexts By his account, off-duty police officers were certainly […]


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