âNever judge a white person until you have walked a mile in their burnt Nikes.â-Ancient African Proverb
Guys, I donât think the practice of calling out white people for calling the police on black people is working as well as we wanted. Instead of white-shaming with nicknames like BBQ Becky or using hashtags like #ConvertingOxygenToCarbonDioxideWhileBlack, maybe we should try something different. Maybe we try to understand what itâs like for our Ugg-wearing brothers and sisters who are contemplating calling the cops on a black person.
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In fact, here is a short, multiple-choice quiz based on an actual story reported by WITF about what happened when a black woman dared to enter one of the countryâs wealthiest neighborhoods to canvas for a political candidate.
The story begins on Sunday, October 28, when Dr. Amanda Kemp, an activist and visiting scholar at Franklin Marshall College in Lancaster, Pa., decided to canvas for congressional candidate Jess King, according to a Facebook post by Kemp. Kemp and her husband Michael Jamanisâ first stop was in the Bent Creek neighborhood of Lancaster County, Penn., which made the list of the 1,000 wealthiest neighborhoods in the U.S. in 2014.
After giving the name of the voter they were going to visit to the person at the entrance of the gated community, âthe staff person gave us a yellow card on which she had written our destination,â Kemp said, adding: âThe yellow card informed us of some rulesânone of which related to canvassing.â
When Kemp discovered that the person was not home, she and her husband (who is white) decided to go visit the home of the next voter on her list, who also happened to live in the Bent Creek community. This is when Kemp says they were approached by a white woman with gardening shears, reported to be named Elizabeth âDuffyâ Johnson
âWhat are you doing here?â said Johnson, who we will not refer to as Susie Scissorhands. âYou canât do that here.â
What did the Elizabeth woman want?
A. To welcome black people to the neighborhood.B. To see Kemp up close because sheâd never seen a negro in person.C. To touch Kempâs hair.D. To see Kempâs fugitive slave papers
Kemp explained to Duffy the Volunteer Slayer that she was canvassing for Jess King, to which she replied, in what Kemp described as âaggressiveâ and âin a loud voiceâ:âI hate Jess King. Sheâs trying to take us to socialism. You canât do that here.â
After exchanging a few unpleasantries, Elizabeth, who is reportedly a member of the Republican Committee of Lancaster County and has been campaigning for Lloyd Smucker, Jess Kingâs opponent, continued her interrogation:
âYou canât do that here,â she said. âYou donât belong here. How did you get in here? Iâm going to call the police. Iâm going to take your picture.â
How did the Duffy Johnson know that Amanda Kemp didnât belong there?
A. The woman memorized the faces of every resident who lives in the 400 homes in Bent Creek.B. Racism gives you E.S.P.C. Bent Creek is 88.7 percent white and only .7 percent black, according to Higley Magazine.D. Sheâs white, she doesnât have to know shit.
Kemp says Beth the Bouncer followed them, yelling that she was going to take their picture. But when Kempâs companion, also tried to take a photo of Bent Creek Betty, Johnson hid her face.
âAll of this is private property,â said the woman. âYou canât be in here at all. Iâm calling the police.â
âShe then started to dial,â wrote Kemp.
What did Duffy Johnson tell the police?
A. âI think theyâre trying to start the race war.âB. âThereâs gotta be a law against unauthorized blacks roaming freely, right?âC. âIâd like to report someone for first-degree uppity-nessâD. âIâd like to order the George Zimmerman special.â
Kemp decided to go home, but the police showed up at her door and, after speaking to her husband, determined that no laws were violated. WITF says Duffy actually teaches âdining, social, and personal skills for the Etiquette School of Central PA.â
Johnson alleges that Kempâs story is not accurate. An email from her attorney says: âThis matter is about trespassing. The volunteers from Jess Kingâs campaign entered private property and became aggressive,â adding: âThey were asked to leave and refused, so the police were notified.â
âThe fact the police came to my houseâI donât know what the basis of that was,â said Kemp. âThat was really disturbing.â
Pennsylvaniaâs criminal trespassing statute does not seem to list any of Kempâs actions that day as illegal but thatâs neither here nor there because:
A. Elizabeth âDuffyâ was not actually worried about trespassing.B. There is a separate Pennsylvania statute that allows people to stop anyone from walking down the street.C. Johnson stops everyone she sees in her neighborhoodD. You know why.
Answers: None of this makes any sense. As with everything in America, the correct answer is always âwhiteness.âï»ż
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