Fresh out of college, I
found the job of a reporter both trying and satisfying. I relished the
opportunity to gather worthwhile information and a variety of perspectives, aiming
with each week’s issue of the Westminster
Window for a carefully rendered look at a community I’d grown to love.
When Wal-Mart proposed
a vast new big-box in a less prosperous part of the suburb, igniting months of
opposition among the retailer's would-be neighbors, I spent countless hours and
inches of copy capturing the range of clashing voices on the topic. As it
evolved from proposal to protest to ballot issue to reality, my role was to
observe, inquire, record and communicate.
Approaching something
from at least a couple angles wasn't heroic, of course, but simply expected in
the newsroom. We sought to maintain its reputation as a trustworthy source of
information and to foster a more informed citizenry. And we wanted to get the
story right.
|
Gateway Arch |
One thing that the job
did not require of me was my opinions about the news. That's not to say I
lacked them or was denied them – only that those opinions were beside the point
and didn’t often come up. I was busy trying to become "the resident expert" on
my beat, as the publisher put it. The other reporters and I left the occasional
op-eds to him and the managing editor.
Now, no longer a
journalist, I often feel that my opinion is all that is expected, or all we
expect from each other. Instead of the demanding yet straightforward tasks
associated with getting the story, I’m digesting it, reacting to it, comparing
accounts, unsure what to make of it all – yet awkwardly eager to determine
where I stand ("Whose side are you on?"). I don't have the luxury of being a
witness, the public-service-oriented excuse of being a necessary bystander, so
my engagement with the events of the day must take some other form, if any.
Outrage is a common
one, and social media brings it to a whole new level. We think-piece ourselves
to death, reading and writing the narratives that provide us with the most
comfort and personal catharsis possible.
Twin to outrage is a
sort of jaded epistemological reinforcement. Another cyclist or pedestrian is
killed by a hit-and-run driver here in St. Louis, and I am saddened, but more
than anything I am not surprised. It's a validation of my attitude toward
drivers as a lot. Or when it turns out that the Republican-controlled U.S. Congress
can’t find any wrongdoing on the part of the Obama administration when it comes
to Benghazi, it's a smirky satisfaction that I feel, not relief.
But then history marches
closer to home, and, for once, more is in fact expected of us. The magnitude of
the cognitive dissonance sparked by events here in St. Louis has defied my
attempts to mentally collapse it, to file away the discomfort.
Watching parts of the Ferguson
community erupt in flames that night in late November, I cried. At the same
time, part of me felt that I shouldn’t be sad but angry – and not at the photogenic
destruction on TV but rather at the appalling lack of justice, love and social
progress around race and poverty.
|
An Indianapolis family visiting Ferguson |
Another part of me has sensed
that I should be out in the streets among the peaceful protesters, in
solidarity. We lived in Selma, Ala., when I was small, and my white parents frequently
joined the anniversary marches across the Edmund Pettus Bridge a mile from our
home and predominantly black church. It was important to them to be present. It
mattered.
One recurring thought
with which I’ve excused my own absence from the Ferguson-spurred demonstrations
is that there is too much shrill rhetoric and generalization, despite the legitimacy
of the movement overall. For instance, I can get behind a chant like "Hands up!
Don’t shoot!" but not "Fuck the police!" That's a genuine hangup for me (not
the f-bomb itself but what feels like a viscerally unhelpful sentiment/demonization),
but I’m not sure it should be, given the stakes. I don’t know.
Watching Selma in a St. Louis theater last month
was convicting. During the part where the bridge and state highway near my
childhood home first loom large (heartbreakingly so) in the film, I couldn't
help thinking of the attempts to briefly shut down highways here in St. Louis –
or of my initial reaction to those efforts.
"How is that peaceful?"
I remember telling friends at one point this fall. "It seems more than 'disruptive'
to shut down I-70 [right near work]. That seems threatening and could cause
accidents. And it's not going to result in goodwill or changed hearts."
If I'd thought at the time
about the Selma-to-Montgomery march and its prelude and repercussions, perhaps
I would not have been so quick to react as I did, about the idea of pedestrians-with-a-purpose
temporarily taking over a busy roadway. That's not to say that my off-the-cuff
concerns weren't somewhat valid, but they also betray an insensitive forgetfulness
of history and the bigger picture.
While we often grapple
with what to think and how to respond to this or that in our super-connected
world, Michael Brown’s death and the aftermath insist on more than my opinions
or outrage. I'm not sure what all that "more" is, exactly, but I think it's here to
stay. And that's probably a good thing.