COMMENTRAY: Towards a More Perfect Union

Front row (l-r) Gabe Christian, Aisha Braveboy, Cunningham  and others involved in the case

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness.

(Second Paragraph of the United States of AmericaDeclaration of Independence) 

The in-your-face lynching of George Floyd on May 26, 2020, by a so-called police officer unmasked the increasingly tyrannical nature of U.S. society.  The murder of George Floyd and the terrorizing of innocent African Americans, and other people of color, makes a mockery of the American Declaration of Independence.

Floyd begged for his life and the officers stood there and murdered him in broad daylight. No human being who witnessed this violence perpetrated under color of law can sit idly by and accept it as business as usual. America must contend with the fact that this heinous conduct is nothing new. The murder of George Floyd by those who disgraced their uniforms has its roots in a history of US law enforcement as slavecatchers.

Those slave catchers roamed the country prior to the US Civil War to enforce the wishes of the Slave Power which held sway in the United States. It was the bold, courageous, transformative and freedom-loving leadership of President Abraham Lincoln which broke the back of the Slave Power with victory by the United States Army in the Civil War of 1861-1865. Prior, slave catchers policed the United States at will, operating under the color of law granted them by infamous Fugitive Slave Act passed in Congress on September 18, 1850.

The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 was met with even more impassioned criticism and resistance than the earlier measure. States like Vermont and Wisconsin passed new measures intended to bypass and even nullify the law, and abolitionists redoubled their efforts to assist runaways. The Underground Railroad reached its peak in the 1850s, with many enslaved people fleeing to Canada to escape U.S. jurisdiction.

Resistance also occasionally boiled over into riots and revolts. In 1851 a mob of antislavery activists rushed a Boston courthouse and forcibly liberated an escapee named Shadrach Minkins from federal custody. Similar rescues were later made in New York, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.

The ghost of the Fugitive Slave Act continues to haunt every police department in the United States insofar as systemic racial prejudice makes a mockery of the United States Constitution. The uprising which swept the nation after the murder of George Floyd was made up of Americans of all colors. Such resistance to tyranny is in the noble tradition of the American abolitionists who fought the slave catchers operating under the cover of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850. Let no one dare reduce these acts of resistance to mere criminal conduct or “riot.”  This shameful condemnation of those who resist the tyranny of the new Slave Power, to being that of a “mob” or “rioters” forget American history.

Who was the first to fall for American freedom and independence? Crispus Attucks, an African American, was the first to give his life for American liberty when he was shot by British troops on March 5, 1777, at the Boston Massacre. He is hailed as a hero today. So too are all those who rise in defiance against a murderous system of policing of the kind that took the life of George Floyd. Unless and until law enforcement in the United States eradicates racial and class prejudice from its ranks, and abides by the United States Constitution, we shall not know peace.  The police are supposed to be servants of the people, not masters who use our tax dollars to oppress and kill us at will in the streets, or in our beds, as they did when they assassinated Black activist Fred Hampton in Chicago on December 4, 1969.

Are we really living in a constitutional democracy where rule of law prevails? Such wanton taking of the lives of our people is a violation of the US Constitution. The 14th Amendment to the Constitution was ratified on July 9, 1868, and granted citizenship to “all persons born or naturalized in the United States,” which included former slaves recently freed. In addition, it forbids states from denying any person “life, liberty or property, without due process of law” or to “deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” By explicitly mentioning the role of the states, the 14th Amendment greatly expanded the protection of civil rights to all Americans.  Today, African Americans routinely have their rights violated by random acts of stop and frisk, false imprisonment, brutal beatings inflicted by so-called law enforcement, and murders such as that of George Floyd.

The United States is at a critical juncture. This must be a period of reset.  The very heavens are calling on us to change our craven ways. We either move toward a society of empathy, love, and kindness one towards another or fall upon each other as wolves.

Look at the situation for what it is:

  • A nation humbled by the COVID 19 pandemic
  • An economy that has imploded, throwing millions unto the unemployment lines
  • A growing prison industrial complex
  • The daily hazards of deadly weather patterns courtesy of global warming
  • A military-industry complex warned of by President Dwight Eisenhower that sucks up a disproportionate share of the national wealth
  • A policing- system that treats Black, Brown, and poor Americans like the enemy
  • A socio-economic system where a tiny elite controls the overwhelming wealth of the nation
  • A political system which rewards the candidates who can raise the most money
  • An economic system which does not afford the working man and woman a living wage
  • A society which spends more on war than public health and is without a national health insurance system

Is such a divided and unjust society sustainable? Reasoned judgment suggests that it is not. Change must come, and quickly. The fall of greater nations and empires have been hastened by the callous inattention to justice and right. Let us not forget the history of Rome and other such empires.

Where shall it end? We know not. But of this I am sure: We have an opportunity to ensure it ends well for our beloved country. It was abolitionist Frederick Douglas who reminded us, “Power concedes nothing without a demand.” These are the demands of what I call The George Floyd Declaration:

  1. Ban the boot on the necks of citizens. No police officer must lay his boot or knee on the throat of any human being. Such conduct constitutes cruel and unusual punishment.
  2. Ban no-knock warrants. No police officer must enter the home of anyone without first identifying themselves as law enforcement. “No-knock” warrants are hallmarks of tyrannical government and are overwhelmingly used against Black, Brown, and poor people resulting in the murder of citizens by so-called law enforcement in their homes.
  3. Ban the militarization of policing in the United States. The civilian police services have adopted a war footing against the American people, and many of our communities are treated as enemy territory with our people preyed upon by those sworn to protect us. It is anti-democratic and symbolic of a tyrannical nation for armored cars and civilian policemen, garbed as if for war, to patrol our streets. Such creates a culture of “us versus them” and is sure to lead to resistance and perpetual conflict between the citizenry and those sworn to “protect and serve.”
  4. Convene a national constitutional convention to address those policies that protect the rights of the American citizens in the face of creeping tyranny in the guise of law enforcement.

The united resistance to tyranny which erupted in reaction to the murder of George Floyd by Black, Brown, White, Native American and Asian American is in the best spirit of the American constitution and those who fought slavery.  That unity of purpose to protect and promote our liberties must be saluted.  In that cause, we must be united as it is the only way to save the union.  We cannot proceed as one nation under the prevailing conditions which disunite us.

On June 16, 1858, Abraham Lincoln famously said, “A house divided against itself, cannot stand.” Lincoln was stating that the United States would either become a slave state or a nation of free men and women. To that end Abraham Lincoln led us to a better dispensation by abolishing slavery. But it took the bloody Civil War to accomplish that end, and Lincoln’slife was sacrificed on that altar of freedom.  Will we respect Lincoln’s sacrifice and act wisely and nobly to save the union for which he gave his life?

On April 4, 1968, upon receiving news of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Senator Robert Kennedy gave what is arguably one of the best speeches in American history. In that speech, he called us to our better selves in stating,

Martin Luther King dedicated his life to love and to justice between fellow human beings. He died in the cause of that effort. In this difficult day, in this difficult time for the United States, it’s perhaps well to ask what kind of a nation we are and what direction we want to move in… …What we need in the United States is not division; what we need in the United States is not hatred; what we need in the United States is not violence and lawlessness, but is love, and wisdom, and compassion toward one another; and a feeling of justice toward those who still suffer within our country, whether they be white or whether they be black.

So, in this moment, let us remember Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and the words of Robert Kennedy.

Where we do not heed the sacrifice of our greats who died in freedom’s cause, to include George Floyd and the thousands of others like him, we would have abdicated our civic and patriotic duty. Indeed, in this moment we must remember all our greats who dedicated their lives to a more perfect union which consolidates, rather diminishes our liberty. It was the celebrated American patriot Patrick Henry who said on March 23, 1775, at St. John’s Church in Virginia who said, “Give me liberty, or give me death!” We remember Patrick Henry, as well.

The decision is in the hands of “We the People;” the power of the people is stronger than the people in power.

Georgetown University Law Center-Class of 1991

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28 Comments

  1. Francisco Etienne-Dods Telemaque
    June 9, 2020

    “There is a part in the American constitution where is speaks of ones inalienable rights!” (Francisco E. Telemaque).

    Elizabeth, you said you would like to see what I have to say on this subject matter; so be informed that the American constitution was written in a way to give and protect the rights of every human under the sun in the United of America.
    In the constitution it is termed: “inalienable rights.”
    Bigotry and hate took precedence over the rights of minorities!

    Inalienable rights entails the: Freedoms that each individual in the United States have which cannot be transferred to another person or surrendered except by the individual having those rights.

    Fundamental rights of Blacks within the United States.
    Nevertheless; the heart (sprite of the majority of people are satanic; they are  control by the devil; and so it is more than difficult for such people to see others as humans.

    The man who murdered Floyd did not see him as human; rather an object…

  2. Francisco Etienne-Dods Telemaque
    June 4, 2020

    “The murder of George Floyd and the terrorizing of innocent African Americans, and other people of color, makes a mockery of the American Declaration of Independence. ”
    I do not totally agree with everything in quotation; I am fully aware that I will be criticize for saying, there is a part in the American constitution where is speaks of ones inalienable rights!”
    The concept of inalienable rights originates from the concept of natural rights formulated by the classical liberals of the 18th and 19th centuries. It played important roles in the justifications for both the French and American Revolutions. 17th-century philosopher John Locke discussed natural rights in his work, and identified them as being “life, liberty, and estate (or property)”.
    The 1776 United States Declaration of Independence, written by Thomas Jefferson, famously asserts:”
    This right was intended for every human who sets foot in the United States; unfortunately racism, bigotry, and all sorts of…

  3. J.John-Charles
    June 2, 2020

    This piece is informative, and it is good to be reminded where we came from.But I would like Mr.Christian to use the same platform,and use himself as an example.
    Look I am a black man from little Dominica and if I am a success in the U.S.you too can.Use DNO and encourage especially the young ones,to stay far from bad companions,from alcohol and drugs,get an education,if possible get married and raise a family and be an example to your children.America is a land of opportunity and success.It is good to know the the history of your ancestors 200 yrs ago.But this knowledge should not define your present and future.
    Tell them, “I Christian made it,and you can,just stay focused.”
    I John-Charles know there is a political party in the U.S.who want blacks to see themselves as victims and technically encouraging them to depend on government..(Food Stamps).A black lady said “Blacks don’t need reparation,they need LIBERATION from the democratic party.
    Sorry 4 my grammar

    • Francisco Etienne-Dods Telemaque
      June 9, 2020

      “I John-Charles know there is a political party in the U.S.who want blacks to see themselves as victims and technically encouraging them to depend on government..(Food Stamps). “(John Charles).
      I do not wish it to appear that I am picking at you; nevertheless you seems to put yourself out of the way to make erroneous  statements; or fallacy’s which are outright lies!
      There are no political party in the continental United States which encourages black people to be dependent on food stamps.
      You should be ashamed; to make such a stupid statement! For your information boy; there are more poor white people on the Welfare system (collecting welfare, and food stamps) in this country than Blacks; Hispanics, and every other ethnic group in America.Let me show you the lie in your comment.
      There are two major political parties here: “the Republican, and the Democratic party; as far as I know each party has created laws “from Welfare to work.” In recent years Bill Clinton ensured that…

    • Francisco Etienne-Dods Telemaque
      June 9, 2020

      How long do people stay on food stamps?Approximately 145,000 Washington, D.C., residents receive food stamps. That’s nearly 22% of the district’s total population. How long do most people participate in the program?

      About 31% of people receiving any kind of public assistance stay in the program for a year or less; 43% receive benefits between 3 to 4 years.

      Able-body food stamps recipients can only collect food stamps for three months in a three year period unless they get into a job or job training!

      While you run your mouth off nobody live on Welfare forever in America okay; there is also SS; and SSI; so unless you know what you quacking about try to be better informed than embarrass yourself as if you know; and not knowing squat!

      Plenty of you leave Dominica come here overstay hoping to collect, and live off food stamps; sorry it does not work that way, its not that simple!

      Remember also there are equally academically educated blacks is America as other ethnicity.

  4. Ibo France
    June 1, 2020

    @Gary
    You are most definitely …….., functionally unlettered and truly suffer from cognitive deficiency. Before you excoriate others, work on your atrocious grammar.
    Example: 1) YOU- “The words echoed in this commentary has been said…” (have not has)
    2)YOU- “…actions speaks louder than words.” (actions speak not speaks)
    3)YOU- “You are accusing DNO to be unbiased…” What a ridiculous statement❗ Truly laughable! The word ‘accuse’ has a negative connotation. “Unbiased” is something laudable.

    Gary, you need help, lots of it. All you do, on this forum, is to read people’s comments then castigate those said people if you perceive them to be anti-government. We are not anti-government, we are anti-wrong.

    Your comprehension skills are rather poor. Anyone with a modicum of common sense, knows I was referring to DNO and not the author when I mentioned giving a voice to the dispossessed and marginalized. Only a Hard Head Harry would have interpreted it the way you…

    • Weighing Every Word
      June 2, 2020

      Ibo / Igbo France, your self aggrandizement and literacy shaming know no bounds. You continue to exude a despicable sense of extreme elitism while castiigating and belittling those whom you view as illiterate and less than you.

      Your repeated assailment of fellow posters and continued vitriol hints of a very lonely and pathetic individual who derives pleasure in puffing himself up while needlessly tearing down others.

      My advice is that you put some of your abundant energy and free time to good use by helping to encourage and build up those who may be less fortunate than you.

      Chill and pick your battles more wisely!!!

    • Gary
      June 2, 2020

      The words you use to describe me are meaningless., it’s not who I’m. It shows once again how erroneous you are with your perceptions and assumptions, it’s what you do with all your comments, believing that your words and grammar can mask your ineptitude to think. I have always told you, it is a pity you do not THINK as well as you write. You such a joker, You made the statement, “I want to thank you for giving the dispossessed and the marginalized a voice.” I told you it is a pitiful statement, it has nothing to do whether you were referring to DNO and not the author, it has all to do with you making a pitiful and ludicrous statement, Wow, am I the one who has poor comprehension skills.

      When you say, “We are not anti-government, we are anti-wrong.” I wonder if you understand the difference between fiction and reality, here is a tip, you got the treat of a fiction writer, you are just an awful political operative.

      • Batibou River
        June 3, 2020

        Mary, get out of here! You are one of Skerrits Chief spin doctors and false prophets. Nothing you say is relevant to the citizens of our country in any shape or form. You are as corrupt as your Master. You are also a major Hypocrite!

    • Francisco Etienne-Dods Telemaque
      June 11, 2020

      I told you all a long time ago, Gary is neither a very intelligent; nor a scholastically educated person you know!
      He do what I term ‘shot-gun for words; when he stumbles on some word that he believe means something he indulges in the word, and in most cases he does not know when he is using them wrong or out of context.

      Everything is wrong with anyone who seeks to expose corruption and thievery in the country.

      It is very unfortunate that such people like Gary who finds fault in everyone who speak the truth about Roosevelt and his corrupted behavior and practices is at fault.

      For as long as you live you will never read where Gary question the missing $1.2 Billion Dollars missing from the government …….

      Let’s remind Gary that $1.2 million translated in words; we are talking about “one billion, two hundred million dollars.

      If my mathematics serves me correctly; a billion dollars is ten hundred million dollars.

  5. Sense out of nonsense
    June 1, 2020

    Why is no one talking about the other two cops – one arab and one latino? Or the asian cop who kept the crowd at bay.
    Why is it that those people capturing the video were restricted to that specific location so they could only record the white cop when all three of them were restraining the man?
    Why is this narrative of innocent black men being pushed when Floyd was being arrested for committing fraud? Why was he resisting arrest?
    Why does his autopsy show no sign of asphyxiation and possible traces of drugs?
    Why is no one talking about the fact that both Floyd and Chauvin worked at the same place for over a year and possibly knew each other?
    Why do the people recording the video know and call the asian officer by name?
    Why does no one ever talk about the fact that more white people are killed by police officers despite the fact that blacks are more likely to interact with police because they commit more crime?
    Why do we never hear about any of those cases?
    WHY?

  6. Gary
    June 1, 2020

    What is so enlightening and thought provoking about this commentary. The words echoed in this commentary has been said countless of times, by many people, in different ways, it’s nothing new under Sun, all recycle rhetoric. When you say, “I want to thank you for giving the dispossessed and the marginalized a voice.” such a pitiful statement. Do you really think such commentary is giving a voice to people who are dispossessed and marginalized. Have you ever heard the saying, “words are cheap.” Then there is also the saying “actions speaks louder than words.” Sometimes I wonder if you should be taken seriously, LOL.

    When you question DNO about failing to do Editorials I wonder if you really understand what Editorials are, I feel sorry for your ignorance. You are accusing DNO to be unbiased and give readership the hard, cold facts on pertinent issues.,LOL. Do you practice what you preach with the comments you make, so long.

  7. Know Better Do Better
    May 31, 2020

    As much as I applaud the non-compliant and constructive protest of Mr. Christian and his colleagues, it would be a great travesty if I remained silent on a statement in this article which is nothing less than patently false.

    “On June 16, 1858, Abraham Lincoln famously said, “A house divided against itself, cannot stand.” Lincoln was stating that the United States would either become a slave state or a nation of free men and women. To that end Abraham Lincoln led us to a better dispensation by abolishing slavery. But it took the bloody Civil War to accomplish that end, and Lincoln’s life was sacrificed on that altar of freedom. Will we respect Lincoln’s sacrifice and act wisely and nobly to save the union for which he gave his life?”

    This is at best a glossy, revisionist view of history as Abraham Lincoln’s emancipation proclamation was not driven by compassion for liberty but by a matter of convenience to allow free slaves to bolster the forces of the Union in the Civil War.

  8. Ibo France
    May 31, 2020

    This is an enlightening and thought provoking commentary.

    DNO, I want to thank you for giving the dispossessed and the marginalized a voice. However, this has me perplexed. How can a popular news outlet like yours fail to do editorials? Don’t you feel you have a moral obligation to the country to do so? Why just repeat and regurgitate precisely what is said by dishonest politicians who have a clear track record of blatant fabrications? Are you afraid of the repercussions for telling the truth? Cowards die many times.
    Be unbiased but give your readership the hard, cold facts on pertinent issues, especially on national issues that have or could have a profound impact on ,the country.

  9. Debbie Brown
    May 31, 2020

    I just finished your very informative article. As a Canadian citizen residing permanently in the U.S., I find it’s very good to see the world from different perspectives. I applaud your championship of human rights; however, conditions are not quite so dire here – the officer who committed this murder has been charged with murder. All Americans are horrified ny his actions. I believe every society needs great improvement, with removal of those in power by influence of the monied classes.

    That said, I respectfully request that you review events of last week involving members of the Dominican Police. You can view a video posted by my daughter, which shows her being assaulted by the superintendent in his attempt to arrest her for no apparent reason other than her association with Steven Joseph. Thank you in advance for reading my comments. I hope Steven doesn’t suffer a similar fate to that gentleman in Minneapolis.

    ADMIN: You can contact us at [email protected] where we can discuss in more detail.

    • LaneMaide
      June 3, 2020

      Well, well, well there we go. All you have plenty to say about the American police doing injustice to one of ‘your brother’. Strangely enough 90% of Dominicans have nothing to say when the dictators police force treat one of your ‘brothers’ unjustly and inhumane. What’s the difference here?

  10. familyislandlink
    May 31, 2020

    Gabriel, well said! The troubles in America might not be resolved in our lifetime but what we have seen happening the past week, hopefully we never see again!
    That would be wishful thinking but every bit of input to change the way people think or react will make a difference!

  11. MR DOMINICA
    May 31, 2020

    This is well stated and need to be an education for all white ,black, red and all . Anyone who saw the policeman foot or knee on that man’s neck must agree this was cold blooded murder but the burning of private property and looting of businesses was uncalled for and this was no different from what happened in Dominica after the hurricane where most stores were looted , attempts were made to remove wooden shutters from my home in Wesley . Living in the U S A reminds me of an advise one teacher gave us in the late fifties ” get out of the slavery mentality this is rampant in the black community .one example someone ask me about Dominica I spoke of elections coming up the response was look out the whites are coming . Then we got to a jewish area where she commented look at them they came here to buy up the area

  12. May 31, 2020

    I would like read what Telemaque has to say on that piece; he, who is always boasting about the USA (America). I have read him saying ”we” when speaking about that country as if he was born there. And Oh! “I will die three times in America instead of returning to Dominica”

    The United State of America, as they call it, is in prophecy which must be fulfilled. For those who have left their homeland and claiming that Nation as their own, I wonder where they are going to run to when the hottest fire starts burning. The signs are everywhere, that it will happen

  13. May 31, 2020

    But Gab, what about the young man from Portsmouth who must have been pleading with Dominican police ” I can’t breathe ” when he was taken into custody and ended up being a DEAD MAN.
    What has become of that?
    That’s why I admonished the Dominican elite for being so hypocritical.
    Stop saying ” Ailah, poor George Floyd” and it has happened and still happening in DA.

    • Debbie Brown
      June 1, 2020

      Very good point! Dominica’s police force are not immune to criticism. They go by their own rules.

    • Sense out of nonsense
      June 2, 2020

      It’s a police problem. not a race problem. but most people are not intelligent enough to see that.

  14. Francisco Etienne-Dods Telemaque
    May 31, 2020

    Who was the first to fall for American freedom and independence? Crispus Attucks, an African American, was the first to give his life for American liberty when he was shot by British troops on March 5, 1777, at the Boston Massacre.

    Yes, but remember him in the following also; do a profile on him you will appreciate his efforts trying to free thousand of slaves!

    Post-: Denmark Vesey (born Telemaque)
    cianapullen.blogspot.com/2014/02/denmark-vesey-born-telemaque.html

    Black Charlestonian Denmark Vesey (born Telemaque) was hanged at dawn in 1822, accused of organizing and very nearly executing what would have been the largest slave revolt in US history.

    His story is still controversial today, and I’ve chosen him as my latest subject for a portrait drawing for Black History Month:

    Note: where history claimed he suffered epilepsy; we his relatives know he faked it; hence he returned on the ship to continue to serve as the captain cabin boy; until he won money in a lottery;…

    • June 1, 2020

      Telemaque, you did the same thing here, as with the “woman of Dominican heritage, who is a district attorney in the United States, was selected to prosecute the two white men arrested in the murder of an African American jogger in February of this year”–according to DNO

      There, you went on and on about your cousin Louis Robinson, like saying, what is the big deal about that district attorney?

      Now you come up with a “Telemque” person to write all of that stuff about him, how does it exemplify what Mr. Christian wrote?

      Mr. Christian is speaking about the present situation with blacks and the police in the USA. The video of George Floyd is all over social media, to hear him pleading with that policeman “to get off his neck” “I can’t breathe” “Mamma help me please”. This is stomach-churning, but he pleaded right to his death.

      I was hoping you say something worthwhile to this article, but to no avail–good Lord

      • Francisco Etienne-Dods Telemaque
        June 3, 2020

        Miss Elizabeth you (doh have any family you can talk about eh)!Hahahahahahahahahahahah!

        But I the kid have plenty of family even me Almost Nearly Cousin the notorious th… Roosevelt Skerrit.

        All your family disown, and disinherited you eh; so how can you be jealous me talking and complementing Lois children, and my famous relative who’s history are taught us colleges and Universities in America. 

        If you go to North Carolina, in front of a university at the gate you will find a statue of Vessy Denmark standing at the gate.

        The guy Christian speaks of is not recognize in history as the great Vessy Denmark Telemaque.

        He died in a riot in the Boston Tea Party; read the history of my relative, you will find he lead, he was a leader, and organizer; he was a preacher; a peaceful man follower of Jesus; when they attack his church and congregation; it upset him hence turn radical, and began destroying the salve powers of the day.

        Tea party a picnic !

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