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HomeCommentaryChauvin Verdict: We Still Have A Long Way To Go

Chauvin Verdict: We Still Have A Long Way To Go

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Chauvin Verdict: We Still Have A Long Way To Go

By Luke Grayson

This is not justice. This is accountability. This is the bare minimum. This is the first step in a very long road to a system reform. George Floyd never should have been killed, especially not by someone who we are told at a young age is a safe person that we can always trust and ask for help, especially when we are scared, or in danger. George Floyd was scared before Derek Chauvin, J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas Lane, and Tou Thao even approached him. He knew he was in danger before he saw any of their faces.

From a young age little black boys are taught how to engage with the police. Keep your hands visible, don’t move suddenly or quickly, say everything you are doing, say “yes sir” and “no sir,” do everything they tell you to do, no matter how unfair and unjustified it may be.

I as a white person, benefit from this system, without even doing anything. I have never for a second thought that the color of my skin would be used as a weapon against me. I have never thought that I would be drug out of my car, put face down on the ground, with someone’s knee on my neck, while I’m left saying “I can’t breathe.” I have never had to think that going to the store, the park or my friend’s house, would result in my serious injury, wrongful arrest, or death. 

George Floyd should be home with his family now. His death should have never happened, the young girl who filmed it should have never had to know that she needed to pull out her phone and record this interaction with the police, full well knowing deep down that this was going to end the way that it did.

My Facebook feed is split between shock at the verdict, relief that someone was finally held accountable, and reminders that this is not over. Every time I see another murder at the hands of police, I am reminded of my 8-year-old foster brother and I being stopped on our way home from baseball practice. The cop asked me if I was OK and if my mother knew where I was and who I was with. I remember the fear plastered across my brother’s face as the cop, with his hand on his gun, asked us where we lived and questioned his answer when he said we lived together. It felt like forever to me, and I can only imagine how long the fear made the interaction drag on for my brother. We were eventually put in the car and drove home where the cop spoke to our guardian.

As an adult, I know that interaction could have ended like it did with Tamir Rice and Trayvon Martin, I could have just as easily watched my brother die on the sidewalk when we were just trying to go home for dinner.

I wish I could say I believe this verdict will 100% for certain change the system for the better, but I know the reality of this system. As I write this I see the news headlines saying that yet another kid, Ma’Kiah Bryant, a 15-yearold black girl, was killed by the police in Columbus, Ohio just moments before the guilty verdict was read. 

I can hope and pray for a better system, I can share articles, I can show up to protests and wish to say for certain that this will be over soon, but the reality is we still have a long way to go before we stop seeing black and brown bodies in the streets in the name of “public safety.” Knowing this reality, I won’t stop fighting for my friends and community until the system is changed and everyone is equally safe from this corrupt system.

Luke Grayson
Luke Grayson
Luke Grayson is a 20-something, disabled, queer and nonbinary trans person who has been in Spokane since 2012 and is an advocate for the LGBT and transgender communities, foster youth and those experiencing homelessness. Luke is also a slam (performance) poet and visual artist who experiments with acrylic paint, spray paint, graphite and other mediums, who created a spray paint mural at the Spokane County Fair in 2022. Luke doesn't currently know quite what faith-base they "belong in," but grew up in an evangelical church that they left when they moved to Spokane and has attended an open and affirming UCC church off and on for the last 8 years. Luke uses they/them and he/him pronouns.

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