On ringing doorbells while Black
April 18, 2023 Good evening, Meteor readers, I’ve started watching “Beef” on Netflix and let me tell you: I get it. Like, am I planning a fiery road rage incident that sparks an over-the-top rivalry with a complete stranger? No. But the way my fellow Houston drivers behave… I’m just saying, if you see me on the news, just pretend you never read this. In today’s newsletter, we also look at the shooting of Missouri teenager Ralph Yarl and the way Black people are viewed as threats, even when they’re bleeding out on a doorstep. And as a reminder, The Meteor has been nominated for the 27th Annual Webby Awards People’s Voice in both the News & Politics and Public Service & Activism categories. Voting closes this Thursday—let’s make this happen! Revving my engine, Bailey Wayne Hundl PHOTO CREDIT: FAITH SPOONMORE VIA GOFUNDME WHAT’S GOING ONKnocks at the door: Ralph Yarl is a 16-year-old Black boy. He plays bass clarinet as a section leader for his Kansas City high school band. And on April 13, after being sent to pick up his younger twin brothers, the teenager rang the doorbell at the wrong house and was shot in the head through a closed glass door by Andrew Lester, an 84-year-old white man. As you probably know by now, Yarl was supposed to pick up his brothers from 1100 NE 115th Terrace, but mistakenly went to Lester’s home at 1100 NE 115th Street—one block north. In a statement given to the police from the hospital, Yarl said he rang the doorbell; Lester opened the interior door, said, “Don’t come back around here,” and shot Yarl through the glass exterior door. Then, while Yarl was still on the ground, Lester came outside and shot him a second time in the arm. Thankfully, Yarl survived the attack, but he was left with a cracked skull, a traumatic brain injury, and an injured arm. In Lester’s police statement, he claimed to believe he was protecting himself from a physical confrontation with an intruder. And his neighbors may have seen Yarl the same way; according to a GoFundMe page made by Yarl’s aunt, the bleeding teenager had to go to three separate homes after being shot before someone finally agreed to help him. Lester currently faces two felony charges, as he should. And while Missouri does not have an explicit “stand your ground” law (like Florida did in the trial of George Zimmerman), it does have the “castle doctrine,” which allows for violent action to defend yourself in your home. As Kansas City attorney Kevin Jamison told The Washington Post, ringing a doorbell is not a legally justifiable threat of violence. It’s easy for non-Black people to hear about violence like this and view it as something both horrible and distant. But, as The Meteor’s Treasure Brooks points out, white liberals are not exempt from a culture that views Black people as “inherently intrusive.” The same anti-Black culture that drove Lester to fire his gun is “the same culture that throws out job applications with ‘black sounding names,’ the same culture that perceives Black students more deserving of expulsion, and the same culture that blocks Black owned businesses from receiving investment.” AND:
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