Running for Your Life: After Ferguson

The morning after the non-indictment announcement (Nov. 25) in Ferguson, Mo., during a run along the ridge above the Vale of Cashmere in Prospect Park, I heard a staccato burst of machinery noise, immediately thinking that it must be related to some kind of racially motivated protest response to the announcement from Missouri that was coiled in rule of law while attempting to grind into pulp First Amendment expression in the form of press reports and social media opinion.

Rather, the machinery noise was arising from a squadron of leaf blowers – predominantly, if not all, blacks and Hispanics – who were working to clear the exterior grounds of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden.

It struck me that morning how far we have come from the Sixties. That protests have swung from the streets to social media platforms. That whites control the machinery of power; blacks, the machinery of servitude.

But, then, later that night, while dining at a Flatbush Avenue restaurant, I watched as hundreds of protesters, some carrying placards that read, Black Lives Matter, marched in the middle of the usually busy motorway at a fast pace, with some marchers coming to those of us who were cheering them on to come and join them.

It was before midnight when I started to walk in the direction of the protesters. Under the arches at Grand Army Plaza stood a small army of police; I counted a dozen 12-person vans. I came upon a second protest wannabe and encouraged him to join me in my search for the marchers. We walked a mile or more in what was ultimately a vain attempt to meet up with the Ferguson protest rovers. Two others of like mind joined us and I ended my day that started with a sense that we had come to a time in which street action – outside of Ferguson, Mo., itself, of course – was over being in a small protest march of my own making.

Next: Running for Your Life: Simply Write It Down