This weekend, a racist white man opened fire on a Jacksonville Dollar General, fatally wounding three people and then ultimately ending his life by turning the gun on himself.

Before opening fire on the unsuspecting Black people who were just living their lives before they were abruptly ended, the shooter, Ryan Christopher Palmeter, stopped by the campus of Edward Waters College, just a few minutes away, where he was immediately confronted by security and changed into tactical gear preparing to be a cowardice murderer. He drove two minutes down Kings Road to destroy innocent lives. As I type this, it is extremely hard not to be overwhelmed because I know exactly where that Dollar General is because I have driven back and forth down Kings Road more times than I can count. It is hard, even an entire state away, to not feel closer to it than comfort allows. While HBCUs like Edward Waters are in jeopardy of existing due to the despotic rule of Ronald DeSantis, the history DeSantis is attempting to erase will continue to repeat itself.

I wish I could be hurt by the novelty, but racist white people have always committed unprovoked acts of violence against Black people. Whether they had the absolute unbridled authority to do so or whether they were not under the law, it has never stopped. Since the FBI began tracking hate crimes in 1991, Black people have been the most frequent victims, but we are consistently gaslighted that it is a figment of the collective Black imagination when it is not. In fact, lynching did not become a federal offense until 2022. Yes, that 2022, the one that occurred last year.

While white people opine about Black-on-Black crime, they are much more silent about violence in their own communities and the violence that they perpetrate against others. The absence of intraracial crime, which is what Black-on-Black crime is, does not have an impact on hate crimes. Bubba is not going to stop hating Black people because the Black community, on the other side of town, has a low crime rate. In fact, Black people minding their business and living regular lives are clearly not immune to targeted violence. Black people grocery shopping does not provide immunity. Black people going to the dollar store does not provide immunity. Black people going to church does not provide immunity. These are not even the Black people of their most racist nightmares, either. In the Buffalo supermarket shooting, as well as the church shooting in South Carolina, most of the victims were elderly.

Targeting Black people has never needed a raison d’être. 

At a vigil for the victims, Ronald DeSantis, the governor of Florida, showed up and was rightfully and promptly heckled. His incitement of far-right ideologies and erasure of Black history makes it easy to view Black people as some sort of human residue, a figment, a living apparition, a nothingness beyond bones and brawn. It is easy to perpetrate crimes against individuals whom you don’t even consider to be humans, and DeSantis is partially responsible for the continuation of that narrative. 

So, while history books attempt to erase the oppression and targeted racism of the past, a new subset of racist garbage will gladly fill in the blanks. 

Kyla Jenée Lacey is an accomplished third-person bio composer. Her spoken word has garnered tens of millions of views, and has been showcased on Pop Sugar, Write About Now, Buzzfeed, Harper’s Bizarre, Diet Prada, featured on the Tamron Hall show, and Laura Ingraham from Fox News called her work, “Anti-racist propaganda.”. She has performed spoken word at over 300 colleges in over 40 states. Kyla has been a finalist in the largest regional poetry slam in the country, no less than five times, and was nominated as Campus Activities Magazine Female Performer of the Year. Her work has been acknowledged by several Grammy-winning artists. Her poetry has been viewed over 50 million times and even used on protest billboards in multiple countries. She has written for large publications such as The Huffington Post, BET.com, and the Root Magazine and is the author of "Hickory Dickory Dock, I Do Not Want Your C*ck!!!," a book of tongue-in-cheek poems, about patriarchy....for manchildren.

Comments are closed.

Exit mobile version