Concerned Citizen, Witness, or Snitch?
Providing Context for the Stop-snitching Movement
Embed:
The media play an integral role in the way the world perceives America, especially young black men. It's been said, if you say something enough times, it will become true. Therefore, it is important to put the media on notice when they start to propagate negative stereotypes. Case in point, Law & Order: CI. I'm a big fan of the show, but I can't let a recent episode go by without registering my outrage and sounding an alarm before mainstream media jumps on the bandwagon of the "stop-snitching" craze, spinning it to portray the black community in a negative light.
The episode, "Flipped," was about a rapper who was killed leaving a radio station. There were several witnesses to the murder. All of the predominantly black characters were afraid of being labeled a snitch and refused to cooperate with the police. Even the black police officer working for the gang unit sanctioned this "don't tell" manifesto. To add injury to insult, there were several young children - about 8 or 9-years-old - who continued to play as if nothing happened, despite the fact that the body of an assassinated snitch flew off the roof landing near their play area.
As a lifetime member of the beloved community, I doubt that there is one neighborhood in America so desensitized to murder that children would continue business as usual amid a dead body; certainly not a black neighborhood. I take offense that Law & Order would devote an entire episode to depicting the black community as a bunch of apathetic hedonists with questionable values, spooked by the thought of assisting the police in any way for fear that they would be labeled a snitch and assassinated.
It is true that snitches are detested in the black community. However, a person reporting criminal activity in their neighborhood is not a snitch. That would be a CONCERNED CITIZEN. Someone that gives an accurate account of a crime is called a WITNESS.

More by Edrea Davis
- Mychal Bell of the Jena Six, Sent Back to Jail for Prior Charge
- To Snitch or Not to Snitch: Urban Fiction "SnitchCraft" Used in Curriculum Guide at Yale National In...
- "Stomp the Yard" Star, Meagan Good, to Host Independent Black Film Festival Awards Show Airing on Co...
- "60 Minutes" Story on Snitching Reinforces the Need to Support the Black Press
You may also like...
- How to Become a U.S. Citizen
- Citizen Rising: Causing Peaceful Chaos T...
- On Being a Citizen Journalist
- How to Prepare to Witness an Execution
- Be the Perfect Witness: Describing a Sus...
- Child Witness Service Established in Aus...
- "Witness" Silently Hypnotic
- Witness Protection for State Trials: Sho...
- Robert Todd Lincoln: Witness to Three Pr...
- Book Review: Witness in Death by J. D. R...
Today's Most Commented On
Advertisment
Kat Rice Williams
Add a Comment
Posted on 10/05/2007 at 9:10:00 PM
Saba,Ink
Add a Comment
Posted on 03/13/2007 at 2:03:00 PM
Kendrah Roberts
Add a Comment
Posted on 03/10/2007 at 6:03:00 PM
Kendrah Roberts
Add a Comment
Posted on 03/10/2007 at 6:03:00 PM
T. M. Meacham
Add a Comment
Posted on 03/10/2007 at 11:03:00 AM