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PLATFORM : Undoing Progress

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<i> EARL OFARI HUTCHINSON, author and publisher of a newsletter for African-Americans, commented on the controversy surrounding the song "Cop Killer" by rap artist Ice-T. He told The Times:</i>

From slavery through the civil-rights movement, African-Americans have always held the moral high ground in the battle against racism and injustice. The civil-rights movement won the respect and admiration of the world because it refused to advocate violence or express hate against whites. As a result, the movement successfully ended legal segregation in America and put the issue of equal opportunity at the forefront of the nation’s agenda.

But lyrics like “Cop Killer” unfortunately strip away some of the soil from that moral ground. It leaves many whites wondering if their sympathy and support for the African-American struggle still means anything. And it allows bigots to depict blacks as violence-prone racists.

Those who defend Ice-T’s lyrics as a genuine expression of black anger and pain need to ask themselves how those lyrics will play in the streets the next time there is a confrontation between nervous young blacks and nervous police officers.

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