For much of its seven-year existence, the Black Lives Matter movement has been seen by many Americans as a divisive, even radical force. Its very name enraged its foes, who countered with the slogans āBlue Lives Matterā and āAll Lives Matter."
Times have changed ā dramatically so ā as evidenced during the wave of protests sparked by George Floydās death at the hands of Minneapolis police. Black Lives Matter has gone mainstream ā and black activists are carefully assessing how they should respond.
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A few examples of the changed landscape:
Sen. Mitt Romney, a Republican stalwart, joined a Black Lives Matter march. Some NASCAR drivers, whose fan base includes legions of conservative whites, embraced the phrase. So did NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell. The mayor of Washington ordered the words painted in large letters on a street near the White House. Now, Black Lives Matter Plaza turns up in driving directions from Google Maps.
Like many black activists, Sakira Cook is pleased by such developments but also cautious. She and others worry that businesses and politicians will hijack the slogan without any real commitment to doing the hard work needed to fight racism.
āBlack Lives Matter is not just a rallying cry,ā said Cook, director of the Justice Reform Program at the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.
āIt actually means you have to start to interrogate the systemic racism and inequalities that exist in our society and help to dismantle them. You must make sure youāre not co-opting this for your own purposes.ā
The Black Lives Matter movement emerged amid anger over the acquittal of George Zimmerman, the Florida man who shot and killed 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in 2012.
As a slogan, āBlack lives matterā soon became as widely heard at protests as āNo justice, no peace.ā
Nationally, the phrase was praised for its clarity and attacked as strident and hostile toward police. But support grew as the list of slain black people got longer: Eric Garner, Michael Brown, Freddie Gray, Walter Scott, Alton Sterling, Philando Castile.
āWhen we started Black Lives Matter, it was really to have a larger conversation around this country about its relationship to black people,ā said Patrisse Cullors, one of three black women who founded the Black Lives Matter Global Network, with chapters throughout the U.S. and in Britain and Canada. āWhat keeps happening, time and time again, is weāre witnessing black people die on camera, and there is little to no accountability.ā
While large donations poured into the new, loose-knit group of black-led grassroots organizations, prominent figures within the movement were subjected to years of rebukes and threats from police, their unions and elected officials.
Cullors said she and others were dismissed as too militant to be taken seriously by many of the individuals and corporations in the mainstream that now embrace their message.
In 2018, news reports revealed that the FBIās counterterrorism division had begun tracking anti-police threats from black activists in the wake of deadly ambushes on police officers in New York, Texas and Louisiana. Many Black Lives Matter activists feared it was a repeat of the Cointelpro era, when the FBI illegally conducted surveillance and sabotage against civil rights groups and other organizations suspected of having links to the Communist Party in the 1950s and '60s.
Today, the Black Lives Matter movement boasts a following of millions across social media platforms. A coalition known as the Movement for Black Lives, formed in 2014, now includes more than 150 affiliate organizations that have organized around such causes as defunding police departments and reinvesting in struggling black communities.
Its agenda focuses heavily on overhauling police training, the use of force and the punishment of rogue officers. The movement is also pressing to erase economic inequality and disparities in education and health care.
āThere are hundreds of thousands of black visionaries around the world that are doing the work that people keep saying, āOh, thatās never going to happen. ... Not in this lifetime,āā Cullors said. āAnd look what happened. Something gets unlocked, and because weāve already laid the seeds, weāve already had the conversations, the people doing the work get to bear the fruit.ā
Although the current surge of support for the movement is vindicating, itās not sufficient to realize the original vision, Cullors said.
Malik Shabazz, president of Black Lawyers for Justice, praised āBlack lives matterā as āone of the most brilliant and creative phrases of our generation,ā one that has won acceptance well beyond the movement.
āThereās a danger it will become co-opted and mainstreamed,ā he said. āBut right now, anyone in our struggle would be happy more people are using it.ā
Shabazz said it is important for black people to remain at the forefront of the movement, even as more Americans of other races voice support.
āItās up to us that we donāt get happy with a couple of weeks of protest and demonstrations,ā he said. āThis is a good start. We just have to dig in and stay for the long haul. ā
Khalilah Brown-Dean, a political science professor at Quinnipiac University who has written about inequality and criminal justice reform, said uttering the slogan is easy. What comes next matters more.
āItās much more important for public officials and policymakers to inculcate that belief into the very fabric of how they lead and govern,ā she said. āPainting a street, marching in a rally, or wearing kente cloth are only useful if these symbolic acts translate into substantive action.ā
The counter-slogans that emerged in 2014-15 ā "Blue Lives Matter" and āAll Lives Matterā ā have surfaced only sporadically in the past two weeks. Plans for a Blue Lives Matter rally in Las Vegas were scrapped after the cityās police department refused to help promote it.
āAll Lives Matter,ā from the start, angered some black activists who said it minimized the entrenched racism faced by black people.
Last week, longtime Sacramento Kings TV broadcaster Grant Napear resigned after tweeting āALL LIVES MATTERā when asked his opinion on the Black Lives Matter movement. On Saturday, the top editor of The Philadelphia Inquirer resigned amid a furor over the headline āBuildings Matter, Too."