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eridani

(51,907 posts)
Sun Mar 8, 2015, 09:32 AM Mar 2015

A white woman finds out what a "jump car" is

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2015/03/04/1368574/-I-dodged-the-jump-car

We were not far from her apartment when we passed a car that had just been stopped by the police. I saw the usual flashing lights and three or four blue-uniformed cops, pulling the driver, an African-American man, out of the car. But I was concentrating on driving around the commotion on the narrow street and didn't see much more than that.

"It's the jump boys," my friend said. She spotted the female passenger, also African American, getting out of the car with a cigarette in her hand. "Oh, you're pregnant and you're still holding a blunt," she said. "I hope you're not too far along, because if you are, you're having your baby in jail."

She turned to me and said, "that was the jump car. I know it from when I lived here before. They followed us for several blocks before you stopped to unload."

"What? What's a jump car?" She explained that our neighborhood is targeted for priority policing, which includes unmarked cars patrolling the streets, looking for a reason to stop and search cars and arrest people.

"I guess I'm glad I didn't make an illegal u-turn," I said, knowing the only reason I didn't was that the street was a little too narrow and there was a car behind me. "Would they have stopped us if you had been driving?

She said that the police probably ran the plates on the SUV -- "Cars like yours, in this color, are often stolen," she said. When it wasn't listed as stolen, and when neither of the owners (my husband or I) had any warrants for unpaid traffic tickets (or anything more serious), and when I got out of the car and they saw I was an older white woman, they passed us by.

Half an hour later, they found someone else to jump out and arrest.

I know about the economic divide between middle class and poor. I have fought against the racial divide between black and white most of my life. But I didn't realize what a divide there is between people like me who can expect to be able to drive down the street, minding their own business and not be bothered, and people like my friend, who can't.
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A white woman finds out what a "jump car" is (Original Post) eridani Mar 2015 OP
Most people never think of this. daleanime Mar 2015 #1
This type of thing is what candidates for President need to focus on BumRushDaShow Mar 2015 #2
I am glad that this issue has come to light nationally, tho sad about the reason. dixiegrrrrl Mar 2015 #4
Message auto-removed Name removed Mar 2015 #3

BumRushDaShow

(128,905 posts)
2. This type of thing is what candidates for President need to focus on
Sun Mar 8, 2015, 10:09 AM
Mar 2015

not nebulous "TPP!!!11!!!11" and "Wall Street bankster". It is NOT solely "economic" as some will keep insisting. The DOJ Ferguson report just released, established that this goes on and it is just a microcosm situation that is isolated to a small Midwestern town, but is a characteristic both in the smallest towns and the largest urban areas, in every state of the union. Someone "fits the description" and that someone is rarely "white" (or "white-looking&quot .

Just the ability to stand, walk, drive, shop, and vote without being targeted, followed, denied access, harassed, arrested beaten, or even killed without cause except for race, ethnicity, or orientation.

Having been on this planet for 50+ years, to this day, I am always on guard EVERY SINGLE TIME I walk in a store (no matter what type) and open my pocketbook to pull out a shopping list or wallet due to a fear of being "profiled" as a potential shoplifter. I'm never someone simply taking out money to buy something, but am always considered suspect to stealing, just because of what I look like.

dixiegrrrrl

(60,010 posts)
4. I am glad that this issue has come to light nationally, tho sad about the reason.
Sun Mar 8, 2015, 11:19 AM
Mar 2015

And have to admit that the racist attitude towards Pres. Obama has shocked me.
I really did not realize it was at such a high level that elected Congresspeople would say and do the things they have.

Response to eridani (Original post)

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