2020
July
07
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 07, 2020
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Fear. Anger. A sense of injustice. 

Albany, New York, officer Sadaka Kedar Kitonyi offers a deeply-felt perspective on the racial protests in America: a Black man in blue. 

About 13% of all U.S. police officers are Black. Officer Kitonyi has knelt with protesters and supports ending racial injustice, he says. But for the first time in his 12-year career he’s afraid to go to work. He’s been cursed, called racial slurs, and had an M80 tossed at him. He’s long been judged by his skin color, now he’s judged by his uniform.

I am not Derek Chauvin

I am not George Floyd

I  am ME

I am compassionate and I am caring ... so why do you hate me? – I’ve given the socks off my feet to a homeless drunk who had no shoes ...

Officer Kitonyi’s June 6 Facebook post, which he gave the Monitor permission to share, is a plea to be seen as a person, not a profile. Out of uniform, he’s experienced being forced by cops to lie on the sidewalk because he “fit a description.”  

I listen to rap music, I wear baggie jeans … and have tattoos all across my body ... But why do you profile and stereotype me?

It is a cry for nuance in a time of binary views, a voice for officers who operate with compassion and integrity. “I can’t walk away from being a Black man,” he said in a recent interview, “and I refuse to walk away from a job I have so much love and pride for.”

 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group/AP
Surfers gather their belongings after being asked to leave Half Moon Bay State Park July 3, 2020. California Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered the parking lots of state beaches to close for the Fourth of July weekend to help prevent the spread of the coronavirus.
Umer Asif
Kashmiri photojournalist Masrat Zahra, a month after she was booked by police, photographed in Srinagar, India, on May 20, 2020.

Difference-maker

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Kathleen Dolan poses in the children’s playroom, covered in murals she painted, at her nonprofit ArtisTree Community Arts Center, on June 8, 2020, in South Pomfret, Vermont. Her center offers classes in the arts for children and adults.

Books


The Monitor's View

dpa via AP
German Chancellor Angela Merkel speaks to the press in Berlin July 2, 2020. Germany took over the presidency of the EU July 1.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Steve Helber/AP
Crews lower the statue of Confederate Gen. J.E.B. Stuart in preparation for transport after removing it from its pedestal on Monument Avenue, Tuesday, July 7, 2020, in Richmond, Virginia. The statue is one of several that will be removed by the city as part of the Black Lives Matter reaction.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow. We’re working on a story about a meeting between the leaders of Mexico and the U.S.: What does each hope to gain?

In case you missed it: The Monitor’s Supreme Court reporter Henry Gass and multimedia reporter Jessica Mendoza, who led our “Looking past Roe” series, appeared on Reddit Tuesday for an “ask us anything” event about the court’s latest ruling on abortion. You can still see the discussion here

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2020
July
07
Tuesday
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