‘A Black Man’s Guide to Survival’ - Rule Number 1: Comply now, contest later.

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[h1]‘A Black Man’s Guide to Survival’[/h1][h4]Rule Number 1: Comply now, contest later.[/h4]
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When Eric Broyles was nine years old, recklessly riding a bike through his Hamilton, Ohio, neighborhood, he had a tense encounter with a police officer: he fell off his bike, sending it rolling into the street, nearly hitting a passing police car. In response, the officer chastised him, using a racial slur.

Broyles, now an attorney, wrote about the incident — one of two unpleasant police encounters that he details — in his new book, “Encounters With Police: A Black Man’s Guide to Survival.” “I was stunned,” he wrote. “I was so terrified because I did realize that I could have been run over and then I was mortified by the police officer’s racial slur.”

Those experiences, as well as the recent spate of high-profile police shootings, inspired Broyles — who co-authored the book with his friend, Adrian Jackson, a 25-year veteran of an Ohio police department — to provide African-American men a guide for handling their own interactions with police. Below, he reflects on recent shootings, the reasons why police encounters escalate, and why his book’s message, “comply now and contest later,” couldn’t be more relevant.

What made you want to write this book?

There were three incidents that motivated me to write the book. The Eric Garner and Michael Brown killings, and John Crawford, the young man who was shot [by police] in the Wal-Mart in Ohio. My college classmate is the family’s lawyer in the Crawford case, and by talking to him and hearing the frustration from the family and community, I wanted to put together some information to help young people, of color in particular.

The book is subtitled, “A Black Man’s Guide to Survival.” Why focus on men?

The tools in this book can be used by anyone, but it’s geared toward men of color, and the reasons why are obvious. I don’t think I need to list the names of all the black men that have died in confrontations with police recently.

With the release of the Sandra Bland video, there has been a lot of confusion about a police officer’s authority during a traffic stop. What are some of the things a police officer can and can’t order you to do?

It really depends on the nature of the stop. Police officers are entitled to give certain commands to create a safe environment for themselves. If they feel there is a threat of some sort by a person they pulled over, they have the right to make certain requests to reduce their risk of being harmed. In terms of telling her to put her cigarette out, the only justification would be if the officer thought it posed some sort of threat, like if she were to flick it in his eye.

What, if anything, could Sandra Bland have done differently during that traffic stop?

Because you don’t know what a police officer is doing at the time of the stop, whether they’re investigating a homicide or looking for a suspect whose description you fit. We suggest you err on the side of complying with police demands. I don’t know that I saw anything in her behavior that would raise the threat level to the officer. But as a general matter, citizens should comply with police requests. Even if the citizen is correct, they have a forum to address wrong behavior by police officers, and that’s through the complaint process or litigation. It’s certainly not something that you do at the time of the encounter.

Many people make it a point to know and express their rights when dealing with police. In the Bland tape, she tells the officer twice that he does not have the right to order her out of her car. Does familiarity with the law sometimes become a double-edged sword during police encounters?

I think that when [someone] knows his rights and encounters a police officer who is a true professional, I don’t think you’ll have any incident.

So would you say that knowing your rights helps more than hurts?

Yes. But I understand the frustration that African Americans, in particular, may feel at the notion that they have to subjugate their constitutional rights in order to survive a police encounter. But until we work through some of the cultural issues and training issues in police departments, my objective is to get people home safely. That’s why the theme is “comply now, contest later.” It’s not about leaving an encounter with police without your dignity in place.

Should police also be responsible for adjusting their behavior during these encounters?

It’s always the police department’s responsibility to act without bias, so I’m not giving a wink and a nod to bias or prejudicial behavior. I’m recognizing the reality that it’s going to take time to change that. It’s absolutely the police department and the police system’s responsibility to root out bias, racism, and profiling, 100 percent. But during the time it takes to root that out, over the next 10, 20, 50 years, how many lives are you willing to sacrifice?

You wrote about an incident in which you were pulled over and surrounded by several cops. Eventually you found out they were looking for a murder suspect with a similar vehicle. There was a communication disconnect throughout the incident.

I was a black male in a two-door silver coupe. The officers were looking for a murder suspect who was a black male in a silver two-door coupe, but I didn’t know that. So, if they would have told me that at the time of the encounter, I would have been upset but I would have understood.

Have you received feedback about the non-confrontational message of the book?

Some people take this as I’m asking them to be a coward or swallow their pride, and I tell them that it’s a false equivalency. This book is about teaching young people how to position themselves to fight this battle.

Have people expressed a desire for more confrontational methods of dealing with police?

Sure. But what do you get from trying to beat up a police officer? You have no bragging rights for beating up a police officer. There are two types of people who beat up a police officer: number one, the person’s dead. Or, number two, they’re talking about it in a prison yard.
 
Very very important read, there are some things like knowing your rights and how to imply them that could potentially be solutions.
 
If everyone just bends over and let cops harass them all day long it will never stop. Are the deaths necessary? absolutely not, but unfortunately  its events like these that really open peoples eyes and hopefully incite the change that we need.
 
I swear I thought about making a video similar to this. It seems like so many people try to struggle with the police, wrong move. That just gets them hype. When they get hype they ignore the law, but they are the law,so they're immune.
 
I swear I thought about making a video similar to this. It seems like so many people try to struggle with the police, wrong move. That just gets them hype. When they get hype they ignore the law, but they are the law,so they're immune.
yet somehow white folk who walk around w/i automatic weapons getting all "disorderly" get to live.

but what happens if youre black, fail to put your turn signal, and attempt to exercise your rights?
 
lmao.

so because someone is a minority they should remain subservient and pacify themselves to the aggressive oppressors?


shlould edit the article title to "how to tap dance and please massa"

You've got to be kidding. There's a big difference between complying with an officer, and shucking and jiving.

I'm glad I got off of Instagram.
 
You've got to be kidding. There's a big difference between complying with an officer, and shucking and jiving.

I'm glad I got off of Instagram.
what does instagram have to do with a clear racial prejudice and abuse of power that police exercise upon minorities, specifically black people?
 
Not sure im comfortable with this dude being the one to post it..
 
Very very important read, there are some things like knowing your rights and how to imply them that could potentially be solutions.
 
You've got to be kidding. There's a big difference between complying with an officer, and shucking and jiving.

I'm glad I got off of Instagram.
what does instagram have to do with a clear racial prejudice and abuse of power that police exercise upon minorities, specifically black people?
because instagram and social media in general is full of psuedo black revolutionists that get more excited by the drama of a situation/confrontation than actually navigating the racist political and social construct in the manner that will most effectively benefit the black community as a whole....
 
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lmao.

so because someone is a minority they should remain subservient and pacify themselves to the aggressive oppressors?


shlould edit the article title to "how to tap dance and please massa"

You've got to be kidding. There's a big difference between complying with an officer, and shucking and jiving.

I'm glad I got off of Instagram.

FOH. Police are unjustly treating us, proven time and time again, and yet our only recourse is to simply comply and be polite? Why do we have to alter our behavior on account of the bias that many officers have? What about Tamir Rice, who didn't even get a chance to comply with an officers order before he was shot? Or Leon Ford, who complied with officers until they illegally entered his vehicle? Or the COUNTLESS OTHER accounts of people of color across the nation where they were simply targeted for being black, assumed to be guilty, and treated as criminals despite being completely innocent?

You need a reality check. The problem isn't that black people need to be more cooperative -- many of us already are, and that doesn't stop us from getting shot. The problem is with the police. Stop blaming the victim when you should be pointing the finger at the agressor.
 
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The problem with blindly complying with cops who are violating your rights as an American is that often the forum (courts) to air out your grievances is tilted in their favor. This is especially true if you're black and are filing a valid complaint. There is often no justice, even when complying with their orders. Yes, you'll be alive. But at what point do we question just how alive we are if we have to go through life having to jump through hoops as to not piss off the oppressive master? What kind of existence is that?

The fact that something like this guide is actually a real thing is the most important issue that so many people (often white) conveniently overlook.
 
These SWS are basically saying hey if you keep your mouth shut and keep your hands folded we will let you sit at the kiddies table at the pizza party
 
Dude tried to get cute.

Can't deny the fact that this guy will always side w the cops.
 
The problem with blindly complying with cops who are violating your rights as an American is that often the forum (courts) to air out your grievances is tilted in their favor. This is especially true if you're black and are filing a valid complaint. There is often no justice, even when complying with their orders. Yes, you'll be alive. But at what point do we question just how alive we are if we have to go through life having to jump through hoops as to not piss off the oppressive master? What kind of existence is that?

The fact that something like this guide is actually a real thing is the most important issue that so many people (often white) conveniently overlook.
Accurate.
 
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The problem with blindly complying with cops who are violating your rights as an American is that often the forum (courts) to air out your grievances is tilted in their favor. This is especially true if you're black and are filing a valid complaint. There is often no justice, even when complying with their orders. Yes, you'll be alive. But at what point do we question just how alive we are if we have to go through life having to jump through hoops as to not piss off the oppressive master? What kind of existence is that?

The fact that something like this guide is actually a real thing is the most important issue that so many people (often white) conveniently overlook.
Accurate.

How I feel as well
 
you gotta pick your battles when dealing with the cops, especially for folks of color.

is it fair? hell no.

is it messed up when some cop on a power trip is going about things in a rude unnecessary manner when you did nothing wrong?  it sure is

with that being said, given the current setup, especially if you got kids or loved ones close to you or dependent on you, its best to just bite your tongue, swallow your pride, stroke that officers ego and make it home to see your loved ones safely.   i'm saying that because of the power dynamics. you can be completely right and they can be completely wrong but they got the power to manipulate the situation.    it's not being weak biting your tongue and swallowing your pride when its an unfair playing field.

personally the hell with corrupt, over aggressive cops, but in this day in age where "i fear for my life" can get them off, its better to play it safe. its not fair, it sucks, but knowing those power dynamics sometimes that's the option that should be considered.

make a complaint, write local congress, media, newspapers etc or whatever you feel will raise awareness after the incident 

now if you have something illegal on you or something of that right than in that case if they have no reason to stop you or search you, dispute it because you have nothing to lose. 
 
buy guns guys.
how is having a gun going to help you when it comes to the police 
laugh.gif


the black panthers provided an example of their usefullness 50 years ago.....

a good lawyer and a clean record > * when it comes to the justice system
 
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The problems with comply now, contest later are these:

1) If a cop is doing something illegal, depending on the action, it can be nipped in the bud by stating that you don't consent. Cops are trained to use manipulation to get around the rights that the innocent and guilty have. Theoretically, complying can be used against you when you take it to court. Internal affairs and the Blue Code already give police a cheat code (I call it the Pork Pass) as it is and by indulging a power trip, you likely kill your chances in court.

2) Compliance doesn't mean you'll be safe. As has been going on decades and more openly the past couple years, cops know that the Pork Pass afforded by the Blue Code will save them short of committing terrorism. Even animals and people who are not only innocent but were nowhere near the scene or don't even have any semblance to a known or possible suspect can be harassed, assaulted, and or killed because a cop is having a bad day or feels a certain way. Of course, we know what they'll do even when a guilty person is subdued and in custody.
 
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The problems with comply now, contest later are these:

1) If a cop is doing something illegal, depending on the action, it can be nipped in the bud by stating that you don't consent. Cops are trained to use manipulation to get around the rights that the innocent and guilty have. Theoretically, complying can be used against you when you take it to court. Internal affairs and the Blue Code already give police a cheat code (I call it the Pork Pass) as it is and by indulging a power trip, you likely kill your chances in court.

2) Compliance doesn't mean you'll be safe. As has been going on decades and more openly the past couple years, cops know that the Pork Pass afforded by the Blue Code will save them short of committing terrorism. Even animals and people who are not only innocent but were nowhere near the scene or have any semblance to a known suspect can be killed because a cop is having a bad day or feels a certain way. Of course, we know what they'll do even when a guilty person is subdued and in custody.

So what should a black man do?
 
A man no matter what skin color should not have to act differently or accordingly due to their skin color.


Color should be embraced. Color should not be an indication or measure of difference in fellow man
But I know yall don't want it that way.
 
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