Posted on 05/19/2020 5:14:31 AM PDT by conservative98
Black runners make exhaustive mental checklists, are confronted by suspicious neighbors and fear for their lives when they go out to log miles.
We asked readers to share their experiences of running while black. Here is a selection of those submissions, led by an essay from Kurt Streeter, one of our writers. Responses have been edited for clarity and length.
SEATTLE Our jog was just beginning when my young son asked the question. Dad, today can we go through my favorite neighborhood?
During the pandemic, weve made a habit of running together in the early evening. We course down the middle of calm streets, exhausting ourselves as best we can. Its become our way to bond.
But now my jaw clenched. The neighborhood that has become his favorite route? I had to think fast. What should I say to him about how that place makes me feel?
How would I ever tell him about the killing of a black jogger in a corner of the country far from ours?
When will be the right time to explain to a 9-year-old the wariness that comes every time I lace my clunky green sneakers and pad through the streets in our almost entirely white Seattle community?
Im not a great runner; Im a 6-foot-2, 220-pound plodder who tends to wilt at Mile 4. But I get out there as much as I can, to ease the stress and to feel free.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
Sometimes its in the forefront of my mind gutting, angry, mournful as in the days after Ahmaud Arbery was chased and fatally shot. Sometimes its in the far corners, background noise, but still inescapable.
"When will be the right time to explain to a 9-year-old the wariness that comes every time I lace my clunky green sneakers and pad through the streets in our almost entirely white Seattle community?" @kurtstreeter writes. https://t.co/rnW8jAtEWs pic.twitter.com/6sk9eOk289— NYT Sports (@NYTSports) May 18, 2020
I would like to see an article on black joggers in Bill and Hillary Clinton’s hometown of Chappaqua.
The cops would get a call from half the houses the jogger ran by....
Some pigs are more equal than others.
Seattle may seem like the most racist place in the country. But, in reality, the whole USA is homicidally racist.
Where’s the three weeks running national coverage of this crime?
Tell him his father is cowardly racist man child seeking attention.
What a great article— Sean Lawlor Nelson (@HornedPoet) May 19, 2020
---------------------except for the part they left out about the black jogger rushing the man with the gun and trying to take his gun away.
From my own perspective, I find this really hard to believe. Unless those interviewed ran through severely racially prejudiced areas, which would be democrat controlled bot begin with.
If we lived in a city and a black guy ran past our home dressed in the garb runners typically wear, I’d think nothing of it, probably would not give it a good look.
Now there probably is some merit to the story. Statistically speaking, in some neighborhoods, there are thugs that shoot, steal, rape and sell dope that fit such a description. Our prisons are flooded with them. So if that type of a threat were nearby, I’d check out the person running too.
All that stress, and they still don't think not to break into homes while jogging?
This excerpt made me literally LOL.
Reads like a romance novel. Anyway, lol.
Really sad how quickly and conveniently that story has been dropped into a “memory hole.” As if it never even happened.
And this is in Seattle?!
Kurt Streeter covers sports at The Times. He primarily writes features and essays, and has a particular interest in stories related to race, gender and social justice. Prior to coming to The Times in 2017, he was a senior writer for ESPN. He also covered the inner city for the Baltimore Sun and spent 15 years at the Los Angeles Times, where he wrote about everything from crime to transportation to religion, and also was a columnist. A former athlete, in younger days Streeter played college tennis at California Berkeley and was world ranked by the ATP Tour for three years. He lives on the west coast
https://www.nytimes.com/by/kurt-streeter
What about the Central Park jogger? She wasn't black. Turned out to be a pretty dangerous pastime for her too.
What about the elderly couple who were shot dead while visiting their son's grave in Maryland? "Mourning While White." I must have missed that headline.
Spare us your racial scab-picking, Slimes.
Stop putting all that nasty ink all over the paper and just sell it as a toilet paper substitute. Just until the shortage passes ...
My sympathies; it’s too bad that identity politics has forced us to see things in racial colors.
But... how safe would a white guy be jogging through a black neighborhood? Would he take his kid there? Would he always be aware of his color?
New York Times, now do this:
Visiting your sons grave while white; our readers respond.
If he’s so afraid to run in white neighborhoods, why doesn’t he go and run in a black neighborhood? Is it because he knows that black neighborhoods are far more dangerous than white neighborhoods?
jogging while black, funny Just like wearing a hooding will get you shot
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