By Terri Schlichenmeyer, Special to The New Tri-State Defender

Charges dropped.
You were surprised, but not surprised. Hopeful that it might be different, but only barely. You know that these days, the idea of justice can be a slippery issue thatโs sometimes based on all the wrong things, and in the new book โNobodyโ by Marc Lamont Hill, youโll see how weโve come to this.
On the afternoon of May 1, 2015, when Baltimoreโs chief prosecutor, Marilyn Mosby, said she was bringing charges โon sixโฆ police officers involved in the arrest and detention of Freddie Gray,โ her pronouncement was met with โcheers.โ Grayโs case then was the latest in a long line, nationwide, but it wouldnโt be the last of its kind.
Gray, says Hill, was โNobody.โ
โTo be Nobody is to be vulnerable,โ he says in his preface. Itโs being โpoor, black, brown, immigrant, queer, or transโ and living in an atmosphere thatโs โmore rather than less unsafe.โ Nobody is โconsidered disposable.โ
Take, for instance, Michael Brown.
By all indications, Brown was a normal guy who acted spontaneously: he stole cigarillos from a c-store and shoved the shopkeeper, who called authorities and the rest is history. The way it happened, though, the dehumanization, and the aftermath of Brownโs โrandom encounterโ with police will be talked about for generations, says Hill.
How did we get here? The answer is found in crowded, ill-maintained, depressing neighborhoods where schools are sub-par and few in charge care. Itโs in the way the justice system operates for those who are too poor to hire a lawyer or afford their bail. Also to blame: so-called โquotasโ within police departments, a lack of differentiation between serious infraction and minor annoyance, and the relative ease of targeting minorities in all of the above.
And yet, says Hill, we cannot โindividualize this crisis.โ We must fix housing, schools, the justice system, and the economy overall, in all corners of the country.
โWe must reinvest in communities. We must imagine the world that is not yet.โ
You brace yourself, take a deep breath, unfold the newspaper at the corner and quickly peek at the headline to see if itโs about yet another shooting of a young person. So begins your day. Shoulda read โNobodyโ first.
โNobodyโ
Author: Marc Lamont Hill,
Foreword: Todd Brewster
C .2016, Atria
$26.00 / $35.00 Canada
250 pages
Before you do, though, letโs get the elephant out of the room: author Marc Lamont Hill isnโt anti-cop in this book. Instead, I saw a thoughtful, balanced, thought-provoking look at how todayโs authorities, police departments, and government entities have evolved to be what they are, and how that can be turned around. In his examination of the past, in fact, Hill paints real solutions to the problems that put vulnerable citizens in harmโs way. I also saw that those solutions donโt lie one-hundred-percent with those in Blue.
This is not an easy book to read; itโs not fun, either, and it demands that you think about whatโs said. Still, if you only read one book with the intention of making change, then this is what you want. Start โNobodyโ today, and thereโll be no dropping this one.
(To reach Terri Schlichenmeyer: bookwormsez@yahoo.com; bookwormsez@gmail.com.)
