Joe Brown, Black American

My dear friend Louis Arnold was number one, the most aggressive heavyweight karateka and kickboxer in the State of Texas during the 1970’s. I was at the time a member of the Austin Police Department, as well as that department’s self defense instructor. Recently, Louis told me about the time in the early 1970s when he was stopped by two of my fellow officers.  They did a complete search of his person and of his vehicle, as well as a records check. He was clean. They then insulted him in the following manner: “Do you expect us to believe that you, a 24 year old Black man, have never been in trouble?”

I tell that story to give the reader an idea of the difficulty even law abiding Black citizens faced in that day. This was but seven years after Doctor Martin Luther King’s march in Alabama, and two years after his assassination.  In no way do I give any accreditation to the current situation in Ferguson, Missouri. I have difficulty with the moronic mindset of people whose idea of protest is to burn down their own neighborhood. Louis Arnold, one of the greatest fighters in the nation in his day, could have easily taken out both of those cops. Instead, he conducted himself like a gentleman, in the face of stupidity and ignorance. He, and not those agitators flocking to Ferguson, would have made Doctor King proud.

But it is Joe Brown*, Black American, and retired member of this country’s military forces, that I want to speak of. I made his acquaintance at the intersection of Oltorf and South Congress in 1970. I was stopped at the light on Oltorf, behind two other vehicles, when I was hit from behind by another vehicle, slamming my police cruiser into the vehicle ahead of me, which then slammed into the vehicle to its front. I jumped out of my vehicle, and raced to the car behind me. The driver was Black, and in his mid 40’s. I thought that strange, for there were at the time few Blacks living in South Austin, (where I was working temporarily, as I normally worked East).  Most Blacks didn’t venture out of East Austin in those days. There was truly a racial divide in those days.

I was angry, and reached into the car to yank him out, but was stopped by a curt but firm and sober, “don’t treat me that way! You’ve got no cause to put your hands on me.” This came in the tone of a man of used to giving orders, apparently a man of respect, twice my age, talking to a young pup. I was surprised, but he was right. I was out of line. There was no evidence he’d been drinking, and as it turned out, he was tired and had fallen asleep. He identified himself as Joe Brown, and a records check came back clean. He produced insurance papers, and a collision report was made.

The more I learned about Joe Brown, the greater was my admiration for the man. He had a little food stand up on Webberville Road, close to Ernie’s Chicken Shack.  Ernie’s Chicken Shack was a landmark East, a place people liked to go after hours on weekends. You would see them come in, a caravan of cars, filled with White folks. They would come in large groups, for protection, and walk into Ernie’s to mingle with the Black folks, deep in “dangerous” East Austin! The coffee was good there after hours, for the coffee had a mix of whiskey in it, if anyone cared to know. After spending an hour or two in the place, the White patrons would load into their cars, and drive away, to recount to their friends the next day as to how they’d spent a couple of hours the night before mingling with savages! Ah, the thrill of it all! The day after their jaunt into danger, should any of those White folks happen to bump into the Black folks they had mingled with the night before, they would turn up their noses, as if they had never seen them.

At any rate, they were as safe at Ernie’s as anywhere else in Austin, for the folks there were not going to let anything happen to them. Ask any policeman who had run into Ernie’s to get away from the brick and bottles!  I recall four of us loading into one unit to go after an out of district officer who had run into Ernie’s. We had driven through the hail of rocks and bottles reserved for policemen, in answer to a phone call from the proprietor at Ernie’s. The proprietor’s had laughingly handed over the very frightened officer, with a “he’s ok, we weren’t going to let anyone hurt him!

It was there, in that area, that Joe Brown got the attention of the Austin Police Department’s East Austin units.  As I have said, pretty regularly there, we took in rain storms of rocks, bottles, and bricks. It was something that happened, part of the job.  Sometimes one of us went to the hospital, (to include myself) and sometimes it was one of them. On a rare occasion, when things were quiet elsewhere, a more intrepid Captain of police would allow us to gather a dozen or so officers and go after them, but most of the time, we were on our own.

Now the man Joe Brown was a law abiding citizen, and he laid down the law, in pretty explicit language and harsh action, which coming from anyone but a Black man would have been labeled racist.  He wasn’t putting up with such hooliganism. He was good on his word. One night, when a mob began raining down bricks on APD units, Joe Brown intervened. He shot and killed one of the hoods, this in defense of a cop. Nor was that the only instance of his intervention in behalf of law and order. It happened again, a year later, with another hood going down to Joe Brown’s pistol. This too, was a clear case of self defense, and with a couple of Austin police officers testifying in his behalf, (unheard of in those days, cops testifying in behalf of a Black man) Joe Brown was no billed by the grand jury.

Then came the night that a White man, the owner of a night club up on Burnet Road, came to Ernie’s Chicken Shack. He was having money troubles, and Joe Brown, a frequent visitor to Ernie’s after hours, was reputed to have money.  He befriended Joe, and in time was able to come away with the money he needed, quite a large amount, with a promise to repay.

The months passed, and nothing was heard from the man Joe Brown had lent the money to.  Joe Brown called him at his night club, numerous time. The man refused to talk to him. Joe told him he would go to the night club. “N——-, don’t come here. There are none of your kind allowed in this part of town! If you come here, I’ll kill you, and no law will arrest me for killing a n——-.”

Joe Brown was nobody’s fool. He knew that ordinarily the law would frown severely on a Black man going into North Austin after a White man. But the circumstances and his relationship with the law up to this point were anything but ordinary. They owed him, and he was about to test the system in a big way. They owed him, and the night club owner owed him, and he meant to collect on both accounts.

When he walked into that man’s night club, there was an immediate uproar. “ What is that n——  doing in here?” Joe didn’t let that bother him. He had come on business, that being to recover the money owed him, or to hear a good reason why not.

The owner approached him, and things got ugly quickly. “N——, I told you not to come here!”  Joe remained cool, unruffled by the man’s verbal threats.  “I’ve come for my money,” he tendered quietly.

At this point, the threat level increased substantially, for the night club owner pulled out a .38 pistol and leveled it at Joe Brown. “I told you not to come here!” But Joe Brown, never a man to be trifled with, was not fazed. Quick as you please, he pulled a .45 caliber automatic, and shot the night club owner dead.  Then, remaining unruffled despite the commotion and screaming his last action had caused, he leaned up against the bar and waited for the law to arrive.

Twice that month, Joe Brown had petitioned to collect on debts owed. The night club owner denied the first petition, and threatened his life to boot, for which act he paid with his own. The Travis County Grand Jury heard once more the case of self defense regarding the Black man, Joe Brown, only this time, the killing involved a White man. As the investigators wrote it up, there were lots of witnesses, and the night club owner was a man with a tarnished reputation. It may have been with reluctance, but Joe Brown was no billed. The system owed him, and he had collected.

*Not his actual name.

 

Frustrated, Mr. President

You brought up Ferguson Missouri in your UN speech, today (9/24/14) Mr President, perhaps on a par with terrorism, beheadings, etc? Sad, in that you also brought up the rule of law. Is not that young police officer given guarantees under the Constitution, even innocent until proven guilty? You are in essence pronouncing him guilty before the world. Nor should you have denigrated our closest ally in the Midwest, even Israel in front her enemies, who are in reality ours as well. I will stop now, save to say, with sadness, that we reap what we sow. The nations whose favor you think to curry will turn on us in time.

Empty praise

The statement has been made about the Ten Commandments not being “ten suggestions”. Indeed. It is not our prerogative to attempt to down grade them to our present lack of obedience. Where a potion of repentance is necessary, we need apply it. We may speak all the day long of God’s love and goodness toward us, but words of praise are empty and meaningless without obedience. Surely we need be mindful of the admonition of the Christ found in John 14:15. “If ye love me, keep my commandments…” An inspired Prophet Samuel had earlier voiced the same: “…Hath the LORD as great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices, as in obeying the voice of the LORD? Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice…”

Feelings of deja vu

We have all experienced feelings of “deja vu” in the which we say to a complete stranger, “It is as if I know you from somewhere.” There may be more truth to that than we realize. As spirit children of our Heavenly Father, we lived in His presence prior to coming here to take on a physical body, and to be tried to see if we would live worthy to return to His presence. To such did the poet Wordsworth allude in his inspired “Ode. Intimations of Immortality…” Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting. The soul that rises with us, our life’s Star, Hath had elsewhere its setting, and cometh from afar: Not in entire forgetfulness, And not in utter nakedness, But trailing clouds of glory do we come, from God who is our home…” Indeed, to Jeremiah the Lord declared “Before I formed thee in the belly, I knew thee…” (Jeremiah 1:5) and to Job: “Where was thou when I laid the foundations of the earth? declare if thou hast understanding…When the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy?” (Job 38: 4,7) Is there not then reason to rejoice? For we are sons and daughters of God, and in the words of the Psalmist “What is man that thou art mindful of him? and the son of man, that thou visitest him? For thou hast made him a little lower than the angels, and crowned him with glory and honor…” (Psalms 8: 4,5

Shall we not do our part?

On 21 October 1805, on the eve of the battle which would save England, the great British Admiral, Horatio Nelson, issued this order: “England expects that every man will do his duty.” He then led the British fleet to victory against the combined French and Spanish fleet. Nelson, who had lost an eye in one battle, and an arm in another, had asked for total commitment, and then led the way, this time laying down his life in the process. Should we not be willing to give our all in every thing we do? Would not our communities and our country be a better place were all to follow suit? We have had so many witnesses. And what greater than this, from the sacred hymn, ‘How Great Thou Art: “And when I think, that God, His Son not sparing, Sent Him to die, I scarce can take it in: That on the cross, my burden gladly bearing, He bled and died, to take away my sin…” Shall we not do our part? We can do better. We can always do better. We owe Him that much.

For political advantage (October 2012)

I am not a fan of David Letterman, given his rough treatment of Conservatives. So I was surprised when he said, “You want your President to be telling the truth; you want the contender to be lying…Mitt said, (about an allegation made against him by the President) ‘No no, check the thing, check the thing…’ and so what we found out…President Obama was not telling the truth…I felt discouraged…” Well ought we all feel discouraged, Mr Letterman! Well might we be discouraged when the great tragedy of Benghazi is buried on page 12 of our major newspapers, while a Republican’s statement about his belief in the rights of unborn babies is ridiculed by the press on page one. Well might we be discouraged when the press cannot make news of the fact that men fighting for their lives sent out urgent requests for reinforcements, not once, not twice, but three times, during seven hours of furious fighting, and were refused, although a Delta Force team was available to be flown in. Well might we be discouraged when, given the duty of the press to investigate and uncover the facts, it willfully neglects its duty, and instead, for political advantage will stifle the truth…”Oh say, what is truth?” asked the poet, ‘Tis the fairest gem That the riches of worlds can produce…’Tis the brightest prize To which mortals or Gods can aspire…’Tis an aim for the noblest desire…” Yes, well might we be discouraged, when the holder of the highest office in the land fails us! But the poet continues, prophetically: “The sceptre may fall from the despot’s grasp When with winds of stern justice he copes…”

Grace in defeat

Of his impending surrender to General Grant, General Robert E. Lee said…”I would rather die a thousand deaths.” But his previously unbeaten army now numbered but 6,000 poorly clad infantry, and 2,000 cavalry on spent and gaunt horses. Grant was upon him with 80,000 men. For the sake of his spent army, Lee humbly presented himself before Grant, to effect a surrender. Years later, he was in the presence of a pastor who railed bitterly against the North. He took the man aside, and said unto him, “Doctor, there is a good old book which I read, and you preach from, which says, ‘Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you.’ Do you think your remarks this evening were quite in the spirit of that teaching?” To another who spoke bitterly of their former enemies, General Lee quoted the following: “Learn…to love thy foe, and store with pearls the hand that brings thee woe, Free (thyself) from base vindictive pride, Emblaze with gems the wrist that rends thy side…shall men do less than heal the smiter and the railer bless?” Those lines, he told the man, were written by a Muslim, and then he quietly asked, “Ought not we, who profess…to be Christians…rise at least to the standard of this…Muslim…and learn to forgive our enemies?” My dear friends, that is good doctrine. We must rise to the class of General Robert E. Lee, or to the class of a Mitt Romney, whose parting words last night (November 6, 2012) were, “I so wish…I so wish I had been able to fulfill your hopes to lead this country…but this nation chose another leader. And so Ann and I join with you to earnestly pray for him and this great nation.”

They will do it

It is the Marines, the Soldiers, the Sailors, the Airmen who will do the fighting and dying. It will always be them, so why not let them do the planning and then follow the plan? The plan at this moment is that there is no plan. What is taking place is a tragedy in the making, a gradual frittering of our military into a cauldron; there will be more and more military members drawn into this cesspool with the passing of weeks, months, and years, and the enemy can deal with that. We are fighting the enemy’s fight, as dictated by him, while led by a very timid man who knows nothing of war. We had hoped we would not have to return to this, but sadly, we are there again. Thus, if it must be, why not let the military handle this, and there will be a plan: massive bombing followed by an invasion of several hundred thousand soldiers and marines, in one big push to wipe ISIS off the map. And they will do that. Only in that manner will we send a message that all of radical Islam will understand.

A strong friend in the President

CNN chirps that our military has today targeted its 176th airstrike over the past several weeks. Each airstrike it seems, must have the President’s approval. This timid approach to a terrible crisis emboldens our enemies around the world. We quote with disbelief the President’s words to the President of the Ukraine. “You have a strong friend in this President…!” Strong words, indeed! Not so much talk by our military leaders. Rather than 176 airstrikes spread out over numerous weeks, our military leaders believe in shock and awe, typical of which would be some 200 airstrikes a day, to be followed up by overwhelming force on the ground which would sweep before them ISIS. Knowing this, ISIS will not confront our military in a conventional battle. No matter, for this President will not allow such. And while one is loathe to concede a need for a new military front, at the cost of so much sacrifice to our sons and daughters, one understands the need to regain lost initiative and our position of strength in the world. Any who have even a slight understanding of history, will understand the grave dangers facing us. We pray that our leaders might come to their senses, that such may be averted.

Iran’s Supreme Leader, a pragmatist?

A spokesman for the administration explains the difficulties of attempting to persuade Iran to abandon its plans to acquire nuclear weapon status. “There is a continued erosion of diplomatic relations with Iran. We want a deal more than Iran’s leader does. He continues to say NO…this man is a pragmatist, committed to his goal of acquiring a nuclear weapon.” My, my! He says NO? This is part of the problem. Our Yale and Princeton educated government leaders are able to intellectually define those who are committed to our destruction as “pragmatists,” while unable to define those who use violence and intimidation in the pursuit of their political aims, as the terrorists they are. They arrive at the bargaining table exuding a farcical bravado, demonstrated by tough talk which has no credibility. We have told the world and our enemies what we are not going to do. We cringe in the realization that rather then tout our strengths, our president has dismantled our nuclear defenses, and continues to downsize our military and cashier our best generals and admirals. We may console ourselves with the revelation that Iran’s supreme leader is a pragmatist.