Posted on April 24, 2020

Anti-Vaxxer Accused of ‘White Privilege’ After Getting Arrested for Taking Children to the Park During Lockdown

Moya Lothian-McLean, Independent, April 24, 2020

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While larger protests have seen a strange absence of policing – something black leaders in the US have already pointed to as a racial disparity – smaller displays of defiance have seen brushes with the law.

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Now an Idaho mother has prompted a heated discussion about white privilege after her arrest for violating city orders.

Sara Brady was taken into custody by officers at a park in Meridian, Idaho when she apparently refused multiple instructions to leave a playground that was closed in an attempt to prevent coronavirus spread.

The incident was reportedly streamed live to Facebook in a 40-minute video and Brady’s arrest prompted more protests outside the Meridian City Hall after anger at her treatment.

However, it was later revealed that Brady was present in the park with other mothers as part of a “playdate protest” and that she is well known in the community as an anti-vaxx advocate.

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One snippet of video, posted by journalist Yashar Ali, shows Brady and another woman, who is recording the interaction, arguing with a police officer politely asking them and their companions to move.

“Well it’s a public park so I do wonder why it’s being closed when it’s a public park,” says Brady’s companion. “I mean we’re not breaking the law.”

“The city closed it,” the officer responds.

“Under what grounds?” the woman responds.

Brady then chimes in to say they pay their taxes and the park’s closure is “unconstitutional”.

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The pair continue to argue with officers who remain extremely polite but firmly ask them to leave.

“Exit the playground now,” another officer says. “You have five seconds”.

The pair refuse to move with Brady goading the officer to “Arrest me… do it,”.

“Record it,” she says to her companion.

An officer then cuffs Brady while her companion says “Officer, you don’t want to do that,” in a warning tone.

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And the confidence of the woman during the entire incident, coupled with the respectful demeanour of the police, sits in striking contrast with how black individuals are treated, even when they’ve committed no offence, say commentators.

Twelve-year old African-American Tamir Rice was shot dead by a white officer as he played with a toy pellet gun in a park in Ohio in 2014.

The officer was never formally charged with any crime in relation to his death.

Others saw similar discrepancies in the exchange between the officers and the white women.

“The astroturfing and privilege are bad enough,” wrote news correspondent Joy Reid.

But as a black person you watch how differently these interactions go down than they did with Tamir Rice or Philando Castille and on and on … the pleading vs the screaming orders … the patience vs the snap judgments … my God…

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Ah, the 28th amendment: the right to be obnoxious while white.