By Busta Brown
The New Cool Podcast and The New Cool Movement feature a brilliant group of middle and elementary students. According to co-president 7th grader Jeremiah Jett, āWeāre changing the image of cool – a cool where character, intellect, and academics come first. We support the protest for equality and also peace in our own communities, all of which are more important than image, money and fame. When you make the world better, all of that other stuff will eventually come. Iām not saying kids shouldnāt have fun, but itās a time and place for everything. And I believe as black youth, we must begin planning for our future instead of playing with our friends and video games all day. You can always make time for that.ā
Jett said the organization is planning events and forums that will bring youth of all groups together. āItāll be a love meeting. Weāre going to talk about how each group feels about whatās going on today and what we can do to change it, so that our future is more equal and fairer for all people. Dr. King said, people fear each other because we donāt know each other. We donāt know each other because we donāt communicate. The New Cool Movement events and forums will encourage other youth to communicate better. We must communicate and protest non-violently, because itās more effective, and no one gets hurt.ā
The New Cool Podcast does a phenomenal job of giving youth a platform to share their views ā⦠because our voices do matter,ā said Co-President Destiny Harris.
But Harrisās views are a bit different from her co-president Jett. āI agree with Jeremiah. We must learn to communicate better and listen to one other. But you can never ever get rid of racism, because thereās always going to be some people that have negative thoughts. Itās our job to make sure we donāt take that to heart and allow it to affect our self-worth. We canāt make long-term decisions off of short emotions, because the affect can be permanent. So, when someone says something hateful, just keep it moving,ā said the straight-A honor roll student. She said protest is very necessary. āPolice brutality and racism need to be addressed, but the chaos was over-shadowing the message. I love seeing the positive and peaceful protests, yet I know the pain weāre feeling as black people. Weāre supposed to feel safe with the people that are there to protect us, but we fear them instead. And thatās very unfair. The best thing we can do right now is continue to push for change, stay on a good path, and hope for the best,ā shared Destiny.
Jett added, āThere are some police that despise whatās going on, so all of them are not bad.ā
New Cool Movement member Kandake Boyd shared how police brutality toward black people has turned her once dream of becoming a detective into a nightmare. Her testimony brought tears to my eyes. You could hear the heartbreak in her voice as it trembled. āI always wanted to be a detective, but I told myself that I didnāt want to be like the cops out here today. I donāt want to be a detective anymore, because I would feel like Iām turning on my people. And what Iām seeing in police today, I donāt want to stand by that.ā
She paused for a few seconds to gather her composure and then began to smile. I could tell something beautiful was on her mind. āI still love watching detective TV shows and movies. When I was younger, I would imagine myself solving mysteries, crimes and stuff like that. It was fun!ā She became very emotional, āBut I donāt want to do that anymore!ā
But it got much better. She began smiling again and held her head up with pride. āInstead, Iām going to use my voice in public and on our podcast. I refuse to stop fighting for change.ā
I shared Kandakeās story with my best friend of over 25 years, Lieutenant Alexander Ricketts of the Greensboro Police Department. āIād love to meet her. I want to share how important it is for young black men and women to join law enforcement, because thatās where they can make the change needed. We must become a part of the system to make effective and significant changes,ā Lt. Ricketts said.
I can speak to that personally. Chief Thompson and Sheriff Kimbrough are making positive changes in Forsyth County. Chief James and Sheriff Rogers are doing the same in Greensboro. All four are African American, so I look forward to connecting them with Kandake Boyd.
New Cool new member Roberto Garcia-Aguirre said it breaks his heart that racism is still happening in 2020. āIt really does break my heart.ā He got very emotional. āThis is ridiculous! I understand that police are human like anyone else, and they will have bad days. But they shouldnāt take their anger out on anyone else. They are sworn to protect us, not hurt us. You would think that they would be grateful and happy with the job God trusted them with. Theyāre saving peopleās lives and helping people in need. Itās horrible that we have to deal with this. Itās horrible! It really is,ā Roberto said with extreme passion. He continued, āItās not how I want it to be. Itās not how anyone should want to be!ā
Member Romeo Adom added some hope. āItās a song that I listen to. It says, we all breathe the same, even though our skin tone might be different. If we look at the personalities and our character, weāll notice that weāre beautiful when we come together. And we canāt do this alone.ā He concluded with, āHumans should be fighting for each other and not against each other.ā
Roberto jumped back in. āI agree, because the color of your skin doesnāt matter to me.ā
Jabien Dockery joined in on the conversation as well. āViolence is not going to get you anywhere. Itās going to create another mess that we donāt need.ā
Logan Eckler said, āWe should come together and put an end to all of this drama.ā
Taliya Coffie also commented on watching videos of young children responding to whatās going on in our country. āItās been emotional,ā she said.
The New Cool Movement co-president closed with some very inspiring words: āEven though we look different, weāre not animals. Weāre not dumb. Weāre extremely brilliant, creative, productive, and successful people. So, treat us with the respect and equality we deserve. It only takes one person to make the change. That person must go and encourage other groups, and then itāll spread around. It will take time, but at least weāll start the motivation of moving forward. Iām very hopeful.ā
If you would like New Cool to speak at one of your events, contact them at newcoolradio@gmail.com. Listen to The New Cool podcast on Anchor.com and Spotify.