My Child Wants to Be a Cop — Here’s My Letter to Him

After unlearning my own childhood obsession with the police, I’m giving my child the tools to shape his own worldview

Jayson Kristopher Jones
LEVEL
Published in
9 min readMar 1, 2021

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Image by Igor Ovsyannykov from Pixabay

The year is 2020. As usual, the news is on in our home, providing a background ambiance for our daily lives. The reporter, a White woman who is almost in tears, describes the latest developments in the murder of Breonna Taylor.

Murder. I use that word deliberately because seldom is it attached to the deaths of Black people who have done nothing but exist. And that’s what Breonna did. She lived in a world that did not love her, a world that has never loved anyone like her.

I’m frozen.

I want to change the channel, but I can’t. Instead, I stare, wishing that things could’ve been different.

What if “no-knock warrants” were unlawful?

What if they had better information?

What if she weren’t Black?

“Who is Breonna Taylor?”

I turn to my left to see you, all of nine years old, staring intently and waiting for an answer: Why did this happen?

The year is 1993. My mom and I rush down the street. She tries her best to match my pace, but she’s not…

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