
 
        
         
		FROM THE PUBLISHER 
 Vote for Carolyn 
 Change-making is not ‘a spectator sport’ 
 COURIER LIFE, JUNE 19-25, 2020 17  
 The great Jackie Robinson, 
  the fi rst  African- 
 American  to  play  in Major  
 League Baseball, once  
 commented that “Life is not a  
 spectator sport.” You could remain  
 on the sidelines or in the  
 stands, but in order to be an  
 agent for change, you had to be  
 on the fi eld.  
 During his career, Robinson  
 endured years of abuse and humiliation  
 due to the color of his  
 skin. He was forced to sleep in  
 separate hotels from his teammates  
 due to Jim Crow laws.  
 Fans and fellow players alike  
 hurled racist invective at him  
 when  he  was  at  bat.  At  one  
 point, he sustained a major injury  
 while playing fi rst  base  
 when  an  opposing  player  gave  
 him a seven-inch gash from his  
 shoe spikes on Robinson’s leg.  
 Yet he persevered, and today is  
 credited with paving the way  
 for integration in Major League  
 Baseball. 
 The same holds true of policing  
 in our modern, racially  
 divided era. The anger over  
 the murder of George Floyd in  
 Minneapolis is completely justifi  
 ed, and refl ects the widespread  
 feeling among Black  
 Americans that this country  
 has had its knee on our necks  
 for too long.  
 I know this sentiment well.  
 When I was a 15-year-old living  
 in South Jamaica, Queens, my  
 brother and I were arrested on  
 criminal trespassing charges.  
 Shortly after, we were picked  
 up  from school by offi cers and  
 brought to the 103rd Precinct.  
 Out of the blue, one of the offi - 
 cers — both of them were white  
 — asked us if we felt like a beatdown. 
   They  then  took  us  to  a  
 room downstairs and kicked us  
 in the groin repeatedly. It was  
 only after a black offi cer poked  
 his head in the room and said  
 “that’s enough” that the beating  
 fi nally stopped.  
 For weeks after, I urinated  
 blood every day. I promised  
 myself repeatedly that if it continued, 
  I’d tell my mother what  
 had happened. Every blare of a  
 siren brought back traumatic  
 memories, and the glee the offi  
 cers took in emasculating my  
 brother and me.  
 A few years later, I was approached  
 by a group of black  
 leaders in the community with  
 a proposition that sounded  
 crazy to me at the time, as it  
 probably would to many people  
 of color today: Join the NYPD.  
 Change the department from  
 within. 
 The more I thought about it,  
 the more it made sense to me.  
 So I joined with a clear mission  
 in mind, and that mission  
 sustained me throughout my  
 22 years on the force. I committed  
 myself to rectifying the  
 systemic issues the department  
 was facing. 
 At  times,  my  task  felt  like  
 Sysiphus rolling the boulder up  
 the hill. The entrenched hierarchy  
 within police departments  
 is often resistant to change –  
 and when it comes, it comes  
 slowly. But I retired from the  
 NYPD  at  the  rank  of  captain  
 knowing that I and my fellow  
 reformers had made a positive  
 difference, drawing attention  
 to issues that have long plagued  
 the department and opening the  
 door to fellow change-makers. 
 Take Edwin Raymond. A  
 Lieutenant in the NYPD, Raymond  
 joined a group of 11 minority  
 colleagues in 2016 to expose  
 a policy of targeting minorities  
 in a transit patrol unit. He and  
 his fellow plaintiffs allege they  
 were  explicitly  told  to  go  after  
 Black and Latino people for  
 low-level crimes such as  jumping  
 turnstiles, and avoid “soft”  
 targets  such  as  Whites  and  
 Asians. When  they objected  to  
 this clearly unjust policy, they  
 claimed they faced retaliation.  
 They are now suing the department  
 for discrimination, and  
 the issue of quota-based policing  
 is now in public view.  
 People like Lieutenant Raymond  
 and his colleagues are  
 carrying the torch for reform.  
 The protesters on the streets  
 now are forcing a long-overdue  
 conversation about racism in  
 policing. But in order to effect  
 meaningful  change,  we  have  
 to  dispel  this  damaging  idea  
 that    change  can  come  from  
 within. In 1947, Jackie Robinson  
 debuted as fi rst  baseman  
 for the Brooklyn Dodgers. The  
 following year, the Negro National  
 League — a symbol of  
 baseball’s segregation — disbanded. 
 Eric Adams is borough president  
 of Brooklyn. He served 22  
 years in the New York City Police  
 Department (NYPD), retiring  
 at the rank of captain, as  
 well  as  represented  District  20  
 in the New York State Senate. 
 Borough President Eric Adams. 
 BY VICTORIA SCHNEPS-YUNIS 
 Congresswoman Carolyn  
 Maloney works tirelessly to  
 serve three boroughs in an  
 extraordinary way. 
 As  they  say  in  the  vernacular, 
  she’s “brought home  
 the bacon” to her district  
 in Brooklyn, which encompasses  
 Greenpoint and Williamsburg; 
  she has “brought  
 home the bacon” for her  
 Queens districts in Astoria  
 and Long Island City; and she  
 has “brought home the bacon”  
 for her districts on the Upper  
 East Side of Manhattan.  
 I’m proud to endorse her  
 for reelection to another term  
 in Congress. 
 She’s been an incredible  
 advocate for her communities  
 and brought in more than  
 $10.7 billion in funds for jobs,  
 infrastructure  projects  and  
 quality-of-life concerns. 
 She serves in the powerful  
 position as chairwoman of the  
 United States House Committee  
 on Oversight and Reform,  
 which is a critical place to be  
 in today’s world. She’s also a  
 member of the Select Subcommittee  
 on the Coronavirus  
 Crisis. 
 Not surprisingly, she was  
 rated the No. 1 leader in Congress  
 due to her outstanding  
 track record. 
 She has fought tirelessly  
 to  keep  services  at  the Manhattan  
 VA  hospitals.  Understanding  
 the power of a  
 great education having been  
 a teacher herself, she led the  
 task force to establish the Eleanor  
 Roosevelt and P.S. 151  
 schools. 
 Her advocacy for the Second  
 Avenue Subway line  
 helped  to  secure  $1.3  billion  
 in federal funding. She has  
 championed equal rights,  
 building efforts for a strong  
 economy and expanding  
 healthcare while safeguarding  
 clean air and water issues. 
  Her list of accomplishments  
 can go on and on.  
 It’s important to reelect  
 someone like Carolyn, a  
 proven champion of  the communities  
 she serves. I’m  
 proud to call her my friend  
 and a true public servant.  
 Make sure you make  
 your voice heard and cast  
 your vote, either in person  
 or via absentee ballot. 
 Victoria  Schneps-Yunis  
 is  the  publisher  of  Schneps  
 Media. 
 Carolyn Maloney deserves our votes! 
 LESSONS LEARNED WHILE ON THE BEAT 
 WITH BROOKLYN BOROUGH PRESIDENT ERIC ADAMS