That’s not how life works – not for African-Americans – or for anybody.

That’s an important and necessary fact to lift up. When black folks are literally just living our lives, going about our business, we don’t think, “Golly, I should probably start filming right now just in case brutality or bigotry breaks out so that I have the beginning, middle, and end of it all on film.”

wear body cameras. We probably should, but we aren’t filming 360 degrees of our lives 24/7. So when an everyday black man, woman, boy, or girl ends up being confronted with racism or bigotry or police brutality of some kind, it just so happens that the filming tends to start when the horror is already well underway.

So when a horrible viral video of racism or police brutality makes rounds online, it’s rare that the video starts before the encounter begins. By the time a bystander, or the victim, has the thought, “I should I pull out my camera and begin filming this,” the ugliness is normally well underway.

And it’s that fact that is now producing a tired trope I hear every single day from people who witness the awful videos and then ask the question, “But what happened before this was being filmed?”

The question itself is rooted in racism. When we witness African-Americans being brutalized in the most horrific ways imaginable, when we see discrimination of the worst degree humiliating or degrading African-Americans who just want to live their lives in peace, what happened before someone was forced to consider the need to begin filming an incident really does not matter.

Here’s why.

The question is most often asked because the person asking wants to believe that the brutality or discrimination was necessary and justified.

What I am telling you is that brutality and racial discrimination are never justified.

Last Thursday, a video surfaced of a young black man named Anthony Wall being brutally choked, pushed up against a wall, and nearly lifted off his feet by an enormous police officer in Warsaw, North Carolina. Wall, 22 years old and dressed in a prom tux, had just taken his younger sister to her high school prom. They went to a Waffle House afterward.

When the staff at the Waffle House called the police on Wall, the officer arrived. By the time the filming begins, the officer is just moments away from choking Wall, then slamming him to the ground.

We know from the arrest that Wall was unarmed and nonviolent. He was ultimately charged with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest. He could’ve really argued with the staff at Waffle House, but whatever he did or did not do, it will never justify this officer’s actions. Period.

The same is true for the brutal police assault of Chikesia Clemons at another Waffle House outside Mobile, Alabama. Police were called when a dispute broke out over her being asked to pay 50 cents for utensils. When police got there, she was eventually slammed to the ground, choked, mounted, and manhandled in such a way that her blouse came off, exposing her breasts in front of everyone.

Throughout it all, she was nonviolent and achingly calm. Nothing she did before the video could warrant what she got in return.

The same is true for the police officer in Miami who ran and punt-kicked the head of a nonviolent man who was already being arrested and under the control of another police officer. I don’t care what happened before that video was being filmed. Nothing warrants such an attack.