You would think, in the wake of “Permit Patty” (aka Allison Ettel) and “BBQ Becky” (real name, Jennifer Schulte) experiencing massive blowback for calling the police on black people for being out in public and in their line of sight, that perhaps white people would not, in fact, just call the police on black people for no good reason. But in what’s shaping up to be the summer’s ugliest trend, we’re not so lucky. Meet ID Adam, a grown man who called the police on a black woman for using a community pool (in the community she lives in).
According to Buzzfeed, Jasmine Edwards was approached by a man while she was using the pool in the development where she lived and demanded her ID. Edwards filmed the encounter, where two police officers are already on the scene, and once Edwards proves her key card works for the pool, the police apologize to her and leave.
The venue makes this particularly charged: The history of public pools in America is also a history of racism. And in short order, ID Adam quickly experienced the wrath of the internet:
So we have #IDAdam, #PermitPatty, #BBQBecky. Who else wants to show their entire ass?! Whew these folks are trash. I commend the victims in these situations for remaining calm because *I* would not.
— krissy (@__Krisssyy) July 5, 2018
Idea: Every time one of these douche nozzles calls the police on a black person going about their business, said douche nozzle gets a $500 fine. When the police show up, black people die. It's not funny anymore. It never was #IDadam
— John☭Frum☭Chicago (@Jack9The3Knife) July 6, 2018
Winston Salem, NC.
I’m DISGUSTED with this Adam, clown. #IDadam https://t.co/lwSQV66hp5
— IG: BDahtTV (@BDAHT) July 6, 2018
The bigot was quickly identified as Adam Bloom, who at the time worked for Sonoco Products. After the fires ignited, that was no longer the case:
#IDAdam is no longer on the HOA board. He is also no longer their “pool chair”. pic.twitter.com/oxtJmPtvE3
— TheNotoriousMLP (she/her) (@thenotoriousmlp) July 5, 2018
There will no doubt be some hand-wringing in the next few months over whether Bloom was punished too harshly, because there always is. But it’s worth remembering that black people, in particular, are automatically at risk in any interaction with the police, and unarmed black women, in particular, are at the most risk. Did Bloom know this when he made the call? Possibly not. But as a society, we’ve agreed that if we put others at risk for our irresponsible actions there needs to be consequences.
(via BuzzFeed)