How will George Floyd be remembered in 100 years?


It doesn't feel like a coincidence that the first anniversary of George Floyd's death under Derek Chauvin's knee arrives on the same week as the centenary of the Tulsa Massacre, in which as many as 300 Black people were killed. American history is full of racial horrors — it may be impossible to pick a week that doesn't coincide with some act of terror in our collective past.
The Tulsa experience tells us something important as the country continues to move on from Floyd's death: The pain of racial trauma never really ends, and the ramifications can ripple out endlessly.
Wheaton College researchers have documented some of those ripples. Before the massacre, Black Tulsans had higher rates of homeownership, marriage, and employment than their peers in other cities. After the violence, they fell behind, and many of the city's more prosperous Black residents left town entirely, upending the city's social structure. "In just 24 hours, the promising trajectory of an entire community can be significantly altered in ways that last for generations," the researchers wrote.
Subscribe to The Week
Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives.

Sign up for The Week's Free Newsletters
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
In Congress last week, one of the survivors — 107-year-old Viola Fletcher — testified that she is still haunted by what she witnessed as a young child. "I still see Black businesses being burned," she said. "I still hear airplanes flying overhead. I hear the screams. I have lived through the massacre every day."
As in Tulsa, the ongoing ramifications of Floyd's death will be both personal and societal, as well as long-lasting. Millions of Black Americans have been traumatized by the videos of the crime, and they will carry that pain forward. Americans are still working out some of the other possibilities. Will we remake America's police and our relationship to them? Or will the "Blue Lives Matter" backlash win out? Future generations will live with our choices.
There's a widespread notion in America that we can and should leave the bad stuff behind — that (say) yes, the Founders were slavers, but they also wrote the Declaration of Independence, and that's where our focus should be. Such happy talk amounts to an act of erasure. Like Tulsa, Floyd's death will leave a lasting mark on the country. What's unsettled is whether we'll be left with scars that signify healing, or with an ugly, open wound.
Sign up for Today's Best Articles in your inbox
A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com
Joel Mathis is a writer with 30 years of newspaper and online journalism experience. His work also regularly appears in National Geographic and The Kansas City Star. His awards include best online commentary at the Online News Association and (twice) at the City and Regional Magazine Association.
-
June 14 editorial cartoons
Cartoons Saturday's political cartoons include Donald's 30 dolls, a Flag Day fail and a MAGA Mayflower
-
5 jackbooted cartoons about L.A.'s anti-ICE protests
Cartoons Artists take on National Guard deployment, the failure of due process, and more
-
Some of the best music and singing holidays in 2025
The Week Recommends From singing lessons in the Peak District to two-week courses at Chetham's Piano Summer School
-
The France-Indonesia push for an Israeli-Palestinian two-state solution
Talking Points Both countries have said a two-state solution is the way to end the Middle East conflict
-
Israel-US 'rift': is Trump losing patience with Netanyahu?
Today's Big Question US president called for an end to Gaza war and negotiated directly with Hamas to return American hostage, amid rumours of strained relations
-
What happens if tensions between India and Pakistan boil over?
TODAY'S BIG QUESTION As the two nuclear-armed neighbors rattle their sabers in the wake of a terrorist attack on the contested Kashmir region, experts worry that the worst might be yet to come
-
Why Russia removed the Taliban's terrorist designation
The Explainer Russia had designated the Taliban as a terrorist group over 20 years ago
-
Inside the Israel-Turkey geopolitical dance across Syria
THE EXPLAINER As Syria struggles in the wake of the Assad regime's collapse, its neighbors are carefully coordinating to avoid potential military confrontations
-
'Like a sound from hell': Serbia and sonic weapons
The Explainer Half a million people sign petition alleging Serbian police used an illegal 'sound cannon' to disrupt anti-government protests
-
The arrest of the Philippines' former president leaves the country's drug war in disarray
In the Spotlight Rodrigo Duterte was arrested by the ICC earlier this month
-
Ukrainian election: who could replace Zelenskyy?
The Explainer Donald Trump's 'dictator' jibe raises pressure on Ukraine to the polls while the country is under martial law