Since the appearance of menacing T-shirts and
DVDs a few years ago, a great deal of media emphasis has been placed on a "cultural" explanation for inner-city witnesses' reluctance to cooperate with police or to testify in court.
Meanwhile, not only does the "Stop Snitching" crisis continue, but the division between some inner-city residents and law enforcement has intensified.
Forget non-compliance - within the last year, both police and criminals have committed brutal acts of violence at a frightening clip.
The Oct. 31 murder of Police Officer Chuck Cassidy was followed by the Jan. 11 police shooting of Goode, who died of two bullet wounds to the back, suffered while running from police.
Within days of the harrowing assassination of Officer Stephen Liczbinski, Philadelphia officers made headlines for the beating of three young men allegedly returning from a prayer vigil.
Perhaps we have ineffectively addressed the Code of Silence because we focus on the immediate expressions of a deep-seated phenomenon.
Addressing the popularity of the "Don't snitch" culture is like ripping the flowers off a deeply rooted weed. T-shirts and rap music are not the causes of "Stop Snitching." Rather, the communication breakdown is a consequence of a historical social and economic process that has left some community members distrustful of police, and left police unable to adequately protect inner-city Philadelphia.
As long as we continue to focus on T-shirts and rap lyrics, the true causes of "Stop Snitching" will go unaddressed.
For this reason, the United Way along with the Stoneleigh Center, Blueprint for a Safer Philadelphia and WHYY have organized a public forum to discuss the systemic complexities behind the Code of Silence.
Despite the sensitive subject matter, the forum aims to bring community leaders, civic leaders and criminal-justice representatives together to open a dialogue on this crucial subject.