By Alan
Caruba
The wounding of two police officers in
Ferguson, Missouri, and earlier in New York City the assassination of two police
officers are disturbing events for all Americans as they represent a hostility
that threatens a safe, secure society wherever one
lives.
Shooting police is an invitation to
anarchy. That there have been protests and parades of late advocating this
should be a matter of deep concern to all of us, no matter our race.
Ferguson, however, is NOT America if
one looks at its population and the incredibly poor governance they have
endured. You get the government for which you vote or when you neglect to
vote.
Ferguson is atypical of the nation. As
James Langston notes in his book, “America in Crisis”, in Ferguson “the growth
of the black population relative to whites is a recent occurrence. In 1990,
blacks comprised 25 percent of the city’s population but that percentage grew to
52 percent in 2000 and 67 percent in 2010.”
“The demographic transition was not
followed by a corresponding transition in black access to political positions,
the police force, union representation, and the like. The recency of the
demographic transition likely has altered the city in ways that do not
characterize other contemporary major cities in the United States, especially
those that are majority black like Detroit or
Atlanta.”
As noted in the Department of Justice
report of an investigation occasioned by the shooting of Michael Brown by a
white police officer, local governance was a factor in the lives of its black
citizens that has invoked protest and resentment.
“Ferguson,” notes Langston, “is
unusual in the degree that the city uses the municipal court system and the
revenue it generates as a way to raise city funds. This created a financial
incentive to issue tickets and then impose excessive fees on people who did not
pay.” For the record, this occurs in other comparable
communities.
“Data bears this out. Ferguson issued
more than 1,500 warrants per 1,000 people in 2013 and this rate exceeds all
other Missouri cities with a population larger than 10,000 people. Ferguson has
a population of just over 21,000 people but issued 24,000 warrants which add up
to three warrants per Ferguson household.”
This, however, is not that unusual in
Missouri. An article by Joseph Miller, published in the March edition of The
Heartland Institute’s Budget & Tax News noted that
excessive use of traffic fines is not that uncommon in Missouri. “Of the 20
cities in the county with fine collections exceeding 20% of total revenue, 13
are contiguous with one another in a 25-square-mile section” and described this
as “a daily burden for local residents.”
What the media has reported regarding
the number of blacks killed in police shootings is a bit deceptive. There is no
question that “the disproportional number of blacks that are killed in police
shootings”, says Langston. “Blacks comprise 13 percent of the U.S. population,
but represent 32 percent of those killed by police between 2003 and 2009.”
That’s more than double the number of whites killed.
One must, however, consider the
greater number of criminal events that bring together blacks and the police
responding to them.
Being black in America inherently
evokes the historical fact that this nation practiced slavery prior to and since
its founding in 1788 when our Constitution was ratified, to Lincoln’s
Emancipation Proclamation in 1863. It wasn’t until 1964 when the Civil Rights
Act was passed, followed by the Voting Rights Act in 1965 that the
discrimination affecting the black community was fully
addressed.
Two generations of Americans, black,
white and other racial groups, have been born since then and these new
generations have no living memory of the Civil Rights movement or the riots that
occurred in cities like Los Angeles and Philadelphia. Between 1955 and 1977
there were more than thirty race riots in America. Younger Americans did not
experience them. Older Americans recall them and the protests in Ferguson evoked
disturbing memories.
As reported in a 2007 study released
by the National Urban League, “African-American men are more than twice as
likely to be unemployed as white males. They are nearly as likely to be
incarcerated, with average jail sentences about 10 months longer than those of
white men.” Between the ages of 15 and
34, the civil rights group noted that “black males are nine times more likely to
be killed by firearms and nearly eight times as likely to suffer from AIDS.” The
unemployment rates are comparable to those today, eight years
later.
A
2007 report by the U.S. Bureau of Statistics noted that, while only 13 percent
of the U.S. population, blacks “were the victims of 49 percent of all murders
and 15 percent of rapes, assaults, and other nonfatal violent crimes
nationwide.” Significantly, “Most of the black murder victims—93 percent—were
killed by other black people” while 85 percent of white victims were slain by
other white people.
One might conclude that murder is
rampant in America, but the reality is that homicides are at a 50-year low. The
peak homicide rate was in 1980. The rate began to grow in the mid-1960s, but
steadily dropped by the 1990s. Today’s murder rate is at the lowest point in the
past century.
What we are witnessing, however, is
the result of cultural issues that afflict the black community. Juan Williams, a
Fox News analyst, writing in 2007 noted that “One hard, unforgiving fact is that
70 percent of black children are born today to single mothers.” The school
dropout rate is “about 50 percent nationwide for black students.”
“Black youth culture is boiling over
with nihilism. It embraces failure and frustration, including random crime and
jail time,” wrote Williams.
Ferguson is an example of far larger
problems that afflict the black community. Only blacks can solve these problems.
One might have thought—and many
did—that the election of America’s first black President was going to make these
problems go away. Many blacks have entered the middle class, but the majority
encounters the problems endemic to the black community and, until its culture
and lifestyle choices change, those problems will be around for a long time to
come.
With a black President, a black
Attorney General, black members of Congress, black mayors and others
demonstrating how different 2015 is from 1965, laying blame on white racism is
no longer a valid excuse.
© Alan Caruba, 2015
2 comments:
"Ferguson is an example of far larger problems that afflict the black community"
Is the issue of social disintegration and dysfunction unique to the African-American community in the US or is it typical of black majority nations around the world? If the latter---which I suspect may be the case---then there may be no good solution on the horizon.
The problem seems to be easy street or working way. Training from children's parental units appears to make the difference between EBT and PHD.
Not that either is a sign of success in America today. Perhaps I should add PE versus JD degrees to that list.... Or Social Justice Warrior versus Productive Member of Society. Or "fill in the blank versus fill in the blank". Pretty sure the Romans enjoyed the decline - and I won't live long enough not to. Maybe.
Will probably be dead and gone by the time this is all sorted out and all the bodies are buried.
I no longer envy the youngsters...
Post a Comment