By Alan Caruba
The pat answer for black complaints
about events these days is “white racism.”
One rarely, if ever, reads or hears anything about black racism, but if
you ask, many blacks will acknowledge it.
As the 50th anniversary of the Selma, Alabama
confrontation was recalled, there was little mention of a multitude of black
violence events that continue to either go unreported or reported to reflect
“white racism” even when it is not a factor.
In 2013, Colin Flaherty published
“White Girl Bleed a Lot: The Return of Racial Violence to America and How the
Media Ignore It.” His new book, “Don’t
Make the Black Kids Angry: The Hoax of Black Victimization and How We Enable It”
was published in February. It picks up from where the first book left off,
filled with hundreds of stories of black-on-white violence that, as often as
not, did not receive much attention.
By contrast, when a black youth is
killed as in the cases of Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown, the media ignored
the violence that led to it. The Department of Justice (DOJ) and local
investigations found that both killings were self-defense. Even questions of
whether the youth’s civil rights were abused found that they were not.
In early March an 86-page DOJ
report about the shooting of Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, confirmed that
Darren Wilson, a white police officer, acted in self-defense. Also in February,
a DOJ report exonerated George Zimmerman, a white man, for shooting Martin. When
a case was brought against him in Florida in July 2013, the jury acquitted him.
The most recent case is the shooting
on Saturday, March 7, of Tony Robinson in Madison, Wisconsin. The 19-year-old
black youth was shot as the result of an altercation with a white police
officer. News reports stressed Robinson was “unarmed”, but downplayed the fact
that the veteran officer had been struck in the head and knocked down. Also
largely unreported was that Robinson had pled guilty last year to armed robbery
and was serving a three-year probation term.
At what point do we begin to ask why
black youths are behaving in this fashion toward police officers? Theirs is a
culture in serious trouble.
As someone who spent years in the
South when “Jim Crow” laws were still in effect I had an understanding of how
and why the civil rights movement began in earnest in the late 1950s and gained
momentum throughout the 1960s. In 1964 Congress passed a Civil Rights Act and in
1965 it passed the Voting Rights Act. Naively, I and lots of others, white and
black, thought it would resolve many of the problems that had afflicted
blacks.
A half century since then, however,
Flaherty’s new book documents the racially-based animosity that exists
throughout elements of America’s black population and how it demonstrates itself
in acts of violence. The accounts are often
shocking.
“Black crime and violence
against whites, gays, women, seniors, young people and lots of others is
astronomically out of proportion,” says Flaherty in his new book, following up
that assertion with 500 pages of events and pages of detailed endnotes.
A professional journalist, Flaherty
opined that “In 2013 more and more people began to figure out that the
traditional excuses—jobs, poverty, schooling, whatever—for black crime and
mayhem were not really working anymore.”
“Now they have a new excuse. The
ultimate excuse: White racism is everywhere. White racism is permanent. White
racism explains everything.”
The perception of racial issues in
America says Flaherty, involves “A new generation of black leaders and white
enablers (who) want to remove black violence from the table and focus on the Big
Lie: The war on Black People and how racist white people are waging it. All the
time. Everywhere. When just the opposite is true.”
Flaherty’s book documents “black
resentment, black hostility, and black racial consciousness that permeates every
part of black media, black churches, black families, and black schooling.”
Sadly, this also manifests itself as black-on-black
violence.
That hostility has also been witnessed
in the acts and words of America’s first black President and his black Attorney
General. How did Barack Obama get elected and reelected if “white racism” is
so widespread?
Obama and Sharpton |
Race has played a role in American
history from the day when the first indentured African was brought here in 1654,
up to and after the Civil War that was fought to end the slave trade, and
through to current times when, based on all the laws that have been passed to
protect everyone’s civil rights, one might think that the problems associated
with race would have been resolved.
The problems haven’t been resolved
because too much animosity exists and, too frequently, as Flaherty documents, it
is black animosity toward whites.
Most people, white and black, wish
this would end.
Editor’s Note: “Don’t Make the Black
Kids Angry” can be purchased from Amazon.com and other Internet book outlets. It
is priced at $19.72 on Amazon and $6.99 for the Kindle version.
© Alan Caruba, 2015
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