By Alan
Caruba
When you’ve lived over seven decades
in America, the news about another race riot is really not news. It’s just
another race riot.
The latest is Baltimore and the theme
for this one is police violence against an unarmed black youth. This was the
theme of the Ferguson, Missouri riots last year and has been a fairly common
theme since the arrival of the new century fifteen years ago. Such events
included riots in Cincinnati in 2001, the Oakland riots in 2009, and the two
most recent.
A December 2014 article in Real Clear
Politics by Jack
Kelly put the statistics in perspective. “Young black males are 21 times
more likely to be shot dead by police than are young white males, Pro Publica
said. But because more than two-thirds of police officers are white and blacks
commit about half of violent crimes, it stands to reason most police shootings
would involve a white cop and a black suspect.”
Largely unreported is that “Black cops
shot black suspects at essentially the same rate as white cops…”
For those of us outside of the black
community and living in safe suburban zones surrounding our cities, the riots
might as well be taking place on Mars. Why anyone would, as is often the case,
destroy their own neighborhood, loot and burn down businesses (often
black-owned) defies an answer.
Because riots offer television news
dramatic images of violence and destruction, one can depend on coverage for a
long as it lasts. Being photographed looting or engaging in violence against
police and others seems to be one of the “perks” of rioting. Baltimore’s riot
dominated the news on every channel Monday evening to the point one might
conclude that nothing else of any importance was occurring anywhere in the
world. The earthquake devastation in Nepal had to fight for the very few minutes
of coverage it received.
It is astonishing to recall that Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr. was able to lead many civil rights marches with so
little violence, but it was the years concurrent with and following the passage
of the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts in 1964 and 1965 that saw large riots
such as several in 1964 in Philadelphia, Chicago, and New York. There were three
just in New Jersey that year.
Having achieved the goals of the civil
rights movement, historic federal laws, one might have concluded that rioting
was no longer needed to call attention to the ills of the post-civil rights era.
You would have been wrong. The one
that got national attention was in the Watts area of Los Angeles in 1965. The
pattern continued with riots in 1966 and 1967. In April and May 1968 after Dr.
King was assassinated, there were riots in 125 cities. The 1980s and 1990’s had
their share of riots.
Just add Baltimore’s Freddie Gray’s
name to the list of those who died either during an arrest or in police custody,
sparking a riot. In the past the public generally backed the police, but now
they are being depicted as undisciplined killers. The reality is that the police
are the thin line of defense between us and the criminals whose job is theirs to
arrest and detain. That occurs all the time. Police have more reasons to act in
their own defense in a week than most of us will have in a
lifetime.
As we learned from Ferguson, the
original allegations against the police officer were totally false. Let it also
be said that is not the only reason riots have occurred. A lot of them just seem
to reflect feelings of alienation, anger, and dissatisfaction that bubble below
the surface in black urban enclaves. Nothing is likely to change that.
So, as Baltimore cleans up the mess
left behind by the latest riot, be assured that another is right around the
corner somewhere. There is a core of law-breakers and angry blacks for whom
virtually anything is excuse enough for a riot.
We had to pass through a Civil War to
resolve the race-based ills of that era. Americans elected the first black
American as President in 2008, but his race has not reduced riots during his
time in office.
The lesson that we can draw from this
is that, if you put enough people together in close proximity in a city where
there is both wealth and poverty, where there are economic disparities between
whites and blacks, you need only wait a while for the next
riot.
Alan Caruba, 2015
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