By Alan Caruba
Thanks to an infection and the
antibiotics taken to rid myself of it, I have had several days of being able to
do little more than watch the news on television, listen to it on the radio, and
reading about it in my daily edition of The Wall Street Journal. If there was
anything else happening in the world, you would not know it because it was 24-7
Baltimore, Baltimore, Baltimore.
Specifically, it was about the arrest
and death of Freddie Gray, a known drug dealer and user with an extensive rap
sheet. There are different descriptions of the manner of his death, but the
details of the autopsy are still obscure beyond a reference to having received a
blow to his spine. This is attributed to having been placed in the police van,
shackled hand and foot, but not having a safety belt applied.
The response from a certain element of
Baltimoreans was to begin to loot, vandalize and set fire to their own
neighborhoods by way of protesting alleged police brutality. This followed his
funeral on Monday. The Mayor’s response was to tell the police to stand down and
let the protesters have their way. When that predictably did not work, the
National Guard was called in and a curfew imposed.
Capping these events was the
indictment of the six arresting officers by the State’s Attorney General,
Marilyn Mosby that included charges of second-degree murder and involuntary
manslaughter. That seemed to appease the mob that passes for Baltimore’s
citizens.
I wish I could say I have sympathy for
Freddie Gray and his family, but I don’t. I wish I could say that I feel sorry
that Baltimore has been a state of decline and decay since the last riots in
1968, but no one asks why the trillions of dollars poured in comparable cities
since the days of Lyndon Johnson’s “War on Poverty” hasn’t demonstrated any
results.
I wish I could say that the connecting
factor between Baltimore, Detroit, and other Democrat-controlled cities was the
primary reason that their citizens suffer unemployment, why their children
attend schools that fail to teach them even fundamental skills, but what has
evolved in these distressed cities is a culture that does not emphasize
the traditional family, demand better education, and replaces the work ethic
with the “entitlement” check. The Baltimore mother who chastised her son to keep
him from participating in the riot is single and has five other children.
These cities are daily crime scenes.
The riot was a crime scene.
And who is accused of Freddie Gray’s
death? Members of the Baltimore Police Force who initially spotted Gray, a 25
year old with a criminal record, and went to investigate what they had observed.
He ran. They ran after him. That’s what we want and expect our police to
do.
The indictment,
a purely political act intended to quell the angry mood of those Baltimoreans
who protested by committing crimes, is an attack on every police officer in
America. Most are good men and women, but like any other profession, there are
some bad ones. The legion of police who protect us do not go around murdering
suspects indiscriminately.
Tell that to State
Attorney Mosby. Then consider that Freddie Gray’s attorney, William H.
Murphy, Jr. donated $5,000 to her campaign. Consider that her husband, Nick
Mosby, is a Baltimore city councilman with lots of reason to see the riots
quelled.
What these cities and the decades
reaching back to the 1960s all represent is a vocal resentment of police
authority. Back then they were called “pigs.” America has been drifting away
from the traditional respect and regard we have had for our police.
The problem isn’t the police.
It’s liberal notion that raising taxes
and heavily regulating businesses large and small will somehow attract them to
our cities. It doesn’t work that way. Our cities have become great dumping
grounds for people who interest the Democratic Party only around election
time.
And that is a problem for the police. It will be a growing
problem for everyone if we cannot return to a decent respect for our police.
So, for now, a pox on Baltimore and on
all the politicians from the President on down who keep telling us the police
are the problem, not the world of Freddie Gray’s roaming our city’s
streets.
© Alan Caruba, 2015
1 comment:
I was just thanking God last night that my family doesn't live in one of those large city hell holes. I don't even have to lock my doors here, and walk anywhere without even a thought of fear or concern. Last summer I visited one of those cities, and what happens? I get surrounded by several young negroes demanding my money. Let's just say I dealt with it, and they didn't get a cent. But the heck with that crap. Let them collapse. --Big_Al__
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