By Alan
Caruba
When I look back at the Civil Rights
movement of the 1950s and 60s, I marvel at how naïve I was that the passage of
major legislation was going to “solve” the problem of discord between the white
and black race.
On May 3, the Wall Street Journal
reported on a survey regarding racial disturbances around the nation such as
those that wracked Baltimore. “A resounding 96% of adults surveyed said it was
likely there would be additional racial disturbances this summer…” To nobody’s
surprise, blacks and whites “viewed the situation
differently.”
“Asked to choose between two possible
explanations for recent events, 60% of blacks said they reflected ‘long-standing
frustrations about police mistreatment of African-Americans.’” Some 27% of black
respondents said they thought the disturbances were caused by people as an
excuse “to engage in looting and violence.” I favor the latter explanation
because I doubt that our nation’s police forces engage in deliberate harassment
and mistreatment of blacks.
Indeed, Baltimore has a back Mayor,
Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, a black police chief, and many blacks among his force.
If the issue was the police, then no city in America is safe and that is just
not so. Unfortunately, the foolishness of Baltimore’s Mayor, who told the force
to stand down and let the rioters have their way, was then demonstrated by her
request that the Department of Justice (DOJ) launch an investigation of the
city’s police force.
The problem with that is that the
DOJ’s Civil Rights Division has only fifty employees responsible for handling
labor-intensive ‘pattern or practice’ investigations among the nation’s 18,000
state and local forces. There is no way
the Baltimore investigation will produce anything of useful information. It is
far more likely that the outcome will be more political than demonstrative of
trends.
What is generally not being noticed is
that the Obama administration, as reported in Politico.com on May 8, “has opened
more than twenty such investigations into local law enforcement agencies “most
of which result in either a settlement agreement with local officials or a
lawsuit that pushes legally binding reform.”
I
have come to the view that the most racially divisive leader in America is our
first African-American President. Why else has Rev. Al Sharpton become his most
widely recognized “adviser” and why are administration figures are less likely
to be found honoring fallen police officers than the alleged black victims?
Three were sent to Freddie Gray’s funeral and none to the funeral of the slain
police officers. The First Lady, too, has been stirring up racial
discord.
Referring to the Baltimore riot, he
said that “we as a nation have to do some soul-searching” when as William
McGurn of The Wall Street Journal noted the trillions spent on liberal
programs, personified by LBJ’s “War on Poverty”, have not succeeded in reducing
poverty and have contributed to creating whole populations that live off of
government handouts of one sort or another.
“While the Great Society’s billions
were creating a culture of dependency,” said McGurn, “South Korea—with its
emphasis on trade and global competition—rose from the ashes of a terrible war
to become the world’s 12th
largest economy.” This occurred over the same time period the liberal dependency
programs and liberal governance of many U.S. cities created the problem we are
addressing and discussing today.
Nor is the answer for the federal
government to take over the management of the nation’s police forces. We have
already seen how it has ruined the educational system and is now doing the same
to our health system.
Are their differences between whites
and blacks? Yes, but they are economic. Middle and upper class blacks
share the outlook of their white counterparts. They look at the inner cities and
they understand that decades of liberal governance has driven out businesses
large and small, along with anyone who could afford to leave. Yes, there was
“white flight”, but they were joined by blacks who saw there was no future to be
had there for their children. The rest are trapped.
So, will there be more riots and
disturbances in our cities this summer? Yes, that would appear to be the case.
So long as police are not allowed to take action against the instigators and
perpetrators, that is a given.
Not until this nation returns to the
high levels of respect for the men and women who put their lives on the line
every day will we see a cessation of such events. My experience and the nation’s
over the past six decades is an indication that some pundit will be holding
forth on this topic six decades from now…only it will be
worse.
© Alan Caruba, 2015
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