By Alan
Caruba
When you
get right down to it, the protests said to be about the shooting of Michael
Brown are really about how differently the black and white communities view the police. Blacks may want and need protection, but they don’t have the level of
confidence in the police that whites express.
That
protection occasionally includes having to shoot those who threaten the lives
of police officers. If the Ferguson and other city protests are against that they
are as irrational as the burning down of the Brown family’s church.
What we are witnessing is a rejection of
the rule of law and those who put their lives on the line to protect society.
The
President got involved, predictably urging that violence be avoided, but also
saying that the protesters should “stay the course.”
Here
is an excerpt from The New York Times:
“Some of the national leaders met with President Obama on Nov. 5
for a gathering that included a conversation about Ferguson.
According to the Rev. Al Sharpton, who has appeared frequently in
St. Louis with the Brown family and delivered a speech at Mr. Brown’s funeral,
Mr. Obama “was concerned about Ferguson staying on course in terms of pursuing
what it was that he knew we were advocating. He said he hopes that we’re doing
all we can to keep peace.”
Protest leaders said wholesale change was ultimately what they
were demanding, though not all agreed on what that meant. Some called for the
removal of the Ferguson police chief or the entire department. Others said they
want the police to wear cameras; civilian review boards for all police
shootings; or a requirement that ethnic and racial makeup of police departments
match the communities they serve.
“It must be changing how police and citizens relate to one
another,” said Michael T. McPhearson, the co-chairman of the Don’t Shoot
Coalition. “We’re calling for police accountability, police transparency,
changing how the police do their work. If there’s an indictment or if there’s
not an indictment, we still have that work to do.”
As reported by the Times, according to the black community leaders
the problem was the police, not the community. In an appalling lack of judgment
and prudence, The New York Times published the name of the street on which Officer Wilson lives! A Twitter user published what he claimed was the address
and a photo of his home.
As far as the media was concerned the story was about police
officer Wilson, not Michael Brown or the protesters, except insofar as they
provided dramatic video. The story became a repeat of charges against police of
“racial profiling” and other actions resulting from just doing their job.
As we know, lots of the violence took the form of looting and
destruction of Ferguson businesses occurring before and since the grand jury
decision. What has surprised many observers was the way neither the Missouri
National Guard, called out by the Governor, nor other police authorities engaged
the “protester’s” criminal behavior, arresting few while concentrating on
protecting the court house and police headquarters.
One of the dramatic forms
of protest was to burn police cars.
I recall an event involving President Obama and a police officer
when, on July 16, 2009, Harvard University professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr., an
African-American, was arrested at his Cambridge, Massachusetts home by a local
police officer responding to a 911 caller’s report that men were breaking into
and entering the residence. As the facts came out, professor Gates had returned
home from a trip to China and found the front door jammed shut. With the help
of his driver, they tried to force it open. When the police officer, James Crowley,
showed up responding that what well could be a crime in progress, Gates was
less than cooperative and charged with disorderly conduct.
The charges were dropped, but the event invoked a national debate
about “racial profiling” by police. On July 22, President Obama commented on
the incident, criticizing the arrest and Officer Crowley’s actions. The
national response was a massive rejection of the President’s comment and, two
days later, a photo op was staged at the White House where both Officer Crowley
and professor Gates were seen with the President enjoying a beer together.
Indeed, it became known as the “Beer Summit”; all because of Obama’s assumption
that racial profiling, not the actual facts of the event, was the reason Gates
was charged.
Who doesn’t like the police? People who tend to get questioned by
them and who get arrested by them. Many of those people are black because a
significant amount of crime in America is perpetrated by blacks and a
significant percentage of those incarcerated in our prisons are black. Who have
been their victims? As often as not, other blacks.
As John Lott, president of the Crime Prevention Research Center,
noted in a Daily Caller.com commentary, “The average black person is
6.5 times more likely to be murdered than the average white person. Over nine
out of every ten black people who were murdered were murdered by other black
people.” And many were young men like Michael Brown. The slaughter in cities
like Chicago, Detroit, and St. Louis is commonplace and appalling.
As the facts of the Brown shooting came out most whites
concluded that Brown was a thug and, indeed, a large one at six feet, four
inches and weighing in at over 300 pounds. The “gentle giant” was caught on
video threatening a store employee after stealing some cigarillos. Even though
he was “unarmed”, a fact repeated in every story, the grand jury concluded that
he had attacked Officer Wilson who then had acted in self-defense.
I do not want to appear to condemn “all” blacks because to do so would
be idiotic. The criticism here is directed at cultural values that are well
established and documented, but that does not mean that “all” blacks share
them. Many have achieved success since the days of the civil rights movement
and one can only hope that many more blacks will join them, be lifted out of
poverty and freed from poorly performing schools. One can hope the same for
others as well.
In cities and towns where blacks are a significant part of the
population they are likely to need more police protection than whites. And many
of the police who provide that protection are white. I guarantee you that the next time a black
person feels threatened and calls the police they are not going to ask what
race the officer is.
© Alan Caruba, 2014
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