Some
numbers on African-Americans versus police
Let’s throw out a few numbers so we can put in perspective
the NFL players taking a knee during the playing of the national anthem. Many
say they are protesting against police treatment of blacks and racial
discrimination. We might ask just how much sense their protest makes.
According to The Washington Post, 737 people have been shot and killed
by police this year in the United States. Of that number, there were 329
whites, 165 blacks, 112 Hispanics, 24 members of other races and 107 people
whose race was unknown (http://tinyurl.com/zyz2tpq). In Illinois, home
to one of our most dangerous cities – Chicago – 18 people have been shot and
killed by police this year. In the city itself, police have shot and killed 10
people and shot and wounded 10 others. Somebody should ask the kneeling black
NFL players why they are protesting this kind of killing in the Windy City and
ignoring other sources of black death.
Here are the Chicago numbers for the ignored deaths. So far in 2017,
there have been 533 murders and 2,880 shootings. On average, a person
is shot every two hours and 17 minutes and murdered every 12 1 ⁄ 2 hours
(http://tinyurl.com/o36cqfc). In 2016, when Colin Kaepernick started taking a
knee, Chicago witnessed 806 murders and 4,379 shootings. It turns out that most of the
murder victims are black. Adding to the tragedy is the fact that Chicago has a
12.7 percent murder clearance rate. That means that when a black person is
murdered, his perpetrator is found and charged with his murder less than 13
percent of the time.
Similar statistics regarding police killing blacks versus
blacks killing blacks apply to many of our predominantly black urban centers,
such as Philadelphia, Baltimore, New Orleans, St. Louis and Oakland. Many Americans, including me, see the black
NFL player protest of police brutality as pathetic, useless showboating.
Seeing as these players have made no open protest against the thousands of
blacks being murdered and maimed by blacks, they must view it as trivial in
comparison with the police killings. Most of the police killings fit into the
category of justified homicide.
NFL players are not by themselves. How much condemnation do black
politicians, civil rights leaders and liberal whites give to the wanton black
homicides in our cities? When have you heard them condemning the very
low clearance rate, whereby most black murderers get away with murder? Do you
believe they would be just as silent if it were the Ku Klux Klan committing the
murders?
What’s to blame for this mayhem? If you ask an intellectual,
a leftist or an academic in a sociology or psychology department, he will tell
you that it is caused by poverty, discrimination and a lack of opportunities.
But the black murder rate and other crime statistics in the 1940s and ’50s were
not nearly so high as they are now. I wonder whether your intellectual, leftist
or academic would explain that we had less black poverty, less racial
discrimination and far greater opportunities for blacks during earlier periods
than we do today. He’d have to be an unrepentant idiot to make such an utterance.
So, what can be done? Black people need to find new heroes.
Right now, at least in terms of the support given, their heroes are criminals
such as Baltimore’s Freddie Gray, Ferguson’s Michael Brown and Florida’s
Trayvon Martin. Black support tends to go toward the criminals in the community rather
than to the overwhelming number of people in the community who are law-abiding.
That needs to end. What also needs to end is the lack of respect for and
cooperation with police officers. Some police are crooked, but black
people are likelier to be victims of violent confrontations with police
officers than whites simply because blacks commit more violent crimes than
whites per capita.
For a race of people, these crime statistics are by no means
flattering, but if something good is to be done about it, we cannot fall prey
to the blame games that black politicians, black NFL players, civil rights
leaders and white liberals want to play. If their vision is accepted, we can
expect little improvement of the status quo.
Walter E. Williams is an economist at George Mason University.
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