By Victor Davis Hanson
Thursday, August 21, 2014
Violence following the recent fatal shooting of an
unarmed robbery suspect in Ferguson, Missouri, has tragically followed a
predictable script.
On average, more than 6,000 African-Americans are killed
by gun violence each year. That startling figure is nearly equal to all of the
U.S. combat fatalities incurred in both Afghanistan and Iraq over some 13
years. African-Americans are the victims in about half of the homicides in
America each year despite the fact that blacks represent only about 13 percent
of the U.S. population.
One would think that these alarming statistics would
provoke the sort of protests that we've seen in Ferguson, but that is not the
case. Nor does racial unrest automatically follow cases in which white police
officers fatally shoot black criminal suspects. Only a small handful of such
instances trigger outrage in the black community.
Instead, the sort of civil unrest we're seeing in
Ferguson is most likely to be ignited by the infrequent and disparate cases in
which someone white, whether a police officer or not, fatally shoots an unarmed
African-American.
Controversy, for example, arose over George Zimmerman's
fatal shooting of unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin in Florida. Now, small-town
Ferguson is in an uproar over a police officer's fatal shooting of unarmed
18-year-old Michael Brown.
There is a second theme in such cases. The media almost
invariably distorts the facts, sometimes deliberately seeking to incite
tensions. In the Trayvon Martin case, journalists published photos of Martin as
a diminutive adolescent, not more recent pictures of Martin as a 17-year old
who was much taller than Zimmerman.
Zimmerman was referred to by the New York Times as a
"white Hispanic" (a term not usually accorded those of mixed
ancestry). ABC News was accused of airing footage of Zimmerman shortly after
his encounter with Martin that concealed the severity of Zimmerman's head
injuries. NBC edited a recording of Zimmerman's 911 call to police in a way that
suggested Zimmerman was a racist. CNN falsely speculated that Zimmerman may
have used the racial slur "coon" during his 911 call.
In the Brown case, the media has rushed to portray the
victim as a "gentle giant" who was almost certainly gunned down by a
racist, trigger-happy cop. Only days later it was reported that just minutes
before his death, the 6-foot-4, 292-pound Brown had allegedly committed a
strong-armed robbery, bullying and assaulting a store owner half his size --
and had been almost immediately been stopped not far away for walking down the
middle of the road.
A third theme is the entrance of Al Sharpton, Jesse
Jackson and the New Black Panther Party. Almost immediately, they incite
tensions by issuing wild, unfounded charges. Jackson said of the Martin
shooting that "targeting, arresting, convicting blacks and ultimately
killing us is big business." Jackson just called the Brown shooting a
"state execution." Sharpton called the legal acquittal of Zimmerman
an "atrocity." In the Zimmerman case, the new Black Panther Party put
a bounty on his head, and in Missouri it called for violence against the
police.
Fourth, demagogic politicians use these tragedies for
political advantage -- usually in ways that only make things worse. Libertarian
Sen. Rand Paul, who is eyeing a 2016 presidential run, blamed the police for
their overt military appearance and their crowd-control tactics. Yet street
violence still persisted days after police in military-style riot gear were
pulled from the scene -- until finally there were requests for National Guard
intervention.
President Obama did not soothe tensions when he claimed
that Trayvon Martin looked like the son he never had, an implication that any
president of the United States might have greater sympathy with those who
shared a similar appearance. Obama initially weighed in on the Brown case
before all the details had emerged, faulting both sides equally for the
violence. In 2009, when police arrested Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates at
his home, Obama blasted the police as racial stereotypers and thereby only
spiked tensions.
Finally, these shootings for weeks on end spark racial
finger-pointing. Liberals acknowledge high black violent-crime rates but cite
poverty, racism and unfair police enforcement as the catalysts. Conservatives
counter that high rates of single-parent families, dependence on government
entitlements, and glorification of misogyny and violence in popular culture
account for inordinate black violent-crime rates.
Eventually, the unrest peaks, then abates, and the
country goes back to business as usual -- a little more racially divided as we
await the next predictable controversy.
Meanwhile, we might remember that the American experiment
to unite various racial and ethnic groups into one culture is as noble as it is
rare in history. When it has previously been tried in the modern world --
Yugoslavia, Cyprus, Iraq, Rwanda, Syria, Congo -- it usually had failed
spectacularly.
What will save us are not more elite and self-serving
"conversations" about racial difference, but a new classically
liberal effort to consider race irrelevant in our shared American culture.
Perhaps if we started treating people as unique individuals and not as
hyphenated and anonymous groups, we could deal with these tragic shootings as
individual tragedies rather than collective conspiracies.
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