By Niger Innis
Friday, January 02, 2015
Earlier this week, a black Muslim radical posted on his
Instagram page that he would be "be putting wings on pigs today.” He
explained that “they take one of ours...lets take two of theirs." Hours
later, he assassinated two police officers.
There is no one to blame for these murderers other than
the murderer. He alone is responsible. But in our efforts to prevent future
violence – against victims of police brutality, as well as other victims of
crime, including murdered men and women in blue who serve and protect our
communities – it is important for leaders across the nation to put an end to
the gross racialization of our politics, one that seems to see so many issues
only in turns of race, and one that places blame based on the color of skin.
Starting with the President of the United States,
followed by his Attorney General, the establishment media, African-American
members of Congress, and dozens of professional athletes, protest against the
loss of black lives has become a cause celeb. To be sure, every death is a
tragedy, and every crime – whether committed by a police officer or anyone else
– should be prosecuted. But the simple truth is that sometimes police must act
in self-defense to protect themselves. It appears that that may well have been
what happened in Ferguson, Missouri.
Many of the protesters in Ferguson took to the streets in
protest before the facts were known. When the grand jury declined to indict,
protests began immediately, well before anyone had a chance to read the
evidence that was presented to the grand jury. This sends the message that,
regardless of the facts of a case, the police are by their nature dangerous,
corrupt, and racist. Inadvertently or not, that attitude creates a wedge
between the law enforcement community and the minority communities they serve.
There is no doubt that there are times when police fail
to adequately serve African-American communities. When that happens, there is
reason for protest. But there is also no doubt that police departments are
responsible for saving hundreds, and probably thousands, of black lives every
year. Can self-appointed defenders of the African American community Jesse
Jackson and Al Sharpton say the same?
That service to African-American communities should not
be belittled or forgotten.
Consider that in 1990, 2,605 New Yorkers were murdered.
But after Mayor Giuliani and his police commissioners instituted enhanced law
enforcement tactics – the same tactics that are under attack today – the
average number of New Yorkers murdered per year rarely fell by 70 percent. That
is nearly 2,000 lives saved every year in just one American city, thanks in
large part to improved policing.
Before the past twenty years of enhanced policing,
African-Americans and Hispanics constituted the overwhelming majority of murder
victims, and when the enhanced police reforms (like the broken windows
strategy) made by Giuliani and kept in place by his successor drove the murder
rate down by over 70 percent, the biggest beneficiaries of the enhanced law
enforcement tactics were African-Americans and Hispanics. I celebrate the fact
that there are thousands of my fellow Americans, including thousands of my
fellow African-Americans, alive today because of this reduction in the crime
rate.
This history raises several questions that those opposed to
enhanced police tactics should consider before their next protest. What happens
if the Obama Justice Department's "reforms" against police backfire
by handicapping the law enforcement community? Who would that hurt the most?
There are approximately 130 African-American deaths each
year at the hands of police. Some of them are not in self-defense and should
most certainly be condemned and prosecuted. But while we are working to prevent
similar deaths in the future, let’s not increase the likelihood that ten,
twenty, or thirty times that many citizens, many of them men and women of
color, will be victims of violent crime that has been successfully reduced and
deterred by the enhanced police tactics of the past twenty years.
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