By Rich Lowry
Tuesday, January 31, 2023
There’s nothing white supremacy can’t do.
It is supposedly so pervasive and powerful that it can
cause black men to sign up to serve as police officers in a majority-black city
and severely beat a black arrestee.
It is to the contemporary Left what capital was to Marx,
sex was to Freud, and gravity was to Newton.
It is the King Charles head of American public life, a
matter of obsession that comes up in debates and contexts where it has no
possible relevance.
An opinion piece at CNN by former Obama official Van
Jones was headlined, “The police who killed Tyre Nichols were Black. But they
might still have been driven by racism.”
A piece at the New York Times on Memphis related the view that
it “is the system and the tactics that foster racism and violence,”
not “the specific racial identities of officers.”
This argument gets points for novelty but none for
plausibility. The Memphis officers who brutalized Tyre Nichols may be guilty of
many things — incompetence, malice, criminal wrongdoing — but white supremacy
is unlikely to be one of them.
Presumably these officers don’t all hate their parents,
children, neighbors, and colleagues as unworthy, racially inferior people who
deserve no protection under our laws.
Maybe it’s only as police officers that these men become
unwitting tools of white supremacy? This makes no sense, either. The Atlantic noted
in an article last year that FBI data showed Memphis to be the most violent
metropolitan jurisdiction in the United States in 2020. According to the New
York Times, Memphis had nearly 350 murders in 2021, when New York City — 13
times larger — had about 480.
Of course, these murders disproportionately affect young
black men. Isn’t this just how a white supremacist would like it —
overwhelmingly black neighborhoods under siege as black men kill other black
men? Why would white supremacism want to interfere with this dynamic by
deploying police units to try to quell the disorder?
Indeed, the false consciousness in Memphis must run deep.
Cerelyn Davis, the city’s first African-American woman police chief, created
the just-disbanded special police unit implicated in the Nichols beating.
Understandably, she thought it was very important to get a handle on rising
homicides and dangerous reckless driving, but, unbeknownst to her, she was just
serving the man.
The obsession with white supremacy is perverse and
insulting on several levels.
It implies that if urban neighborhoods are under-policed
and dangerous, that is their natural state. But if they are robustly policed to
try to make them safer — a worthy project that tends to be supported by people
of all races — that is somehow an inherently “white” initiative.
It suggests that good African-American, Hispanic, and
Asian cops are dupes, puppets on the string of nefarious white people using
them to perpetuate white rule.
And, finally, if taken seriously, it would vitiate the
agency of the cops involved in the abuse of Tyre Nichols. How can they fully
take the blame if an ineradicable, unavoidable force was ultimately responsible
for their behavior?
The explanation for what happened in Memphis is more
straightforward than any of this. Police are given considerable authority, and
human beings — of all races and creeds, in all times and places — have a
natural tendency to abuse authority unless constrained by institutions, norms,
and accountability.
If you are unwilling to believe that the cops in this
case were self-loathing black men, then their behavior becomes a function of
poor training and supervision, abysmal decision-making, anger in the moment,
free-floating cruelty, or some combination of these things.
The Left elevates race above all the other factors that
might play into a police encounter gone horribly wrong because the racial
interpretation allows it to make a broader critique of American society and
force wide-ranging political and social changes.
This is a very useful narrative, which is why the Left is
loath to give it up even in an incident involving black cops.
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