By Wilfred
Reilly
Friday,
May 19, 2023
Joseph
Robinette Biden, our only president, just provided us with a classic example of
postmodern wordplay. In a recent speech to graduating seniors at Howard
University, the octogenarian pol described “white supremacy” as the “most dangerous
terrorist threat” —
at least on the domestic front — to the United States. That’s arguably true,
but it’s worth unpacking what exactly this means, and why Uncle Joe was so
eager to announce it.
It is
actually accurate that, largely because riot and “common crime” deaths do not
count toward terror-death totals (“terrorism,” roughly, is the use of
paramilitary force against civilian populations to achieve a political aim),
right-wing domestic terrorists do kill more U.S. citizens per year than do
left-wing domestic terrorists. However, according to the centrist and
well-respected Center for
Strategic and International Studies, the average number of annual deaths caused by
all American-based terrorists between 2014 and 2021 was 31.
Even
this represents a jump from the period between 1995’s Oklahoma City bombing and
2013, during which the domestic terror toll topped eight only
twice. Saying that white supremacists are the biggest “home front” threat means
in practice that all of them combined kill perhaps 20 American citizens
annually, versus a toll of maybe ten for antifa/black bloc, the “Not F***ing
Around Coalition,” and the like. CSIS records 38 white-supremacist and
“like-minded” terror attacks in the fairly typical year of 2021, versus 31 for
“anarchists” and so-called anti-fascists.
Let’s
put this in more context. Obviously, almost all serious
terrorist groups are international in range, and very many are specifically
Islamic — the stereotype of the Arab terrorist has been around for decades and
didn’t come from nowhere. At present, al-Qaeda, the group responsible for
nearly 3,000 deaths from the 9/11 attacks, has cells worldwide and controls a
considerable amount of territory in Mali, Somalia, and Yemen. ISIS (the Islamic
State of Iraq and Syria) is based in those troubled nations where once Eden
lay. New player
Boko Haram is
Nigerian and in practice controls much of the northeast of that rising
Motherland power.
Obviously,
none of these truly major terror organizations — some of which, in practice,
come frighteningly close to being unrecognized nations — qualifies as a U.S.
domestic actor. And, speaking frankly, terrorism overall is probably no longer
a top-five security threat to the United States — when compared with the rapid
rise of China, the opiate and
fentanyl epidemic (which
killed 110,000 Americans last year), surging crime (murders hit 20,000 annually
back in 2020), and so forth.
So, why
the national-level focus on the rather niche problem of white supremacy — on 20
deaths per year as vs. 20,000? I sincerely think it’s because what some see as
white conservative perfidy can safely be targeted in modern America, with
little fear of “cancellation” or political backlash, at least from the Left.
Since the civil-rights era of the 1960s, working-poor white Yanks have been
very much cemented into liberal mythos as an enemy group: the whey-faced,
dirty-handed rioters screaming abuse at sainted MLK. And, unlike other groups
that may sometimes be unpopular — “hood” black dudes, “slut-walking” feminists,
Muslim Islamists, the over-the-top Pride partiers we’ll all see in a month —
they form a population that can generally be attacked without significant
social risk. They are the Default Villains of the Prevailing Narrative.
This
reality helps explain a phenomenon that is facially baffling to my Asian and
West African friends: the constant near-beatification of unsympathetic black
criminals killed during violent conflicts with whites or the police. My recent
column on this topic discusses
this phenomenon in the context of the death of Jordan Neely, a vagrant with 42
previous criminal arrests who was tragically killed during an incident on a New
York City subway train. However, the trend dates back more than a decade,
encompassing the cases of Jacob Blake, Alton Sterling, Michael Brown, and
dozens more.
On the
surface, objectively, this pattern is genuinely hard for many citizens to
understand. Any death or serious injury is unfortunate, to be sure. But most or
all of the deaths just listed seem legally justified. Jacob Blake, for example,
had been accused of sexual assault and returned to
the home of his purported victim despite her protests (the charge was later dropped). He was
non-fatally shot by police after he fought them for several minutes. For his
part, Officer Darren Wilson, who shot Michael Brown, was cleared of any
wrongdoing on
self-defense grounds by multiple agencies — including the Obama Justice
Department.
Even if
you disagree with applying the word “justified” on some case-by-case basis, it
remains fair to ask why such a hysterical level of mourning invariably erupts
around what empirically are unremarkable local crime stories. Frenetic national
media coverage of the Blake shooting, recall, helped kick off the Kenosha
riots, which made Kyle Rittenhouse a household name. Objectively speaking, why
should George Floyd — and not, say, hero cop David Dorn — be buried in a
golden casket after
four televised funerals? Why are there statues of Floyd in several cities?
The
answer is that certain deaths and harms feed into a preexisting narrative: that
the United States of 2023 is a white-supremacist country, where the political
Left continues to struggle alone against this entrenched evil, and where those
killed by the “white power structure” should be presumed to be heroes or at
least martyrs. Biden, by searching out some technical category within which he
could call white supremacy our greatest national foe, served this self-same
narrative during his Howard speech.
The big
problem here, bluntly, is that the story line Mr. Biden just promoted on the
national stage has been false for decades. Per the proud HBCU faculty of Tuskegee
Institute, the last recorded
U.S. lynchings took
place in 1964. Violent crime involving both blacks and whites is today just 3
percent of all serious “Index” crime . . . and it slants
80–90 percent black on white. What of the police “genocide” we keep hearing about, from
presumably serious people? Well, in the most recent year on record, the total
number of unarmed black men killed by on-duty U.S. law-enforcement
officers was twelve.
In the
real world, the reason why today’s BLM stories are so unsympathetic and bizarre
is that they are the best available in a tiny pool: There are no real Nazi
lynchings or Terminator-style racist cops savagely killing innocents. In this
real world, I have a real proposal for the president: Stop race-baiting and
fearmongering, and let’s widen our focus broadly — across avenging not merely
the 20 or so annual victims of white-supremacist hate, but also the other
20,000 people murdered here every year.
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