This appeared here and I would like to thank Alan for allowing me to publish his work. RK
I don’t know
when it occurred to me that I had gone from having shaken hands with Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr. to being called a white racist, but apparently I was not paying
attention.
Neither were a
lot of others of my generation who had welcomed and supported the Civil Rights
movement only to discover we were not going to hear a word of thanks. Younger
generations have suffered the same indignity.
On Saturday,
August 24, the NAACP is sponsoring a march in Washington, D.C. to commemorate
the fiftieth anniversary of Dr. King’s famed “I have a dream” speech given on
August 28, 1963. One wonders if the first black President of the United States
will put in an appearance, but the White House did not have anything scheduled
on its website.
The whole nation
went through the trial of George Zimmerman, the “white” Hispanic who shot
Trayvon Martin, apparently the epitome of the virtues of black youth despite
having been suspended from school several times and guilty of infractions that
often put others his age in jail. Had Zimmerman not shot him, Trayvon would
surely have gone to jail for assaulting him.
Although the
rate of juvenile incarceration has dropped 41% from its peak in 1995 and is
down among all racial groups, black youth are nearly five times more likely to
be incarcerated as their white peers. Latino and American Indian youth are two
to three times more likely to find themselves behind bars as white boys and
girls.
I have heard all
the sociological explanations about blacks and the criminal justice system. I
am concerned that too many within the nation’s “African-American” population
simply do not grow up with or absorb “white” attitudes about staying in school,
getting a job, and raising a family; not all, but not enough.
To all the
blacks who stayed in school, went to college, married and are raising a family
in the suburbs, my apologies for seeming to lump you in with those who did not
and thank you for not adopting victimhood as your mantra.
There is good
news about blacks in America. U.S. Census statistics as of 2010 counted 2.4
million black military veterans that year. In 2010, 82% of blacks 25 and older
had a high school diploma or higher degree. Indeed, 18% of that cohort had a
bachelor’s degree or higher, and 1.5 million had an advanced degree. In 2010,
there were 2.9 million blacks enrolled in college, an increase of 1.7 million
since 1990.
And then there
is the bad news. Blacks represent 13% of the population, but according to a
fact sheet of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People,
blacks “now constitute nearly one million of the total 2.3 million” Americans
behind bars.
In New York
City, the successful “stop and frisk” police procedure has been deemed
prejudicial by a judge who ordered that it be stopped. It is prejudicial if you
parse the word and find it means to “pre-judge” an individual or situation that
you may deem a potential danger.
Everyone
profiles everyone else all the time.
The NAACP’s
super sensitivity about the one HALF of the President’s racial identity that is
black was recently demonstrated when a rodeo clown donned an Obama mask as part
of entertaining the crowd. This device, using presidential masks, has been
commonplace for decades, but the particular incident had the Missouri NAACP
demanding that the Secret Service and other law enforcement agencies
investigate it as a “hate crime.” The President hasn’t spoken a word about this
absurd charge.
Indeed, in 2008
when Obama was first elected, we were all assured that the nation was entering
a “post racial” period in which whites and blacks would join hands and put the
past behind them. Despite the growth of the black middle class and other
examples of the benefits that flowed from the 1964 Civil Rights Act and other
protections, the ugly truth is that too many blacks seem trapped in a 1960’s
time warp with the same accusations and resentments still being expressed.
How much
progress has been made?
Since the
Zimmerman trial it is now common knowledge that 97% of the murders of blacks
are by other blacks. Less known are the many black-on-white attacks that occur
routinely throughout the nation. Colin Flaherty has been making news ever since
he published “White Girl Bleed a Lot.”
He continues to document this vastly under-reported problem. Thomas Sowell, writing in the National Review, said ”Reading
Colin Flaherty’s book made painfully clear to me that the magnitude of this
problem is greater than I had discovered from my own research. He documents
both the race riots and the media and political evasions in dozens of cities.”
Speaking solely for myself I am extremely disappointed by
the failure of too many black Americans to simply admit that there is something
terribly wrong in a community that has too many abortions, too many fatherless
children, too much exploitation of welfare systems, too much drug use and
trafficking, and too much blame on white racism for these and other ills.
Instead of seeing evidence that the black community in
America is mounting an effort to address its problems what I and others see and
hear are the same tired race hustlers, Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson, and others,
spewing the same “blame whitey” rhetoric.
It needs to be said that racism cuts both ways, but too
much black racism gets a pass. Whites are not to blame at this point. One hopes
the Saturday march in D.C. will reflect Dr. King’s generous and hopeful speech
of fifty years ago. I doubt that will happen.
© Alan Caruba, 2013
No comments:
Post a Comment