By Daniel Greenfield August 06, 2023 @ Sultan Knish Blog
33 people were shot over the weekend in Chicago. Urban gangland violence
like that is what real “mass shootings” look like and finally a Journal
of the American Medical Association paper addressed the problem by
shifting the blame to something it calls “structural racism”.
The JAMA paper,
which was quickly picked up by CNN as “Structural Racism may Contribute
to Mass Shootings” and by Bloomberg as “Mass Shootings
Disproportionately Victimize Black Americans”, acknowledged what
conservatives have been saying about gun violence.
“There was no
discernible association noted in this study between gun laws and MSEs
[mass shootings] with other studies showing similar findings,” it noted.
The
issue wasn’t gun laws, it was race. “The study found that in areas with
higher black populations, mass shootings are likelier to occur compared
to communities with higher white populations,” CNN reported. “The
findings disrupt the nation’s image of mass shootings, which has been
shaped by tragedies like the Las Vegas festival shooting and Sandy Hook
in which most of the victims were not black,” Bloomberg added.
Faced
with an immovable statistical object and the unstoppable force of
equity, the JAMA paper blames the whole thing on structural racism. The
study correlates urban areas and neighborhoods with high concentrations
of single-parent households” to mass shootings. It then demonstrates
that “structural racism” must be at fault because of “the percentage of
the population that is black.” Black people in the study are
interchangeable with racism.
Such is the state of woke medical
science which tries to fix racism with more racism. The study never
comes up with any plausible explanation of how structural racism causes
people to shoot each other. At one point it claims that “racial
residential segregation practices are predictive of various types of
shootings” in a country where segregation had been abolished since 1964.
The
study’s definition of segregation is so senseless that it lists
majority black cities like Detroit, a 77% black city, as being 73%
segregated, and Baltimore, a 62% black city, as being 64% segregated. A
city with a strong black majority and black leaders is racially
segregated and its people are suffering from “structural racism”. That’s
why there are so many mass shootings.
But if segregation is the
issue then why does Atlanta, which had actual segregation, have only 18
mass shootings, while Chicago has 141? Southern cities show up as less
segregated and less violent in the paper’s data. A history of
segregation is clearly not the issue. This isn’t about the past, whether
it’s the historical revisionism of the 1619 Project, or any other.
If segregation were the issue, crime would have been far higher during segregation than after it.
Murders
actually shot up after the end of segregation. So did most other kinds
of crime. (That’s not to suggest that the end of segregation was
responsible. After cratering in the fifties, crime was rising sharply
even before the end of segregation along with general social breakdowns
in which divorce rates rose sharply as did single parent families,
Protestant religious denominations declined, so did various forms of
institutional allegiance and public confidence.)
Crime did not
turn the corner until the middle of the nineties when, by most accounts,
gentrification actually pushed black people out of some neighborhoods
resulting in what leftists misleadingly described as “resegregation”. It
rose sharply again in response to pro-crime policies such as the
elimination of bail, the mass release of criminals from prison during
the pandemic, and the end of public safety due to the Black Lives Matter
movement.
Segregation, real or fictional, has nothing to do with
crime rates which track more closely with pro-crime policies, whether
those of the Warren Court, that began with inventing the right to a
lawyer and concluded with banning the death penalty, and with its modern
counterparts.
The JAMA study however sticks to the central
premise of anti-racism which is that any black statistical outlers
represent systemic racism in action. Higher black crime statistics can
only be interpreted as the consequence of white racism even if it means
describing Baltimore, a black city with a black mayor and majority black
city council, as a segregated city.
Who is segregating Baltimore
and Detroit, or for that matter Atlanta and Chicago? Almost all of the
cities that the JAMA study lists as the most segregated, including New
York City, Buffalo, Cleveland, Milwaukee, Pittsburgh, and San Francisco,
have black mayors.
What magical “structural racism” is forcing
black Democrats to “segregate” their own cities and how does that cause
gangs to shoot each other in the street? The JAMA study can’t do much
except wave its arms toward generic ideas. “Future research is needed to
develop more specific and sensitive markers of structural racism,” it
claims. Unable to even define any kind of causative factor between what
it deems to be structural racism and violence, it concludes, as every
study does, that more research is needed to explain its inexplicable
premise.
Every time the study bumps into a statistic that
contradicts its premise, it shrugs awkwardly. Despite repeatedly blaming
poverty, it observes that the “higher firearm injury rate persists even
after correcting for income levels. In fact, the rate of gun violence
among the highest income levels in Philadelphia was 15.8 times higher
for black residents than white.”
Why are wealthier black people more prone to shooting and being shot? Structural racism.
“A
potential explanation may be related to housing policies, as a long
history of redlining has resulted in a higher density of black residents
in certain neighborhoods,” the paper claims.
Today, what’s
holding back any black person in the “highest income levels” from living
anywhere he wants in Philly? Like Rittenhouse Square. Why could Stephen
Smith, born a slave who bought his own freedom, started a lumber
business and became the wealthiest black man in America in an era of
actual slavery, live without fear of crime or anything except racist
mobs?
The lies of anti-racism lies don’t help black people or
anyone else. Gun laws don’t work. Blaming racism doesn’t work. The only
thing that works is personal responsibility.
The cult of
anti-racism insists, as the study does, that everything can be explained
by waving at the “normalized and legitimized range of policies,
practices, and attitudes that routinely produce cumulative and chronic
adverse outcomes for people of color.” Rather than the adverse outcomes
being the result of choices from within the community, critical race
theory chooses to render black people powerless victims by claiming that
their problems all come from outside.
Structural racism, like
guns, doesn’t kill people. Poverty isn’t generational, it’s personal.
History doesn’t hold us back, to paraphrase Obama, we are the ones
holding ourselves back.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine.Click here to subscribe to my articles. And click here to support my work with a donation.
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