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A False Narrative About "Impoverished" Ferguson, MO That Just Won't Die
RCM ^ | 08/12/2019 | Joseph Duggan

Posted on 08/18/2019 5:29:08 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

FERGUSON, Missouri -- Five years ago this week, the national and international mass media descended upon Flyover Country to flood the airwaves and printing presses with a “narrative” about this suburban community not far from downtown St. Louis. Social unrest had erupted when a young black man, Michael Brown, was shot to death during a struggle with a white police officer.

Disruptive demonstrators – most of them recruited from out of town – rioters, arsonists, and looters brought a halt to business in Ferguson for weeks. The town was presented by the world media as a hellhole of dire poverty, urban decay, drive-by shooting deaths, and despair. Some parts of the St. Louis area deserve this awful description, but not Ferguson.

Ferguson was portrayed as possessed by the demons of racism. Again, this was grossly unfair. Ferguson is notable in its vicinity to north St. Louis County as having resisted the worst extremes of white flight. While neighboring north County municipalities have transformed from 100% white to nearly 100% black since the 1960s, Ferguson stabilized at a ratio of about two-thirds black to one-third white. Ferguson is primarily a middle-class community. The town’s black citizens as well as its white citizens tend to be small business owners, white-collar employees, or workers in trades.

Anyone who takes a complete tour of this town of 20,000 people will observe expansive neighborhoods of attractive housing stock, including two gracious late 19th-century/early 20th century National Register of Historic Places residential districts. In the shops and restaurants and pubs they will note the friendly manners of the racially integrated population.

Ferguson does have pockets and fringes of poverty and blight. One of these, nearly at the eastern city limit of Ferguson, was where Michael Brown lived and died. Had his death happened a few blocks from where it did, “Ferguson” today would not be a name living in infamy. Even the area where Michael Brown lived and died, defined by an unappealing commercial strip, was slated for significant new investment before the riots of 2014. The unrest was a setback, but now the major investment is resuming.

For five years, Ferguson’s recovery has been real but slow. The anniversary of the tragedy of Michael Brown and the rioters’ unjust destruction of employment and enterprises in Ferguson is a good occasion for focus on how the town can be transformed from a place of crisis to one of opportunity in two essential categories: entrepreneurship and education.

President Trump’s tax reform legislation enacted at the end of 2017 created a new program called Opportunity Zones, and about half of the territory of Ferguson has been designated within such a zone. The program incentivizes qualified, long-term investment of capital into enterprises within a zone. The first wave of interest in the program has come from real estate developers. This is one natural utilization of the program, but much more could and should be done with the Opportunity Zone program in places such as Ferguson. It would be a disappointment if the program’s participants were only big real estate developers not well connected with the community.

A recent article in Forbes states: “Entrepreneurs might benefit from Opportunity Zones even more than the typical investor, as those zones don't solely present tax savings. They also offer tremendous fundraising opportunities. This is because the capital gains deferral not only applies to real estate; it includes any type of businesses located in these zones, including startups, technology businesses, etc. This makes investing in business located there very attractive to investors. Entrepreneurs who can start a business or look to relocate their offices inside of these Opportunity Zones can take advantage of the flood of investments pouring into these zones.”

Real estate prices in Ferguson remain very low compared with almost everywhere else in the United States, because Midwest real estate is much more affordable to begin with, plus the unrest of five years ago retarded what otherwise might have been a steady recovery from the financial crisis of 10 years ago. Ferguson’s Opportunity Zone includes spaces suitable for light and heavy manufacturing, offices, and new or rehabbed housing. It should be stressed again, as the Forbes article does, that Opportunity Zones, including Ferguson, are ripe not just for real estate investments but for operating enterprises located – and perhaps leased instead of owned – within the zone.

In a webinar produced by the Missouri Department of Economic Development, Ross Baird of Village Capital elaborates on the tremendous potential for the Opportunity Zone program to stimulate long-term investment in “portfolios of entrepreneurs” in Ferguson and other Missouri communities.

Ferguson is in the heart of a vital industrial, transportation, higher education, and corporate hub of the St. Louis area. It is about a five-minute drive from St. Louis International Airport, the University of Missouri-St. Louis, and the corporate headquarters of Express Scripts and the Boeing Defense, Space & Security business. The world headquarters of Emerson Electric, a Fortune 200 giant, is in Ferguson itself.

The Opportunity Zone program is not the only reason to invest and launch new businesses in Ferguson, but those who make smart investments because of the attention brought about by the program may have much to gain.

Ferguson is a model community on which to focus opportunity-based education reform. Its public school district, known as Ferguson-Florissant as it encompasses a larger suburban town just north of Ferguson, has managed to escape the catastrophe of some neighboring school districts whose quality had plunged so much that they lost state accreditation. To put it simply, Ferguson-Florissant maintains standards so that its high school diplomas really mean something, while diplomas from some adjacent districts don’t.

Unusual these days for a community with its size and demographics, Ferguson has two successful Catholic parochial elementary schools. One of these, Our Lady of Guadalupe, is notable as a hub for the fastest-growing large demographic group in the St. Louis area, Hispanics. With a heavy allocation of scholarships to all of its 200 students, this pre-K through 8th grade school provides an education that qualifies nearly all graduates for admission and scholarships to the St. Louis area’s many superb private Catholic prep schools.

Most of the students at Our Lady of Guadalupe are African-American Protestants from Ferguson; the next largest segment of students are immigrants or American-born children of immigrants from Mexico or other Latin American countries. It should go without saying that the school promotes harmony between people of different colors and cultures.

Still, this remarkable school faces a constant struggle to stay open, and schools such as it have closed in neighboring communities where they are so badly needed, because Missouri has no meaningful school choice legislation. Unlike Florida, Texas, Arizona and Wisconsin, which offer exciting opportunities for school choice, Missouri has resisted vouchers, tax credits, education savings accounts, and other programs to enhance educational freedom and quality.

Most but not all of Missouri’s big-city Democratic politicians resist school choice because of their ties to the teachers’ unions. But the balance of power in the Missouri legislature, with Republican super-majorities in both houses, is with Republican legislators from rural and small-town districts where public school superintendents tend to be figures of tremendous prestige and power. The state board of education’s bureaucracy in Jefferson City is essentially a government within a government; its functionaries are notorious for slow-walking to death even the most modest gestures of the legislature towards school choice for parents.

How will Ferguson be faring 10 years from now, when the first exits from the Opportunity Zones’ long-term investments will be taking place? What sort of education will this community’s children obtain? Is it realistic to envision dramatic improvements for Ferguson and much more distressed parts of the St. Louis area, in education, culture, civil society, and material standards of living?

Emphatically yes. Ferguson could flourish if imaginative entrepreneurs embrace the spirit of opportunity there. Ferguson's children will be equipped to become leaders in culture as well as business if Missouri’s legislature follows the example of Florida, Arizona and other states with authentic education reform.

Joseph Duggan is head of C-Suite Strategic Counsel, an international public affairs consultancy. This week Encounter Books published his book “Khashoggi, Dynasties, and Double Standards."



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; US: Missouri
KEYWORDS: ferguson; poverty

1 posted on 08/18/2019 5:29:08 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

There is no city in this country that has a sizeable black population that is not dysfunctinal, decrepit, and crime infested. It is a pipedream for anyone to think Ferguson, or anyplace else with such demographics, will somehow be different.


2 posted on 08/18/2019 5:47:04 PM PDT by DrPretorius
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To: SeekAndFind
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5yzVAxIKKbI

Watch this....and watch to guy to her right...

3 posted on 08/18/2019 5:50:08 PM PDT by Osage Orange (Whiskey Tango Foxtrot)
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To: DrPretorius
There is no city in this country that has a sizeable black population that is not dysfunctinal, decrepit, and crime infested

There is No Place on the Planet hat has a sizeable black population that is not dysfunctinal, decrepit, and crime infested
4 posted on 08/18/2019 5:52:08 PM PDT by eyeamok
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To: SeekAndFind

Eric Holder found no problem with the officers actions. The shooting was justified. If Eric Holder could not find anything wrong, there was nothing wrong. Except that the Feds stood and watched the and watched the town burn.


5 posted on 08/18/2019 5:53:02 PM PDT by poinq
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To: Osage Orange

RE: Watch this....and watch to guy to her right.

I think that guy has an uncontrollable muscular tick, a physical disorder.


6 posted on 08/18/2019 5:56:15 PM PDT by SeekAndFind (look at Michigan, it will)
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To: SeekAndFind

“Hands up! Don’t shoot!” never happened.

TWENTY FIVE TOP QUOTES FROM THE DOJ’S REPORT ON THE MICHAEL BROWN SHOOTING

http://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/opa/press-releases/attachments/2015/03/04/doj_report_on_shooting_of_michael_brown_1.pdf

[01] The evidence, when viewed as a whole, does not support the conclusion that Wilson’s uses of deadly force were “objectively unreasonable” under the Supreme Court’s definition. (Page 5)

[02] when the store clerk tried to stop Brown, Brown used his physical size to stand over him and forcefully shove him away. (Page 6)

[03] Wilson was aware of the theft and had a description of the suspects as he encountered Brown and Witness 101. (Page 6)

[04] Autopsy results and bullet trajectory, skin from Brown’s palm on the outside of the SUV door as well as Brown’s DNA on the inside of the driver’s door corroborate Wilson’s account that during the struggle, Brown used his right hand to grab and attempt to control Wilson’s gun. (Page 6)

[05] there is no credible evidence to disprove Wilson’s account of what occurred inside the SUV. (Page 7)

[06] autopsy results confirm that Wilson did not shoot Brown in the back as he was running away because there were no entrance wounds to Brown’s back. (Page 7)

[07] witnesses who originally stated Brown had his hands up in surrender recanted their original accounts (Page 8)

[08] several witnesses stated that Brown appeared to pose a physical threat to Wilson as he moved toward Wilson. (Page 8)

[09] The physical evidence also establishes that Brown moved forward toward Wilson after he turned around to face him. The physical evidence is corroborated by multiple eyewitnesses. (Page 10)

[10] evidence does not establish that it was unreasonable for Wilson to perceive Brown as a threat while Brown was punching and grabbing him in the SUV and attempting to take his gun. (Page 11)

[11] Wilson’s account is corroborated by physical evidence and that his perception of a threat posed by Brown is corroborated by other eyewitnesses (Page 12)

[12] Wilson’s account was consistent with those results, and consistent with the accounts of other independent eyewitnesses, whose accounts were also consistent with the physical evidence. Wilson’s statements were consistent with each other in all material ways, and would not be subject to effective impeachment for inconsistencies or deviation from the physical evidence.8 Therefore, in analyzing all of the evidence, federal prosecutors found Wilson’s account to be credible. (Page 16)

[13] Witness accounts suggesting that Brown was standing still with his hands raised in an unambiguous signal of surrender when Wilson shot Brown are inconsistent with the physical evidence, are otherwise not credible because of internal inconsistencies, or are not credible because of inconsistencies with other credible evidence. (Page 78)

[14] Multiple credible witnesses corroborate virtually every material aspect of Wilson’s account and are consistent with the physical evidence. (Page 78)

[15] several of these witnesses stated that they would have felt threatened by Brown and would have responded in the same way Wilson did. (Page 82)

[16] there are no witnesses who could testify credibly that Wilson shot Brown while Brown was clearly attempting to surrender. (Page 83)

[17] There is no witness who has stated that Brown had his hands up in surrender whose statement is otherwise consistent with the physical evidence. (Page 83)

[18] The media has widely reported that there is witness testimony that Brown said “don’t shoot” as he held his hands above his head. In fact, our investigation did not reveal any eyewitness who stated that Brown said “don’t shoot.” (Page 83)

[19] Wilson did not know that Brown was not armed at the time he shot him, and had reason to suspect that he might be when Brown reached into the waistband of his pants as he advanced toward Wilson. (Page 84)

[20] Wilson did not have time to determine whether Brown had a gun and was not required to risk being shot himself in order to make a more definitive assessment.

[21] In addition, even assuming that Wilson definitively knew that Brown was not armed, Wilson was aware that Brown had already assaulted him once and attempted to gain control of his gun. (Page 85)

[22] Wilson has a strong argument that he was justified in firing his weapon at Brown as he continued to advance toward him and refuse commands to stop, and the law does not require Wilson to wait until Brown was close enough to physically assault Wilson. (Page 85)

[23] we must avoid substituting our personal notions of proper police procedure for the instantaneous decision of the officer at the scene. We must never allow the theoretical, sanitized world of our imagination to replace the dangerous and complex world that policemen face every day.” (Page 85)

[24] “It may appear, in the calm aftermath, that an officer could have taken a different course, but we do not hold the police to such a demanding standard.” (citing Gardner v. Buerger, 82 F.3d 248, 251 (8th Cir. 1996) (same))). Rather, where, as here, an officer points his gun at a suspect to halt his advance, that suspect should be on notice that “escalation of the situation would result in the use of the firearm.” Estate of Morgan at 498. An officer is permitted to continue firing until the threat is neutralized. See Plumhoff v. Rickard, 134 S.Ct. 2012, 2022 (2014) (“Officers need not stop shooting until the threat has ended”). For all of the reasons stated, Wilson’s conduct in shooting Brown as he advanced on Wilson, and until he fell to the ground, was not objectively unreasonable and thus not a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 242. (Page 85)

[25] Given that Wilson’s account is corroborated by physical evidence and that his perception of a threat posed by Brown is corroborated by other eyewitnesses, to include aspects of the testimony of Witness 101, there is no credible evidence that Wilson willfully shot Brown as he was attempting to surrender or was otherwise not posing a threat. (Page 86)

For the reasons set forth above, this matter lacks prosecutive merit and should be closed.


7 posted on 08/18/2019 6:03:36 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum ("If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.")
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To: DrPretorius

I have to agree with your statement 100%.


8 posted on 08/18/2019 6:11:15 PM PDT by FrdmLvr (They never thought she would lose.)
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To: DrPretorius
There is no city in this country that has a sizeable black population that is not dysfunctinal, decrepit, and crime infested. <<

My 1st instinct was to call BS...but on further reflection I'm afraid you may be right!!...It truly is something to ponder....

9 posted on 08/18/2019 6:15:45 PM PDT by M-cubed
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To: SeekAndFind

Bump


10 posted on 08/18/2019 7:14:49 PM PDT by foreverfree
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To: SeekAndFind

I have a relative who lives near Ferguson. As an elderly white woman she doesn’t dare leave her house at night. Crime is still through the roof there apparently.


11 posted on 08/18/2019 8:33:36 PM PDT by FormerFRLurker (Keep calm and vote your conscience.)
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To: M-cubed
My 1st instinct was to call BS...but on further reflection I'm afraid you may be right!!...It truly is something to ponder....

The book "The Bell Curve" suggested that intelligence, or lack thereof was a major contributing factor in the failure of "black communities". The authors did not necessarily suggest that blacks are stupid, but that the black population has exploded with the illegitimate births of unintelligent people born to the Davontes and Travons and Tanishas of the world. While this segment of the black population continues to increase, there are fewer Clarence Thomases, Condoleeza Rices, Denzel Washingtons, et al, being born to counter it.

12 posted on 08/19/2019 6:53:53 AM PDT by Sans-Culotte (If it weren't for fake hate crimes, there would be no hate crimes at all.)
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To: SeekAndFind

You could be correct........


13 posted on 08/19/2019 11:47:26 AM PDT by Osage Orange (Whiskey Tango Foxtrot)
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To: SeekAndFind

If the facts contradict the narrative, the facts lie.


14 posted on 08/19/2019 12:08:13 PM PDT by TBP (Progressives lack compassion and tolerance. Their self-aggrandizement is all that matters.)
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