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Root causes
American Thinker ^
| April 17, 2008
| Bookworm
Posted on 04/17/2008 12:24:01 PM PDT by neverdem
One of the hallmarks of the Left is its fervent belief that, if poor people behave badly, the fault is not theirs, but instead it lies with "root causes." For example, a word search in the New York Times for "root causes and crime" returns over 100 articles from that newspaper alone.
A significant number of these Times articles, which were especially prevalent in the 1980s and 1990s, have a politician arguing that, in dealing with crime, it's pointless to punish the criminals themselves. Instead, it's the government's job to destroy crime at its root, a concept that invariably translates into pouring more money into social welfare programs. I've gathered a small collection of these articles. In each of them, I've emphasized a few key words, the significance of which I'll explain below.
Poor people historically have been more prone to commit street crime, and blacks are disproportionately poor (though most, of course, are law-abiding). Blacks are uniquely burdened with a legacy of slavery and violence. I. Blame is abundant. So are drugs. Opportunity is not.
[snip]
Unless root causes of crime are addressed, Mr. [Charles] Rangel said, "there will never be enough prosecutors, judges and courts or jails to sweep our secrets under the rug." (Emphasis mine.)
Mayor David N. Dinkins took his anticrime campaign on the road today as he lobbied here for stricter national gun-control laws and an all-out effort against "the root causes of crime," including poverty, homelessness, drug addiction and growing despair. (Emphasis mine.)
For his part, Mr. Cuomo, especially in recent months, has spoken more about crime's root causes, of draining what he has begun to call the "poisoned lake" of poverty, racism and lack of opportunity that many people believe is at the heart of violence. At the state trooper graduation in Albany, for example, he complained that "so far we have not discovered the cure for the greed, the viciousness, the despair that drives this traffic in drugs." (Emphasis mine.)
I could come up with more examples, but I suspect you get the point: In Liberal land, as sure as night follows day, poverty, a lack of opportunity and despair add up to the dangerous pathology of crime.
You go into some of these small towns in Pennsylvania, a lot of them - like a lot of small towns in the Midwest, the jobs have been gone now for 25 years and nothing's replaced them. And they've gone through the Clinton administration, and the Bush administration, and each successive administration has said that somehow these communities are gonna regenerate and they have not. So it's not surprising then that they get bitter, and they cling to guns, or religion, or antipathy toward people who aren't like them, or anti-immigrant sentiment, or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations.
Obama's much more verbose than the others I've quoted, but it seems to me he's seeing precisely the same pattern that Dinkins, Cuomo and Rangel identified: Poverty creates bitterness, and bitterness creates dangerous pathologies.
There is a difference in the speeches, of course. As you see from the quotations, liberals of twenty years back were primitive enough to define as pathologies actual criminal activity (drug use, theft, assault, rape). Obama's argument makes a dramatic break with that traditional by targeting as pathological, not crime, but standard American beliefs.
To that end, he explicitly says that the garden-variety root causes that have been part of political discourse for twenty years (poverty and despair), when visited upon primitive white Pennsylvanians, inevitably lead to the horrors of faith in God; a belief in the Second Amendment; and a pervasive sense that it is fundamentally unfair for illegal aliens to come waltzing into America so that they can hold American jobs, send their kids to American funded schools, get American healthcare, and dine (not well, admittedly) off of American food stamps.
Already back in the 1980s and 1990s, I was unimpressed by the way in which the "root cause" doctrine was being used to relieve people of any responsibility for their actions. I'm even less impressed with the bizarre new use to which Obama has put it. Nevertheless, despite the theory's silliness, his making the argument does serve a purpose: While it tells us nothing about Pennsylvanians, it does give us another look into the mind of a man who has a profound disdain for the values that Americans have held dear for centuries.
TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: benjaminward; obama; rootcauses
It was Benjamin Ward.
1
posted on
04/17/2008 12:24:01 PM PDT
by
neverdem
To: neverdem
Liberals find the "root cause" meme a convenient alibi to avoid holding people responsible for their actions. If people are responsible for they do, their background doesn't excuse them from the consequences of the choices they make. Since liberals think people are basically good, if they do something wrong, its their environment or upbringing that made them go bad, not something they did of their own accord. We'll never see "root cause" disappear from the liberal lexicon because that would mean blaming minorities and women and they are never going to be demanding people be the best they can be. That would cut liberals out of the picture.
"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus
2
posted on
04/17/2008 12:30:19 PM PDT
by
goldstategop
(In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives In My Heart Forever)
To: neverdem
heh in Los Angeles recently Chief Bratton remarked "you can't fight crime by arresting people"...
says it all right there
To: AdmSmith; Berosus; Convert from ECUSA; dervish; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Fred Nerks; george76; ...
Unless root causes of crime are addressed, Mr. [Charles] Rangel said...
...root causes, y'mean like Al Sharpton? Thanks neverdem.
4
posted on
04/17/2008 10:27:01 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/_____________________Profile updated Saturday, March 29, 2008)
To: neverdem
“Mayor David N. Dinkins took his anticrime campaign on the road today as he lobbied here for stricter national gun-control laws and an all-out effort against “the root causes of crime,” including poverty, homelessness, drug addiction and growing despair. (Emphasis mine.)”
I once asked a friend of mine who is a homicide detective why he thought people commit murder. Without a pause or missing a beat he replied “a lack of moral values.” seemed to be the common thread that ran through so many of the case of murders he had investigated.
To me there's a fundamental difference between being poor and being low class. Many poor people are decent and moral people, however, low class people can still be wealthy but their wealth adds nothing to their level of moral integrity.
5
posted on
04/18/2008 11:56:28 AM PDT
by
Towed_Jumper
(Stephen Hopkins: Founding Father who had Cerebral Palsy.."My hand trembles, my heart does not.")
To: goldstategop
Undeniable truth about liberalism #1:
Liberalism, at its core, is the use of force to force the innocent to pay for the consequences of those who make bad decisions.
6
posted on
04/18/2008 11:59:31 AM PDT
by
MrB
(You can't reason people out of a position that they didn't use reason to get into in the first place)
To: neverdem
Root cause -
straying from the concept of “he who will not work, nor shall he eat”.
Someone who is working is too busy to be a criminal.
And they can just stuff their “lack of opportunity” - I don’t buy it. It’s “should I collect $600 a week in welfare or work for $500 a week”?
7
posted on
04/18/2008 12:01:48 PM PDT
by
MrB
(You can't reason people out of a position that they didn't use reason to get into in the first place)
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