Posted on 06/12/2015 1:20:30 PM PDT by Kaslin
This Memorial Day weekend marked a historic uptick in violence in many US cities. Three cities seem to symbolize our national woes the most - Baltimore, Chicago, and Ferguson. In Baltimore 9 people were killed and 29 shot. Chicago marked 12 killed and 44 wounded. The police in Baltimore and the other cities seem to be moving with unprecedented caution. Further, self initiated policing has slowed down significantly. The morale of law enforcement officers is at a decadal low. Therefore, both violent and petty crimes may flourish in several hot spot cities this summer. In Ferguson, sky rocketing crime rates continue despite greater civic involvement by citizens and a massive change in municipal personnel. Law enforcement seems to be becoming more difficult in key cities.
Does the violence in these cities mark the unofficial beginning of a new season of urban violence? Is this the beginning of the worst season of both rioting and lawlessness the US has seen since 1968 after the assassination of Dr. King? Last September I wrote that rioting in DC was possible after the Ferguson riots broke out in August 2014. I had no idea that there would be such a dramatic increase in both incendiary rhetoric and demonstrations. Our cities are still vulnerable to problems and riots. 175 metro areas supported the hands up dont shoot initiative and 50 cities protested the death of Eric Garner with I cant breathe demonstrations. A myriad of cell phone videos from South Carolina to Mckinney, Texas have started to erode public respect for our policemen. There is no reason why there will not be more riots and spontaneous violence this summer - except for the grace of God.
We can turn this bus around, though! But it must be done very decisively and strategically. Smoldering urban anger is still burning. This is not just a race problem. There is interplay between class, poverty, and race. When all three of these things converge, people feel disenfranchised and excluded from the American dream.
As I discuss urban tensions at the water cooler or with my friends around the country, I find that black friends sometimes blame whites and invisible social barriers. Whites often declare that everything goes back to family break down or a lack of respect for authority. The family structure declaration is a great analysis but offers no immediate steps of action to mitigate the problems before us.
Part of the answer to the problem has to do with healing the huge sense of outrage and injustice that is felt among impoverished urban dwellers. Much has been said in the news about the debate concerning criminal justice reform. Many people believe that we are simply addressing problems of policing when we use the term Criminal Justice Reform. The truth of the matter is that there are a myriad of minor adjustments to our systems that could create a greater sense of justice and peace in urban America.
Part of our dilemma is that we live in a society that is quick to label and stigmatize. Similarly, we can be slow to extend the hand of restoration, acceptance, and forgiveness. There are over 65 million Americans with a criminal record in the US today. Over 70 percent of ex-offenders have committed non- violent crimes.
Once these people have served their time, they need to have an opportunity for redemption and to restore their lives. They need a shot at achieving their God given potential. Eric Garner of New York was an excellent example of someone who was just not going to submit to being arrested again. His experiences with the legal system and his dealings with police no doubt entered into his decision to buck authority in Staten Island on the fateful day of his death.
To avoid urban riots this summer we need three things urgently: 1.) Regional prayer gatherings that make an appeal to heaven for justice and divine intervention 2.) Summer jobs for urban youth 3.) Grass roots leaders need to come together and create local strategies to make their communities safer.
Yawn.
Riots in Democrat strongholds full of unarmed people.
It’s going to starting hitting 104 and above here next week. I think the riot window has closed.
See Travis McGee's well-thought out "CW2 Cube".
Also, from Derbyshire:
"(9) A small cohort of blacksin my experience, around five percentis ferociously hostile to whites and will go to great lengths to inconvenience or harm us. A much larger cohort of blacksaround halfwill go along passively if the five percent take leadership in some event. They will do this out of racial solidarity, the natural willingness of most human beings to be led, and a vague feeling that whites have it coming."
He also says
"...(10d) Do not attend events likely to draw a lot of blacks.
Sure it sounds racist and hateful. However, the "Caribbean Fest" was where my infant daughter was almost trampled by feral, violent people, not the Cajun Fest.
Give them what they demand and they’ll still riot. They blame us for their self-inflicted pathologies.
There, fixed it.
My thinking exactly. What's the downside?
“When all three of these things converge, people feel disenfranchised and excluded from the American dream.”
I am white, have served honorably in the military, have founded and run a business of my own successfully, am happily married, am a property owner with no debt on my home or anything else and guess what. I feel “disenfranchised and excluded from the American dream”.
“Its going to starting hitting 104 and above here next week. I think the riot window has closed.”
Doesn’t that just mean you should expect a long, HOT summer?
Eric Gardener was a chronic petty criminal, no one’s fault but his own.
The laws he was breaking might have been silly, but part of the social contract in a democracy is to obey the laws and work through elected officials to change those laws people don’t like.
Yikes. What a bee-ess artist.
You didn’t read the entire article.
That they will make the rest of us pay for the clean up and rebuilding.
There was nothing. What happened? Did Nixon secretly dispatch men all over the country to put the community organizers into preventive detention? I can imagine he or J. Edgar Hoover might have considered it, but I can't imagine we wouldn't have heard about that by now, denounced by the state-run media.
Blacks who want chaos are going to bring their show to areas outside of the inner cities. It's happened a few times in these parts. Trouble makers will get pushy and out of control in a restaurant or store, then hope for a response they can bend to be an issue.
That’s life in the desert. Maybe we’ll get some more Pacific hurricanes/ El Nino though, that’d be nice.
My 2 cents is this: in earlier America, we had the poor, the dirt poor, the unemployed and the underemployed. Most of these people did not take out their frustrations by destroying property and random violence.
The difference is a family with a strong male presence, and the Church. Without the modifying influence of the Holy Ghost, it’s hopeless.
Liberalism has done an incredibly cruel disservice to blacks. The powers that be in government and media are equally culpable, although they’ll never admit it.
Go back to family and get back to Church.
“”(9) A small cohort of blacksin my experience, around five percentis ferociously hostile to whites and will go to great lengths to inconvenience or harm us. A much larger cohort of blacksaround halfwill go along passively if the five percent take leadership in some event. They will do this out of racial solidarity, the natural willingness of most human beings to be led, and a vague feeling that whites have it coming.””
Change Blacks to Palestinians and Whites to Jews.
I was born and raised in Germany and went to school from the late 40s (1948 to the late 50s. I remember from the 3rd grade on every year a police officer from our town visited our class room (one of my class mate's dad was a policeman, I don't know if it was he who visited the class room. Anyway he talked about this and that. Like to look first to the left, than the right and then the left again when crossing the street. The most important thing he said though was. "Remember the police is your friend and helper. Our teachers emphasized on that also and they were correct
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