Enough’s Enough

From: townhall.com,  by Walter E. Williams,  on Aug 15, 2018

During the weekend of Aug. 4-5 (and the preceding Friday night), 12 Chicagoans were shot dead, and 62 others were shot and wounded, the Chicago Tribune reported. Before last week’s mayhem, 1,718 Chicagoans had been shot since the beginning of the year, and 306 had been murdered. Adding to this tragedy is the fact that Chicago’s clearance rate is less than 15 percent. That means that in more than 85 percent of Chicago’s homicides, no suspect is charged. Chicago is by no means unique in this lawlessness. Detroit, Baltimore, Philadelphia, St. Louis, and some other major cities share high rates of homicides.

It’s not just shootings and homicides that negatively impact the overwhelmingly law-abiding black residents of these cities. In addition, there are sky-high rates of burglaries, rapes and property destruction. The schools are notoriously bad. City budgets face shortfalls. Residents deal with deteriorating city services. All of this causes mass exoduses from these cities by their most capable people.

Ordinary decency demands that something be done to address the horrible conditions under which so many black Americans live. White liberals, black politicians, and sports figures focus most of their attention on what the police do, but how relevant is that to the overall tragedy? According to Washington Post data, as of July 9, 626 people had been shot and killed by police this year. Of that number, 114 were black. Last year, 987 people were shot and killed by police, of which 223 were black. To put police shootings in a bit of perspective, in Chicago alone in 2017, there were 674 homicides, almost 80 percent of whose victims were black. It would appear that if one is truly concerned about black deaths, shootings by police should figure way down on one’s list — which is not to excuse bad behavior by some police officers.

Would getting more blacks and Democrats in political office help? It turns out that of the Chicago City Council’s 50 aldermen, only one is Republican. One is an independent. Forty-eight aldermen are Democrats, and 19 are black. In fact, most of the cities where large segments of their black citizenry live under horrible conditions have been controlled by Democrats for nearly a half-century, and there are many blacks on the instruments of control, such as chiefs of police, superintendents of schools and members of city councils. If Democratic and black control meant anything, these cities would be paradises.

How helpful to these desperate black communities are the efforts of so many black politicians to focus on allegations about President Donald Trump’s ties to Russia? The leader of the movement to impeach Trump is Rep. Maxine Waters. Her congressional district suffers from high crime rates and failing schools. She, like most other black politicians, claims that she is helping her constituency by doing all she can to fight to get more taxpayer money to her district.

More money from taxpayers could not fix the problems of these communities. Over the past 50 years, more than $16 trillion has been spent on poverty programs. The majority of those programs have simply made poverty more comfortable by giving poor people more food, health care, housing, etc. What’s needed most is to get poor people to change their behavior. Chief among the modifications is reducing female-headed households. Female-headed households produce most of our prison inmates, the highest crime rates and disproportionate numbers of high school dropouts and suicides. These devastating factors are far beyond the capacity of Washington to fix.

The only people who can fix these problems are black people themselves. Black athletes could be far more productive by going to schools and community centers to encourage constructive behavior and shaming self-destructive behavior. Support should be given to police to stop criminals from preying on communities. Nongovernmental local groups should be encouraged to play greater roles.

It’s a challenge, but keep in mind that black people had the intestinal fortitude to lead the world’s greatest civil rights movement through some very dark days from 1865 to 1965. I believe that we’re up to the challenge.

If we wait for Washington to solve our problems, we’ll be waiting for a long time.

~~~~~~~~~~

As usual, Dr. Williams is spot on in his assessment of the problems of the black community. Did you get that? “Over the past 50 years, more than $16 trillion has been spent on poverty programs.” Sixteen TRILLION dollars and what has been the result? Many blacks have been so accustomed to victimhood, they believe that is the norm. Unless something changes the mindset in the inner cities, it’s a self-fulfilling prophecy; “I think I’m a victim and I can’t get ahead, so I remain a victim complaining that I’ve been left behind.”

I still think that the absence of a father – a real DAD – in so many black households is at the crux of the problem. Children never get to see a mom and dad work together to raise a family, they don’t have a male role model to follow, and there’s little real economic stability in a single mom trying to handle what historically has been the duties of a mom/dad pair to raise kids. Too many black kids grow up in a dysfunctional family – it’s not their fault – but they get hurt by it in a lot of ways. While I’m sure that not all of the blame belongs to the fathers of those kids, I do believe that the bulk of blame accrues to them for not becoming a dad to their offspring. The black family used to be the nucleus of a black community and since so many children now grow up in single-parent households – many raised by their grandmothers – they have no other example to follow.

And, as Dr. Williams noted, those millionaire black NFL players could work miracles if they really got involved – both personally and financially – in helping blacks break the pattern. Where are they instead – kneeling during the anthem and blaming police. A lot of good they’re doing on their knees.

Garnet92.

 



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14 replies

  1. Excellent post and commentary, Garnet.

    Only in the divided world of the blogosphere are we allowed to speak the truth of what ails the black community. Blacks and liberals avoid these sites so as to never be confronted with the truth, except on the rare occasion when one pops in to hurl the trite and meaningless insult, “racist,” at us. So things will never change, at least not with their assistance.

    Why? It’s not because they can’t or won’t see the truth. I don’t like the truth that it’s humid in Texas, but I can’t help but see it as the reality. The truth is they – at least at the leadership level – see exactly what we see, but they won’t acknowledge the truth because they will lose what’s in it for THEM. Power, control, money and the free ride…….these are what drive the state of the black community. If conservatives want that to change it will be 100% up to us.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Thanks, CW. I don’t agree that it’s 100% up to us – the blacks themselves have to realize their own plight and how they got there. Only a few will but I just did a piece (publishing tomorrow) that black voters are now giving a 31% approval to Trump. Those people are the ones who will have to pressure others in the community to bring back the black church and the family unit before anything will change.

      Liked by 1 person

      • Just to clarify, by “us” I don’t mean whites. I mean conservatives, white and black. Liberals, whether they’re white or black, will never give up their own short-term benefit – be it power, victimhood or welfare – for what’s in the long-term best interest of the black community at large.

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  2. I agree that the single-parent situation is a huge part of the problem, but the current leadership encourages, and even rewards it, and as long as the libs are in charge nothing will change. New leadership with a new attitude is what they need.

    The fact that athletes aren’t involved is further proof that their actions are solely for the attention it gets them. Otherwise, there’s plenty of ways they could make a difference.

    Liked by 1 person

    • The things that used to be the foundation of black life – the church and the family – have been removed from importance in inner cities and the gang “family” has replaced them. Until (somehow) we see a return of real DADS into the family and the mom and dad together disciplining the kids and requiring that they go to school and get educated, it won’t change.

      Yes, that statement about the black athletes hits home too. They have enormous influence as celebrities and could help “their people” a lot by spending some time encouraging kids to stay in school and get an education. They could also spend a small portion of their substantial income to make things better in their own community – but do they? If they do, it’s entirely secret, cause I’ve seen no evidence of it.

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  3. Love Walter E. Williams!
    These shootings are wrought by gangs. I haven’t seen a study of these gangs but I think I’ve read that some are Mexican drug gangs. Where do they get their members? Good question. Chicago youth.
    Spending all that welfare money for the poverty in Chicago led to welfare baby mamas. No dads. No families. Procreation of more baby mamas and gang members. No parental discipline. No dads. Pretty common in Democrat governed cities. Then mix the corruption of Chicago with this social problem and you have all this shooting and murder.

    In Pittsburgh, years ago we had a gang problem. Religious organizations got the churches of the inner cities to bring the young people in, provide a choice to the gangs. Christian youth. Parents, grandparents got involved. Guess what, the problem was alleviated, at least for a while. Then things went back to where they were and the gang problem resurfaced.

    Can’t keep having kids with no dads.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Me too tannngl! He’s a wise man.

      I don’t know about the Mexican gangs in Chicago, but you’re right on with the black families – or lack thereof. While I won’t give a pass to Republicans since they haven’t made a concerted effort to stem the flow of baby-mamas popping out little bastards and not being able to control or discipline them thereby allowing the gang to become a de facto family to the budding criminals. Somehow, the black family unit HAS to return else things will never get better.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Garnet, I agree with you when you suggest the problems begin with the breakdown of the family. Perhaps its my imagination, but it seems like whatever issues one is dealing with in the family get magnified when they get to a state or national level. However, I have no idea how one could go about fixing individual family units.

    Liked by 1 person

    • “First, do no harm!”

      Wise words that were ignored by LBJ when he sought to re-enslave Blacks by putting them on Welfare so that “those niggers will be voting Democrat for 200 years!” Thus far, he has been successful!

      But at what societal cost?

      The Black family survived slavery, the KKK, Jim Crow, segregation with a higher stability of the family unit than any other social group. Until the Great Society! Now they have the worst family unity, because the Welfare rules force “Baby Daddies” to live apart from the family. This feeds not only family erosion, but fidelity to marriage vows and interpersonal commitments. Why buy and feed the cow when you can get the milk for “free”??

      Obviously, NOTHING is actually free!

      Perhaps the stronger economy, and a return to employment, especially for those involved with prior non-violent crime, can serve as some beginning re-building blocks. Jobs returning from overseas, the scandals of sexual predation and trafficking now emerging into view, and the like can give us a start.

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      • Garnet, I became aware of the difference between our family’s values and those of a local black family when our daughter was in 2nd grade. One day, she came home just bursting with news… her classmate was pregnant. We chatted about this for a bit and I discovered that the girl was 12 and had apparently failed kindergarten and first grade, that she’d been trying to get pregnant since she was 9, didn’t know who the daddy was – and didn’t want to know AND that she was thrilled because if she could keep popping out babies, by the time she was 16 and could legally drop out of school, she’d have a secure income…. Right then and there, I decided that our welfare system was severely flawed…. It took a bit more discussion for me to realize that the little girl was black. Frankly, I don’t think the erosion of values is limited to an ethnic group, and it is my suspicion that those who are looking for others to bail them out of their poor choices are the problem… Unfortunately, the welfare system seems to make it far too easy. IMHO those benefits should be as difficult to get as VA disability.
        BTW, apparently the girl was 6th generation welfare, so this problem isn’t getting any better.

        Liked by 1 person

      • You’re right, curtis, and I hope that LBJ is frying in hell for what he created and the left’s assistance by continuing the welfare rules that make “baby mamas” the sole source of income in today’s families. What they’ve done to black families is genocidal.

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      • That whole concept is repugnant, foguth. That poor little girl was conditioned to believe that her life would be limited to being pregnant and popping out little bastards as her “profession.” What kind of self-image could that represent? How could she maintain any self-worth? It’s criminal that society has accepted that way of life for decades – well, not so much society as primarily democrats.

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    • I wish I had a magic wand, foguth, but I don’t, and you and I can’t “fix” the problem anyway. I think that it’s going to take some changes in interpersonal relationships between moms and dads with the fathers of these formerly fatherless children taking responsibility for their offspring and actually reforming the black family unit to have a mom and a dad.

      Responsibility has to be the key. To me, that’s the starting point, followed immediately by a determination to get their children educated and stay in school. I know that it’s simplistic, but those two things would “change the world” within the inner city and eventually overcome crime and gangs.

      But HOW to do it? I don’t know, but the black church might be the catalyst that’s needed.

      Liked by 1 person

      • Garnet, I completely agree that personal responsibility is something we all need to shoulder and in an ideal world, the church should be central in helping with this. Fingers are crossed that this complex problem is sortable.

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