Chattanooga Times Free Press

ENOUGH’S ENOUGH

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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 that 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 those 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. If Democratic and black control meant anything, those cities would be paradises.

More money from taxpayers could not fix the problems of those 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. Those 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.

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 ??  ?? Walter Williams
Walter Williams

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