West Side political elders condemn looting, warn it could backfire
West Side political elders on Wednesday condemned recent looting — even though they understand the pain behind it — and warned it would only hurt the quest to rebuild impoverished neighborhoods.
U.S. Rep. Danny Davis said he feels every bit as much “anger,” “frustration” and “rage” about “what the country has done to my ancestors — to me, to my neighbors to my friends” as the young people who answered a social media call to start looting downtown Chicago, fueled by erroneous details about a police shooting in Englewood.
But, as his mother always said: “Right is right if nobody is right and wrong is wrong if everybody is wrong.”
“It is wrong to tear down a little struggling business in the heart of the community that I live in where people have spent all of their lifetime trying to figure out a way to make a solid living,” Davis said.
Davis said the struggle “must continue, but it must continue building up, rather than tearing down.”
“I don’t condone that kind of behavior as a tactic because there are things that were burned down and torn down 50 years ago. They are still down. There are vacant lots that were created after the assassination of Dr. [Martin Luther] King. They were vacant then. They’re vacant now,” he said.
West Side Ald. Emma Mitts (37th) called the first round of looting in late May that spread to South and West Side neighborhoods after downtown was sealed off a “tremendous heartbreak.”
“To relive it again was almost unbearable,” she said.
Mitts acknowledged the need for elder statesmen to listen more to the frustrated young people.
“We have to have some conversation. Problems get out of hand when people are not talking. If we have our youth who feel one way and we are saying that they’re wrong for how they’re feeling, we need to listen to what they’re saying and then we’ll be able to try and work with them,” she said.
But Mitts also is concerned continued looting will destroy the legitimate quest for desperately needed resources in impoverished South and West Side neighborhoods.
“We all are concerned, which is why we all are here now and we’ve been having these conversations. We understand that, if it continues to go down the road we are headed, that we won’t have anything and no one will have anything. And there’s no win there,” Mitts said.
“We can’t continue to tear up the city of Chicago and tear up our neighborhoods . ... There’s a right and a wrong and it’s wrong to do wrong.”