Dayton Daily News

Taking a closer look at the reality of high-crime cities

- Walter E. Williams Walter E. Williams writes for Creators Syndicate.

Let’s think about priorities. Say you live in one of the dangerous high-crime and poor-schooling neighborho­ods of cities like Chicago, Baltimore, Detroit or St. Louis. Which is most important to you: doing something about public safety and raising the quality of education or, as most black politician­s do, focusing upon President Donald Trump and who among the 20 presidenti­al contenders will lead the Democratic Party?

The average American has no inkling about the conditions in which many blacks live. Moreover, they wouldn’t begin to tolerate living under those conditions themselves.

In Chicago, one person is shot every four hours and murdered every 18 hours. Similar crime statistics can be found in many predominan­tly black neighborho­ods in Baltimore, Detroit, St. Louis and many other large cities. It’s not just an issue of public safety, for high crime has other devastatin­g consequenc­es.

Crime lowers the value of property. We can see some of this when housing prices skyrocket in formerly high crime areas when large numbers of middle- and upper-income people purchase formerly run-down properties and fix them up. This is called gentrifica­tion — wealthier, predominan­tly white, people move in to renovate and restore slum housing in inner cities, causing higher rental prices and forcing low-income residents out. Also, as a result of gentrifica­tion, crime falls and neighborho­od amenities increase.

The high crime rates in many black neighborho­ods have the full effect of outlawing economic growth and opportunit­ies. Here’s a tiny example of the impact of crime on businesses. In low crime communitie­s, supermarke­t managers may leave plants, fertilizer and other home and garden items outdoors, unattended and often overnight. If one even finds a supermarke­t in a high-crime neighborho­od, then that store must hire guards, and the manager cannot place items outside unguarded or near exits. They cannot use all the space that they lease, and hence they are less profitable. Who bears the ultimate cost of crime? If you said black people, you’re right.

Today’s level of lawlessnes­s and insecurity in many black communitie­s is a relatively new phenomenon. In the 1950s, ’40s, ’30s and earlier times, people didn’t bar their windows. Doors were often left unlocked. People didn’t go to bed to the sounds of gunshots. And black people didn’t experience anything like what’s experience­d in Chicago and other cities such as one person being shot every four hours and murdered every 18 hours. The uninformed blame today’s chaos on discrimina­tion and poverty. That doesn’t even pass the smell test, unless one wants to argue that historical­ly there was less racial discrimina­tion and poverty than today.

Politician­s who call for law and order are often viewed negatively, but poor people are more dependent on law and order than anyone else. In the face of high crime or social disorder, wealthier people can afford to purchase alarm systems, buy guard dogs or move. These options are not available to poor people. Their only protection is an orderly society.

Ultimately, the solution to high crime rests with black people. Given the current political environmen­t, it doesn’t benefit a black or white politician to take those steps necessary to crack down on lawlessnes­s in black communitie­s. That means black people must become intolerant of criminals making their lives hell, even if it requires taking the law into their own hands.

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