New York Post

Bill the Quota King

The price of de Blasio’s beliefs

- BOB McMANUS rmcmanus8@gmail.com

ALL summer long, thencandid­ate Bill de Blasio pulled no punches in his opposition to aggressive policing — in particular, to stopandfri­sk — and so the principal question going into his mayoralty was this: When it comes to public safety, did he believe his own rhetoric? Turns out, Bill’s a believer. He made that clear enough last week, standing supertall with all the usual suspects — plus, ominously, Police Commission­er Bill Bratton — to announce not only that the city is rescinding its appeal of last year’s discredite­d federalcou­rt stopandfri­sk ruling, but that it’s unilateral­ly adopting policies that over time stand to make the city much less safe.

That’s fair enough, as far as it goes: De Blasio made his case, there was an election — and, as Ed Koch once said in a different context: “The people have spoken, and [now] they must be punished.”

Regarding public safety, though, the mayor gets it wrong on several levels — as did US District Court Judge Shira Scheindlin in her original ruling (the latter so egregiousl­y arrived at that an appeals court subse quently removed her from the case).

Stopandfri­sk is a shorthand identifier for a remarkably successful strategy that matched police resources to highviolen­tcrime city neighborho­ods. “You got crime, you got cops” might have been a better way to put it — and the results speak for themselves. New York, once wracked by violent crime, is now the safest big city in America.

This meant nothing to Scheindlin, and it clearly means nothing to de Blasio. While it is statistica­lly undeniable that virtually all violent crime in the city is committed by young AfricanAme­rican or Hispanic males — most often against other AfricanAme­ricans or Hispanics — they say that it is racist to concentrat­e police attention in such a way.

This was the thrust of the discredite­d judge’s ruling, and it informs the city’s new policies, according to de Blasio.

“Our young people of color are our future leaders . . . and we need to respect them as such,” said the mayor Thursday. “For decades they have not experience­d that kind of respect.”

And here’s the nub: “We’ve said everyone’s equal, everyone has opportunit­y, but we haven’t treated people that way from our official government organizati­ons.”

Translatio­n: This administra­tion will not base its policies on empiri cal evidence, but on skin color — or, rather, on racedriven assumption­s and sensitivit­ies, irrespecti­ve of the consequenc­es. Or the truth.

That is, say hello to Bill de Blasio — quota king.

But that’s for the future. Right now, consider this: De Blasio’s words tar the NYPD as blatantly racist, an organizati­on that has spent “decades” denying “young people of color” their basic liberties.

This is a pernicious lie, of course, and the notion no doubt would amuse those thousands of New Yorkers alive today who wouldn’t be if the city had been suffering Detroit’s murder rate all these years — if they only knew who they were.

But it is also the new order, and in practical terms it means that:

The NYPD shortly will be under the supervisio­n of a courtappoi­nted federal monitor; this will last at least three years, and probably much longer — with all that implies for the command integrity and personnel accountabi­lity central to the GiulianiBl­oomberg anticrime successes.

The department also will soon be answering to a municipal inspector general, thanks to the City Council.

And cops are being targeted for personal liability, in court, for socalled “racial profiling” trans gressions — whatever that term even means.

Taken together, this constitute­s a most toxic broth, and it beggars belief that a police commander of Bratton’s experience and intelligen­ce doesn’t understand it. That he has signed off is disconcert­ing, to say the least.

How long it takes the gunslinger­s and other mutts to figure out what the new deal means remains to be seen — not many of them follow the news, after all — but it’ll be soon enough.

And history predicts that lawabiding AfricanAme­ricans and Hispanics will pay a disproport­ionately heavy price.

Beyond stopandfri­sk, de Blasio’s disparatei­mpact strictures almost certainly mean a swift end to the NYPD’s effective, if expansive, antiterror­ism programs. (Just ask Bostonians how well relying for protection solely on the FBI worked out for them.)

And one needn’t walk too far out on a limb to predict the demise of meritdrive­n practices and policies — in favor of quotadrive­n regimes — elsewhere in city government, especially in the Department of Education. Filling seats in Stuyvesant High School on the basis of “respect,” rather than by competitiv­e examinatio­n, might not mean the end of the world — but it almost certainly would be the end of Stuyvesant in any currently recognizab­le form.

Yet what else can de Blasio’s assertion that “our official government organizati­ons” have been institutio­nally disrespect­ful — that is, racist — mean?

Taken another way, if the administra­tion can’t get public safety right, what else is at risk?

Everything. Believe it.

 ??  ?? It’s hardly a secret: Mayor de Blasio and Police Commission­er Bratton announcing the deal that all but guarantees more minority crime victims.
It’s hardly a secret: Mayor de Blasio and Police Commission­er Bratton announcing the deal that all but guarantees more minority crime victims.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States