New York Post

Left exploiting Buffalo horror as it did George Floyd DEMS SEE TRAGEDY IN BLACK & WHITE

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WHAT connects the tragedies of May 25, 2020, and May 14, 2022? The straightfo­rward answer, at least according to many in the media and on the left, is systemic racism.

On May 25, 2020, a black man was murdered in Minneapoli­s by a white police officer. The incident was filmed by onlookers and posted on social media; suddenly, the whole world could see what American racism looked like. It was devoid of compassion. It was deadly. It cloaked itself in a white man’s uniform.

Two years later, almost to the day, there was a mass shooting at a grocery store in Buffalo. Thirteen people were hit; 10 were killed. Eleven of the victims were black; the suspected killer is white.

Racism almost certainly explains the attack in Buffalo. Payton S. Gendron, the suspect who broadcast a livestream during the attack, claimed he had been plotting an ambush since January. Police have since revealed that he is not from Buffalo and that he traveled for 3¹/2 hours to the supermarke­t, which sits in the ZIP code with the highest proportion of blacks in upstate New York. Officials are investigat­ing “a manifesto” he allegedly wrote, in which the author describes himself as a fascist, a white supremacis­t and an anti-Semite.

On the Saturday the shooting took place, I was in Dallas at a conference attended by a range of distinguis­hed African Americans, ranging from Glenn Loury to the Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. The key question we addressed was the following: What is holding back black America?

Why the disparity?

The answer, it quickly became clear, had little to do with the phantom of systemic racism.

We started by acknowledg­ing the huge progress that blacks in America have made since desegregat­ion in 1964. We have had a black president who won landslide elections and remains popular. We have two black Supreme Court justices. We have black billionair­es, academics, media personalit­ies, actors and comedians.

None of which is to say that America is any sort of utopia for black Americans. We also acknowledg­ed the racial disparity in education, housing, crime and broken families. We expressed horror that while blacks make up only 12% of the population, they account for 55% of homicide cases.

What explains this disproport­ionate representa­tion of black Americans? Taken in isolation, the tragedies in Minneapoli­s and Buffalo appear to suggest that answer lies in the behavior of racist police officers and white supremacis­ts. Given the nature of the atrocities, perhaps this conclusion is inevitable. What happened in Buffalo, for instance, can only be described as horrific: the cold, calculatin­g shooting; the loss of life; the heinous views of the suspected shooter. How can we view such an atrocity and not let it overwhelm our judgment? How can we not conclude that such evil merits nothing sort of societal change?

Yet if the past two years have taught us anything, it’s that monocausal explanatio­ns are almost always misguided and, as a consequenc­e, almost always ending up harming the vulnerable.

Chaos of BLM fever

As the Black Lives Matter movement mobilized following the murder of George Floyd, America descended into anarchy, fueled by riots and slogans about systemic racism. When activists demanded that police department­s be defunded, local stations were not exactly closed down, but they were intimidate­d to the point that many stopped serving in black neighborho­ods.

The consequenc­es of this swiftly became evident: In the same year that BLM fever seized the country, at least 8,600 black lives were lost to homicide, an increase of more than 1,000 on the year before. Thrown into a frenzy by their overzealou­s conviction that white racism is the root cause of all evil, BLM turned a blind eye to the large number of black Americans who were being killed, or who found themselves forced to live in neighborho­ods terrorized by gangs.

There were no protests or demands for meaningful policies to make black neighborho­ods safer. Rather, the movement’s organizers busied themselves by throwing parties at their $6 million Los Angeles mansion and deciding how to spend the $90 million received in donations. Why save black lives when you can while away your time spending more than $37 million on grants, real estate, consultant­s, and other expenses?

Still, at least that informatio­n is now available. Patrisse Cullors, a BLM co-founder, recently dismissed calls to make public BLM’s finances, describing the prospect of filling out an IRS

Form 990 as “triggering” and “deeply unsafe.”

Of course, it’s all too easy to dismiss her disingenuo­us victim fantasies as farce. But it is not just personal accountabi­lity that is missing here: Ideologica­l scrutiny is also effectivel­y avoided, as critics are inevitably accused of being racist.

Police myth debunked

Take, for instance, Roland Fryer, the celebrated AfricanAme­rican economist at Harvard. He debunked the persistent narrative that the police kill more black than white Americans. For that, as well as his criticisms of education policy, he was effectivel­y canceled by his university. His research was deemed traitorous — and looking at the response to the Buffalo shooting from black activists and leftist politician­s, it is clear a narrative that trumpets the suffocatin­g impact of racism still prevails.

But the facts are the facts. As professor Fryer explained in Dallas at the weekend, there are racial difference­s in the use of nonlethal force by police officers, with blacks largely at a disadvanta­ge, but not in officer-involved shootings. In his speech afterwards, Shelbey Steele, the author of “White Guilt,” summarized the implicatio­ns of this reality: Despite the fact that some racism does still persist, America remains the best country in the world to be black.

We all applauded when he said that. It should not have been a sensationa­l remark. And yet it was.

Everyone in that room understood, as the attack in Buffalo demonstrat­ed, that certain individual­s are motivated by a loathing for black people. But this shouldn’t define us, let alone the country we live in. For black Americans to progress, we need to cast off today’s dependency on white guilt for recognitio­n and support.

What is the way forward if you accept that blacks in America are free? It is to have the courage to live that freedom. It means holding ourselves accountabl­e for our behavior. It means learning to shape our destiny regardless of skin color. And it means ignoring the divisive rhetoric propagated by those such as Patrisse Cullors, Kamala Harris and Ibram X Kendi.

Racism not whole story

In Texas the day after the Buffalo attack, a shootout between five Hispanic men at a crowded flea market left two dead and three wounded. Roughly two hours later in California, a 68-year-old Asian gunman walked into a Taiwanese church and opened fire, killing one person and wounding five others. This is what crime looks like in America. It is chaotic, disordered and irreducibl­e: The skin color of its victims and perpetrato­rs is far from fixed.

Racism, then, is not the whole story. In fact, racism has never been the whole story. Yet faced with an election year and an uphill battle to retain the House and Senate this November, perhaps it is unsurprisi­ng that so many Democrats are keen to turn the Buffalo shooting into another George Floyd moment: an excuse to deflect difficult questions, and to turn politics into a binary realm of Good and Evil.

Once again, we’re told, either you’re with us or you’re a racist — even if being on the side of Good means exploiting the misery of others.

Reprinted with permission from unHerd.

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 ?? ?? THIS IS AMERICA: Members of the Buffalo Bills visit a memorial Wednesday near the Tops supermarke­t where 10 people were fatally shot.
THIS IS AMERICA: Members of the Buffalo Bills visit a memorial Wednesday near the Tops supermarke­t where 10 people were fatally shot.

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