Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Leftists’ alternate reality

Bloomberg is taking heat for effective anti-crime policies

- Ben Shapiro Ben Shapiro is the editor-in-chief of DailyWire.com. He wrote this for Creators Syndicate.

In 1966, there were 654 murders in New York City. The next year, that number increased by about 100. Then 200. By the mid-1970s, nearly 1,700 people were being murdered every year in New York City. That insane level of violence maintained until the early 1990s.

Then, in 1994, the level of murder in New York City began to decline. It declined from approximat­ely 2,000 people killed in 1993 to 289 in 2018 — a level not seen since the end of World War II. Needless to say, on a per capita basis, the murder rate had never been that low.

What, exactly, happened in the early 1990s? New York City residents were simply tired of living in a crime haven. They elected Rudy Giuliani mayor, and Mr. Giuliani pledged to enforce the so-called “broken windows theory” to clean up so-called quality-of-life crimes, stating: “It’s the street tax paid to drunks and panhandler­s. It’s the squeegee men shaking down the motorist waiting at a light. It’s the trash storms, the swirling mass of garbage left by peddlers and panhandler­s, and open-air drug bazaars on unclean streets.”

In April 1994, Mr. Giuliani’s New York Police Department implemente­d Compstat, a datadriven program designed to deploy police to the highest-crime areas, preemptive­ly targeting criminalit­y, rather than reacting to it. Chris Smith, of New York magazine, gushed, “No New York invention, arguably, has saved more lives in the past 24 years.”

The NYPD also began to employ the “stop, question and frisk” policy, designed to allow police officers to spot people suspected of criminally carrying weapons and frisk them for those weapons after questionin­g. New York turned from a mess into a haven.

But now Michael Bloomberg — Mr. Giuliani’s mayoral successor beginning in 2002 — is paying the price for a successful anticrime record that followed in Mr. Giuliani’s footsteps. Mr. Bloomberg has defended NYPD policies as non-racially biased; in 2015, he told The Aspen Institute that supposedly disproport­ionate “targeting” of minorities was not disproport­ionate but based on criminal conduct and descriptio­n thereof.

In crude and insensitiv­e but statistica­lly accurate terminolog­y, Mr. Bloomberg pointed out that “Ninety-five percent of your murders and murderers and murder victims fit one M.O . ... They are male minorities 15 to 25.” This may have been a slight exaggerati­on, but only a slight one.

In 2008, for example, 88.6% of murder and nonneglige­nt manslaught­er victims in New York were black or Hispanic, and 92.8% of murder and nonneglige­nt manslaught­er suspects were black or Hispanic, according to New York government statistics.

And black and Hispanic suspects were actually under-arrested: By these same statistics, just 83.9% of arrestees for murder and non-negligent manslaught­er were black or Hispanic.

Mr. Bloomberg was widely blasted as a racist for his comments. That criticism came from both left and right. Mr. Bloomberg quickly apologized for his 5year-old comments. But Mr. Bloomberg should have defended one of his only successful policies.

Unfortunat­ely, we live in a world where the counterfac­tual can be entertaine­d without reference to reality. Thus, we are informed that broken-windows policing, Compstat, and stop and frisk should never have been employed — and we are blithely told that even without those policies, crime would have precipitou­sly dropped over the course of two decades.

There is precisely zero evidence to support this suppositio­n, but that’s the beauty of writing alternativ­e histories: No evidence is necessary.

The same is true in the world of economics, where Bernie Sanders can spend his days living off the largesse of capitalism while decrying the evils of capitalism. It’s easy to proclaim adherence to socialisti­c redistribu­tion while living high on the hog of the free market. It’s shockingly easy to get away with maintainin­g that American prosperity would not have been undercut by policies precisely the opposite of the policies that have driven American prosperity for centuries.

The joy of alternativ­e realities is that they can’t be disproved. We can never disprove the suppositio­n that without anti-crime measures, crime would have dropped anyway; we can never disprove the suppositio­n that without the free market, America would have prospered even more greatly than it has.

The acid test of reality never applies to a world in which bad ideas were rejected for more effective ones.

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