The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

On cable, not all gun violence is covered equally

- Gene Lyons

Cable news programmin­g suggestion: Instead of filling every broadcast with the latest presumptiv­e police outrage, try covering the latest drive-by killings. Show us more of what’s really happening on the streets where we live.

Newspapers and local TV are already on it.

For example, the morning after police released video of the fatal shooting of 13-year-old Adam Toledo by a Chicago cop, the lead headline in the Chicago Sun-Times read, “Girl, 7, fatally shot at McDonald’s drive-thru.”

Witnesses told reporters they were astonished by the brazenness of the gang members who opened fire on a rival in front of many onlookers and several security cameras. The little girl seemingly got in the way.

Young Adam Toledo, of course, was involved in a similar shooting episode immediatel­y before his deadly confrontat­ion with police.

Heaven knows, Chicagoans have reason to be leery of their city’s police department, but context is crucial.

This morning’s headline in the Little Rock newspaper was, “Peace urged after man killed, toddlers hurt by park gunfire.” The toddlers, aged 3 and 4, are expected to recover. More collateral damage, as it’s called when soldiers shoot civilians. Two young men playing basketball were the intended targets; one survived.

Last month, however, a 10-year-old girl was killed in a similar incident in another city park.

In Miami last weekend, 3-year-old Elijah LaFrance was killed in a drive-by shooting after his own birthday party — the third little kid murdered there in recent months. The others were aged 7 and 6.

Criminals, however, don’t wear body cams, so TV footage is harder to come by. Also, because filing wrongful death lawsuits against street gangs is futile, CNN’s roving cast of pundits and personal injury lawyers aren’t primed to respond with appropriat­e indignatio­n.

“When a suspect is a person of color, there is no attempt to de-escalate the situation,” said civil rights lawyer and ubiquitous talking head Ben Crump regarding a recent incident in Knoxville, Tennessee. “Police shoot first and ask questions later, time after time, because Black lives are afforded less value.”

Regarding the value of Black lives, here’s some important informatio­n: According to an extraordin­ary piece of reporting by Rick Rojas in The New York Times, Anthony J. Thompson, age 17, who was killed by Knoxville police in an armed confrontat­ion in a cramped bathroom at Austin-East Magnet High School, was the fifth student from that campus to die of gun violence during this school year.

Five kids, all African American, all shot dead at one school in one year.

“It makes it harder to get out of the house every day knowing another child has lost their life,” one victim’s older sister said.

So far, however, this ongoing tragedy has drawn little commentary on CNN or MSNBC. “Among our elites,” my friend Bob Somerby writes, “no one cares about the gun violence which takes so many other lives. It doesn’t matter if Black people get shot and killed unless it’s done by police.”

At his website The Daily Howler, Somerby has been writing acid commentari­es about the melodramat­ic coverage given police/civilian shootings. In the wake of the Derek Chauvin murder trial, the sad and dangerous truth is that on anything regarding cops and race, you

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