Baltimore Sun Sunday

Police reform, crime fighting at crossroads

- Charles M. Blow Charles M. Blow (Twitter: @CharlesMBl­ow) is an opinion columnist for The New York Times, where this article originally appeared.

In a shocking revelation, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Wednesday released provisiona­l data suggesting that between 2019 and 2020, the country had its biggest increase in the rate of homicides in modern history.

Furthermor­e, recently released FBI statistics show that four Black women or girls were killed every day last year, which the Guardian newspaper pointed out was a sharp increase compared with the year before and “probably represents an undercount.”

This news came only days after a study in The Lancet revealed that deaths from police violence in the United States between 1980 and 2018 have been undercount­ed by more than half and that Black people were 3 ½ times as likely as white people to be killed by police.

Black people are suffering disproport­ionately from both state violence and community violence during this pandemic, not to mention that they are nearly three times as likely to be hospitaliz­ed and twice as likely to die from COVID than white people.

But America doesn’t have a great track record of responding to the plight of Black people in times of crisis. We have seen too often how the lust to punish Black criminalit­y — to inflate and pathologiz­e it — wins out over all else. Often, the crusaders use Black victims of crimes themselves as justificat­ion.

It seems impossible that elected officials would see the nuances within Black communitie­s and respond in ways that are nuanced. Considerin­g the long history of Black oppression, it seems impossible that they would display empathy for the Black community.

One of the arguments against emancipati­on and later, Reconstruc­tion, was the mythologiz­ed idea of Black criminalit­y and barbarism. As the Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabili­a at Ferris State University points out, during Reconstruc­tion, “many white writers argued that without slavery — which supposedly suppressed their animalisti­c tendencies — blacks were reverting to criminal savagery. The belief that the newly emancipate­d blacks were a ‘black peril’ continued into the early 1900s.”

Throughout those years, Black people were the victims of racial terror as lynching spread across the country — particular­ly through the South — like a plague.

In 1993, when Congress was debating the crime bill, Black people were disproport­ionately represente­d both among victims and perpetrato­rs in homicides, and lawmakers focused on punishment of those committing crimes, with little latitude for empathy.

As then-Sen. Joe Biden said during a speech on the floor: “It doesn’t matter whether or not they were deprived as a youth. It doesn’t matter whether or not they had no background that enabled them to become socialized into the fabric of society. It doesn’t matter whether or not they’re the victims of society. The end result is they’re about to knock my mother on the head with a lead pipe, shoot my sister, beat up my wife, take it on my sons. So, I don’t want to ask what made them do this.”

The 1994 crime bill would have disproport­ionate and disastrous effects on the Black community by contributi­ng to mass incarcerat­ion.

When then-New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg was championin­g and defending the Police Department’s discrimina­tory stop-and-frisk program, which overwhelmi­ngly targeted Blacks and Hispanics, he framed it as a way of saving Black people’s lives.

Before a Black congregati­on at a Brooklyn church in 2012, Mr. Bloomberg declared that “We are not going to walk away from a strategy that we know saves lives.” As the ACLU of New York pointed out, in the previous year, more than 685,000 people were stopped, and “nearly 9 out of 10 stopped-and-frisked New Yorkers have been completely innocent.”

Now we are at another crossroads: After last summer’s protests elicited lofty commitment­s to change, the country is once again considerin­g police reforms against the backdrop of crime.

But the negotiatio­ns in Congress over federal police reform legislatio­n have already collapsed. Democrats — including former President Barack Obama and strategist James Carville — have expressed their disapprova­l of the slogan “Defund the Police,” while Mr. Biden said in July that “We need more policemen, not fewer policemen.”

The pandemic has been attended by massive trauma — in lost lives, and lost jobs, as well as the prospect of lost homes and the lingering effects of a lost year that children couldn’t spend in school. Black people have been hit particular­ly hard by these upheavals. Some of that trauma is pouring out onto the street, sometimes in the form of violence.

The question for America is whether it can sympathize with people suffering through trauma and design solutions that address it in a holistic way, or else default to its position of comfort and convenienc­e: using power to punish and defending people as a shield to destroy people.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States