Lodi News-Sentinel

Panic over President Trump unwarrante­d

- Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonist­s, visit the Creators Syndicate webpage at www.creators.com.

Donald Trump’s surprise win has millions of Americans, many of whom are black, in a tizzy. Many, such as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, are writing about what it means to be black during a Trump administra­tion even though Trump’s presidency has yet to begin. My argument has always been that the political arena is largely irrelevant to the interests of ordinary black people.

Much of the 1960s and ‘70s civil rights rhetoric was that black political power was necessary for economic power. But the nation’s most troublesom­e and dangerous cities, which are also cities with low-performing and unsafe schools and poor-quality city services, have been run by Democrats for nearly a half-century — with blacks having significan­t political power, having been mayors, city councilors and other top officials, such as superinten­dents of schools and chiefs of police.

Panic among some blacks over the upcoming Trump presidency is unwarrante­d. Whoever is the president has little or no impact on the living conditions of ordinary black people, even when that president is a black person, as the Obama presidency has demonstrat­ed. The overall welfare of black people requires attention to devastatin­g problems that can be solved only at the family and community levels.

Mountains of evidence demonstrat­es that outcomes are not favorable for children raised in female-headed households. Criminal behavior is greater, and academic achievemen­t is much less for such children.

This is a devastatin­g problem, but it is beyond the reach of a president or any other politician to solve. If there is a solution, it will come from churches and local community organizati­ons.

Education is vital to upward mobility. Most schools labeled as “persistent­ly dangerous” are schools with predominan­tly black population­s. At many schools, students are required to walk through metal detectors and place their book bags and purses on a conveyor belt that goes through an X-ray machine. Armed police patrol the school to try to stem school violence. But even with a police presence, teachers, staff and students are assaulted.

A policy that permanentl­y removes troublemak­ers would make a greater impact on black education than anything a U.S. president could do. The fact that black parents, teachers and civil rights organizati­ons tolerate and make excuses for the despicable and destructiv­e behavior of so many young blacks is a gross betrayal of the memory, struggle, sacrifice, sweat, tears and blood of our ancestors. The sorry and tragic state of black education is not going to be turned around until there’s a change in what’s acceptable and unacceptab­le behavior by young people. That change could come only from within the black community.

Using 2012 data from the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting Program, Law Street Media offers some sobering statistics in an article titled “Crime in America: Top 10 Most Dangerous Cities Over 200,000” (http://tinyurl.com/qeusjj4).

The nation’s most dangerous big cities are Detroit, Oakland, St. Louis, Memphis, Stockton, Birmingham, Baltimore, Cleveland, Atlanta and Milwaukee. The most common characteri­stic of these cities is that they have predominan­tly black population­s. Another common characteri­stic is that for decades, all of them have been run by Democratic and presumably liberal administra­tions. Some cities — such as Detroit, Buffalo, Newark and Philadelph­ia — haven’t elected a Republican mayor for more than a half-century.

Here are some indisputab­le facts: Crime imposes a huge cost on black communitie­s in the forms of human suffering and economic well-being. It matters little whether the U.S. president is black or white, Democrat or Republican. It also matters little whether local politician­s are black or white or Democrats or Republican­s. What will matter is an unyielding black intoleranc­e for crime, along with a willingnes­s to allow policing authoritie­s to do what is necessary to stop criminals from preying on the overwhelmi­ngly lawabiding people of the community. In light of the many difficulti­es within black communitie­s, focusing energy and resources on the election of Donald Trump is gross derelictio­n.

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