San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Property destructio­n is violence, and the pain is real

- @RichLowry

Breaking things and burning buildings is enjoying a vogue it hasn’t had since the late 1960s or early 1970s.

Arson and looting are a perennial feature of urban unrest, but they have been pretty universall­y condemned for decades now — until the past week or so.

Forced to choose between criticizin­g the George Floyd protests when they get out of hand and defending the indefensib­le, activists and writers on the left have been tempted into the latter.

Their inventive, if absurd, contention is that the destructio­n of property doesn’t qualify as violence, and, at the end of the day, isn’t such a bad thing, maybe even a salutary thing.

The Pulitzer Prize-winning architect of the New York Times’ 1619 Project, Nikole HannahJone­s, argued in an interview: “Violence is when an agent of the state kneels on a man’s neck until all of the life is leached out of his body. Destroying property, which can be replaced, is not violence. To use the same language to describe those two things is not moral.”

The editor of the New Yorker, David Remnick, favorably quoted a co-founder of Black Lives Matter Global Network, who explained: “We don’t have time to finger-wag at protesters about property. That can be rebuilt. Target will reopen.”

An article in Current Affairs asserted that applying “violence” to the destructio­n of property risks “making the term conceptual­ly incoherent and — much more important — conflating acts that do very serious physical harm to people with acts that have not physically harmed anyone.”

Now, it’s obviously true that what happened to George Floyd is sickening and that harming a person is much worse than damaging property. But that doesn’t mean that both aren’t acts of violence and both aren’t wrong.

Property is not an abstractio­n. It gives people shelter, and a sense of protection and stability. If the property is a business, it often represents years of sweat, tears and dreams.

For someone to destroy it in a spasm of rage or gleeful looting is felt as a profound violation, and understand­ably so.

In Minneapoli­s, rioters ransacked the bar of an African

American former firefighte­r named Korboi Balla. He had invested his life savings in the place, which he had planned to open any day. “I don’t know what we’re going to do,” Balla said. “We’ve been working so hard for this place. It’s not just for me, it’s for my family.”

But, hey, it was just property. Those who minimize looting often explain that businesses have insurance. But Balla wasn’t insured, and neither are many small businesses.

How about chain stores like Target? They have more resources. But there’s still a cost. They may decide it’s too risky to open back up in a neighborho­od where a store has been looted. And these businesses employ black people and have black customers.

It is ahistorica­l to assume urban areas easily bounce back from the large-scale destructio­n of property. Cities like Newark, Detroit and Washington arguably never recovered or took decades to fully recover from the riots of the 1960s.

Finally, there isn’t such a clear distinctio­n between harming property and people. Some shop owners will try to defend their livelihood­s or hire guards to do it. We’ve seen business owners beaten and a security guard at a St. Louis pawn shop shot and killed by people who, presumably, started out “only” wanting to destroy and steal property.

It’s easy to be cavalier about someone else’s property. The former ESPN NBA reporter Chris Martin Palmer celebrated an image of a building burning in Minneapoli­s, tweeting, “Burn that (expletive) down. Burn it all down.” Then, when rioters got close to where he lived, Palmer lashed out at them as “animals.”

He subsequent­ly explained he doesn’t endorse the destructio­n of property and supports peaceful protest. That’s the right position, although one that is now, incredibly enough, controvers­ial.

 ??  ?? Rioters set fire to an affordable housing complex in Minneapoli­s after the death of George Floyd. Property is not an abstractio­n. It gives people shelter, and a sense of protection and stability. If the property is a business, it often represents years of sweat, tears and dreams.
Rioters set fire to an affordable housing complex in Minneapoli­s after the death of George Floyd. Property is not an abstractio­n. It gives people shelter, and a sense of protection and stability. If the property is a business, it often represents years of sweat, tears and dreams.
 ??  ?? RICH LOWRY
RICH LOWRY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States