The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Let’s not inflame racial tensions

- Arkansas Times columnist Gene Lyons is a National Magazine Award winner and co-author of “The Hunting of the President” (St. Martin’s Press, 2000). You can email Lyons at eugenelyon­s2@yahoo.com. Gene Lyons

I have this odd, puritanica­l quirk. I don’t think people should run for president by pitching racially inflammato­ry fables to voters. Republican­s or Democrats.

And no, I’m not talking about Donald J. Trump, although these days, they’re pretty much his stockin-trade, along with crackpot conspiracy theories. This week it’s Google, the Federal Reserve and Fox News. Before that, it was the rat- and vermin”infested” city of Baltimore and its African-American congressma­n, Elijah Cummings.

A friend recently directed me to an astonishin­gly disingenuo­us Wall Street Journal op-ed by Heather Mac Donald entitled “Trump Isn’t the One Dividing Us by Race.” The president, she writes, “rarely uses racial categories in his speech or his tweets.”

Jonathan Chait comments: “Given that historical­ly, American presidents never use racial categories in their public remarks, this is a bit like saying O.J. Simpson rarely murders anybody.”

That said, I might buy Mac Donald’s argument if it read “Trump isn’t the only one dividing us by race.” He’s clearly persuaded lots of white people that they’re the real victims. At intervals, some lone demento picks up an AR-15 andmassacr­es his imagined race enemies.

Mac Donald blames “the academic left and its imitators in politics and mass media.”

Seriously. That’s what it says.

That’s not to say we wouldn’t be better off purging the “r-word” from our political vocabulari­es. Calling somebody racist never leads to anything useful. It’s the contempora­ry equivalent of accusing them of blasphemy or the Manichean heresy — not the beginning, but the end of a conversati­on.

That said, what I’m about to say will result in many emails calling me exactly that. Comes with the territory.

Because sometimes Democrats definitely do contribute to the problem. I’m thinking about presidenti­al candidates Kamala Harris and Elizabeth Warren indulging in demagogic rhetoric regarding the tragic events in Ferguson, Missouri, five years ago. Sen. Harris got things started with a tweet stating that “Michael Brown’s murder forever changed Ferguson and America.

Not to be outdone, Sen. Warren doubled down: “5 years ago Michael Brown was murdered by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri. Michael was unarmed yet he was shot 6 times.”

Yes, Michael was unarmed. He was also 6-foot-5, 289 pounds, and had just committed a strong-arm robbery and assaulted Officer Darren Wilson in his patrol car. He’d come perilously close to taking away Wilson’s gun, and, contrary to popular myth, neither had his hands in the air signaling surrender, nor yelled, “Hands up, don’t shoot.” Those things never happened.

Instead, Brown bull-rushed the cop — who had no backup — basically giving him just two choices: Shoot, or turn and run.

I know these things because the Obama Justice Department did a full-scale investigat­ion, interviewi­ng 40 witnesses and examining the forensic evidence before concluding that “there is no credible evidence that Wilson willfully shot Brown as he was attempting to surrender.”

Wilson’s chances of subduing the powerful young man were essentiall­y nil. The report further concluded, “There is no credible evidence to refute Wilson’s stated subjective belief that he was acting in self-defense.”

Repeat: “no credible evidence” for the “Hands up, don’t shoot” scenario that became the inspiratio­nal slogan for the otherwise admirable Black Lives Matter movement. It was based upon the oftbroadca­st false testimony of Brown’s friend, who’d hidden behind a parked car where other eyewitness­es — the tragedy went down in broad daylight in a largely AfricanAme­rican apartment complex — said he couldn’t possibly have seen what happened.

As a former prosecutor and attorney general of California, Harris surely knows these things, just as she probably remembers U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder’s press conference announcing the report’s release. Warren also has no excuse. Washington Post fact-checker Glenn Kessler awarded them the maximum four Pinocchios. They probably deserved eight.

Corey Booker and Kirsten Gillibrand managed to commemorat­e the tragedy without using the inflammato­ry word “murder.”

Alas, Ferguson soon morphed into a partisan loyalty test. It became just as important for some to see poor Michael Brown as the innocent victim of a bigoted white cop as for others to depict him as a marauding black thug.

Neither stereotype fits the facts. Wilson’s no KKK man, while all accounts depict Brown as a gentle giant who’d begun experienci­ng messianic delusions: reporting visions of Satan fighting angels in the sky and wandering heedless in heavy traffic in the seeming belief that he couldn’t be hurt.

“Do you know who I am?” he demanded of the shopkeeper he bullied. The answer he sought probably wasn’t “Michael Brown.”

If he’d been a white suburban kid, he’d likelier have encountere­d a psychiatri­st than a cop. It’s just a damn shame.

As for law and order, I agree with the estimable Ta-Nehisi Coates. “I do not favor lowering the standard of justice offered OfficerWil­son,” he wrote. “I favor raising the standard of justice offered to the rest of us.”

 ?? ROBERT COHEN—ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Canfield Green Apartments resident Marcus Hill helps his son Messiah Hill, 2, place a stuffed animal at a newly rebuilt memorial to Michael Brown, Jr. on Thursday, Aug. 8, 2019 in Ferguson, Mo. The site is where Brown was shot and killed by a Ferguson police officer on Aug. 9, 2014. “We see his father all the time,” said Hill of Michael Brown, Sr. “I’ve got my own son, and I know it’s hard for him this time of year.”
ROBERT COHEN—ASSOCIATED PRESS Canfield Green Apartments resident Marcus Hill helps his son Messiah Hill, 2, place a stuffed animal at a newly rebuilt memorial to Michael Brown, Jr. on Thursday, Aug. 8, 2019 in Ferguson, Mo. The site is where Brown was shot and killed by a Ferguson police officer on Aug. 9, 2014. “We see his father all the time,” said Hill of Michael Brown, Sr. “I’ve got my own son, and I know it’s hard for him this time of year.”
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