Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Our shoddy politics on crime are a deadly disaster

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WASHINGTON >> The subway shooting in Brooklyn on Tuesday that left at least 23 people injured underscore­s how our deeply divided political system is utterly failing our nation when it comes to public safety.

Our politics treat crime as an issue to be exploited, not a problem to be solved. Violence becomes just another excuse to fight culture wars, which exploit our discontent­s rather than healing them. Our debates are oriented toward the next election, not what's happening on our streets.

This all makes it more likely that potential solutions are ruled out rather than ruled in. We should prefer a robust discussion of what works.

Since the 1960s, “law and order” has been a rhetorical banner used to divide our society along racial lines. We would do well to think more about security and justice as preludes to a coherent approach to fighting crime — more effective policing and police reform efforts, stronger gun laws and greater access to mental health care. We need to deal with crime's social causes, too.

It's maddening that doing the obvious thing — strengthen­ing our gun laws — is off the table. Our permissive gun statutes are insane, which is why no other advanced democracy has anything like them. Even if states enact tough gun laws, weapons can pour across state lines. The easy availabili­ty of guns is a national problem, not a local one, as is the robust undergroun­d trade in weaponry.

But the conservati­ve politician­s who work relentless­ly to tie their moderate and progressiv­e foes to slogans such as “defund the police” — which is currently being advocated by virtually no one active in politics — reject national action on weapons. Republican­s proudly shout about “Second Amendment rights” and tell rural voters that urban Democrats championin­g gun control disrespect them and want to undermine their way of life.

It's ridiculous. It's shameful. And we keep seeing the fatal consequenc­es.

Despite all this, a U.S. Supreme Court stacked with conservati­ves might soon undercut even those remaining state and local laws aimed at regulating access to firearms.

Progressiv­es need to be very clear that in addition to regulating guns, they want better police strategies that include deploying more officers and other first responders where they are needed, with the resources and training they require. As supporters of public services, progressiv­es must defend public spaces, including mass-transit systems. New York's subway system will collapse if order is not restored.

“Riders need to feel safe,” Tony Utano, president of Transport Workers Union Local 100 in New York, said in a statement after Tuesday's shooting. “My members need to feel safe. We don't just dip in and out of the system. We spend entire shifts down there every day and night.”

But embracing robust policing where necessary should not mean abandoning efforts to reform police practices and prevent abuses — from petty harassment to the killing of unarmed people — that have created anger and mistrust among Americans of color. On the contrary, effective policing depends on bonds of trust between police and the communitie­s they serve.

Within Black communitie­s, there is a strong desire both for more effective policing and an end to abuses. This is a central reason that former police officer Eric Adams, was elected New York mayor last year as a toughon-crime candidate with strong support in Black precincts.

Fighting crime is hard. Our politics should stop making it harder.

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