US protests: liberal elites run risk of creating the racism they claim to hate
By Greg Sheridan
The Weekend Australian
June 6, 2020
If God wills that it (the civil
war) continue until all the wealth piled by the bondman’s 250 years of
unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with
the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said 3000
years ago, so still it must be said: the judgments of the Lord are true
and righteous altogether.
— Abraham Lincoln, 1865
God gave Noah the rainbow sign / No more water but fire next time.
— Mary Don’t You Weep, a negro spiritual
Across
the US this week, 29 cities called out the National Guard to help
control protests, riots and looting that broke out in response to the
gruesome police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.
The nation seemed set to burn. This time water, fire next time.
Is
it fire this time? Probably not. By week’s end, the protests seemed to
be moderating, at least in their violence. But the words of Reverend Al
Sharpton, at a memorial for Floyd, were ominous nonetheless. Floyd was
blameless in the encounter that took his life, and his death was
appallingly gruesome, cruel and needless. It understandably aroused
great passion and anger.
But Sharpton
saw it as the essence of America — the police knee in our neck, he said,
is what America has been doing to us for 400 years.
Liberal
media voices rang out: America has never atoned for the original sin of
slavery. Former president Barack Obama and Democratic presidential
candidate Joe Biden both said the murder of Floyd was “systemic racism”.
But was it really? What do the facts and the long trajectory of US history really show?
Racism
in the form of slavery is indeed the country’s original sin. Yet the
repudiation of racism, and the positive liberal embrace of humanity
which transcends race, is America’s genius.
The
Declaration of Independence begins with a magnificent declaration,
biblical in its majesty: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that
all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with
certain unalienable rights.”
Yet the
author of these words, Thomas Jefferson, owned slaves. Hypocrisy plain
and simple. Jefferson couldn’t see African-Americans as human beings
deserving of human rights.
But the US
is a creedal nation, a nation built, uniquely, on a creed. As the
Christian gospels will shame a believer into better behaviour, so the
Declaration of Independence shamed America into justice on race. The
power of Jefferson’s words overcame the slave-owning example he set. For
as slaves and their supporters, abolitionists of every race, campaigned
against slavery, they did so by holding up to the US its own immortal
creed.
The US, like most nations in the 18th century, was once institutionally racist. Is it now?
The
answer is no, it is not. It has at times struggled bitterly not to be
so. It fought a terrible civil war, by far the bloodiest conflict it has
known, at first to ensure slavery could not expand into new
territories, and then explicitly to end slavery altogether.
There
was immense civil-rights work to do after that. Two of the first
institutions to integrate were conservative: the military, and
professional sports. The churches, though many had led the abolitionist
campaign, had a mixed record. Billy Graham insisted from the start of
his ministry in the 1950s that his congregations be integrated.
The
progress has been spectacular. In 2008, the US elected its first black
president. And even before that, back in 1996, the Republican who
Democratic candidate Bill Clinton feared the most as a presidential
opponent was General Colin Powell.
If
European liberals sneer at the US, they might want to remind us of the
names of all the black French presidents or black British prime
ministers.
Since the great wave of
civil-rights reforms in the US in the 1960s, black life expectancy has
increased by nearly 12 years, more than white life expectancy has
increased, although blacks still die 3½ years earlier than whites.
According to a Brookings Institution study in 1964, 18 per cent of
whites said they had a black friend. Now it’s nearly 90 per cent. In
1958, 44 per cent of whites said they would move house if a black family
moved next door. By the time of the Brookings Study it was 1 per cent.
In
1968, only 50 per cent of African-American adults had graduated high
school. Now it’s more than 90 per cent. In 1968, 10 per cent of blacks
had college degrees. Now it’s just on a quarter.
More
than half of African-Americans are middle class. At the same time,
there is still striking inequality. In 2018, the median income of a
black family was $US41,000, while for a white family it was $US71,000.
Even that does not necessarily indicate active systemic racism operating
today. Asian-Americans, many of whom are immigrants, have a
substantially higher median income than whites. Asian-Americans have not
suffered the tragic, historic disadvantages of African-Americans, nor
have they been locked out by a racist US society.
The
one measure where African-Americans have gone backwards since 1968 is
the proportion of the black population in jail. This has risen from 604
per 100,000 in 1968 to 1703 per 100,000 in 2018.
Here
we come upon a thorny knot of the most difficult problems. As President
Donald Trump and his administration assert, the figures do not support
the idea that US police forces are systemically racist, despite the
shocking murder of Floyd. On the other hand, US society has organised
itself in a way that is distinctly but unintentionally disadvantageous
to blacks and that makes it difficult for blacks to escape these
disadvantages.
I don’t believe this is
racism at work. I have lived in the US on four separate occasions, as
this paper’s Washington correspondent in 1986 and 1987, and for periods
of several months each in three different attachments to US think
tanks. Every time, I have lived in a racially diverse apartment
building. I’ve had friends of every ethnic background. I have spent
probably thousands of hours in the company of conservative Republicans
and conservative Christians. I have never heard a single one ever make a
racially derogatory remark.
That experience is surely subjective, but it’s worth something.
What
do the figures tell us? Last year, police killed 10 unarmed
African-Americans. This is in a nation of 330 million people. It’s
difficult for people to remember just how big a number 330 million is.
It will always throw up tragic and terrible cases and some abuses. A few
terrible incidents, in this media and internet-dominated age, can look
like a national pattern when they are nothing of the kind.
In
any year of the past half dozen, the 800,000 police across the US’s
18,000 separate police forces will kill about 1000 people. One reason
that figure is so high is because of America’s gun culture. Every person
a US cop pulls over or talks to could likely be carrying a gun. In the
four years from 2000, 250 police were killed in the line of duty. Blue
lives matter too.
Generally, about
twice as many whites are killed as blacks, and blacks make up about a
quarter of those killed. Given that blacks are 13 per cent of the US
population, that establishes that they die in disproportionately large
numbers. But given that African-Americans commit more than half the
homicides in the US and an even higher proportion of the robberies, they
come into difficult contact with the police much more often than whites
do.
If the police retreat into passive
policing, it will be law-abiding African-Americans in high-crime
neighbourhoods who suffer most.
That’s
not to say there is no racism. Obviously, white racism survives in the
US. Racism, I suspect, is an inherent human evil. It must always be
opposed but can never be totally eradicated. There is no part of US law —
or respectable US opinion — that sanctions racism. The national
convulsion the Floyd killing has provoked indicates that very few in
the US think it’s OK. When violence against blacks was more routine, as
in pre-civil rights parts of the old Confederacy, it did not cause a
national outrage.
New York’s Chief of
Police Terence Monahan gave a powerful TV interview this week in which
he pointed out that his police force is a “majority minority” — that is,
white officers are less than half his force. He denied absolutely that
he or his officers were racist. He condemned the killing of Floyd and
pointed out, pretty convincingly, that his officers didn’t do it. Not
only that, they have often died in defence of minority community
members. Yet 170 of his officers have been injured, some seriously and
often with intent, by rioters acting violently over the past week.
Sometimes
Trump talks about race in a way that is unhelpful or stupid or gauche.
When he tells congresswomen of African heritage that “they should go
back where they came from”, that is offensive. And when he told
protesters that if they breached the White House fence they would be
met by “vicious dogs and ominous weapons”, that was needlessly
bombastic.
But Trump is assuredly not a
systematic racist. And as with many populists, much that he says is
common sense. It was foolish of him to suggest this week that he would
override states and use the Insurrection Act to deploy regular troops to
US cities to quell riots. The military, though generally
pro-Republican, absolutely hates the way Trump sometimes tries to
politicise them.
Yet the demonisation
of Trump is unreasonable and wildly exaggerated, and it makes its own
contribution to every problem the US faces. Susan Rice, Obama’s national
security adviser, tweeted that Trump “openly incites the murder of his
fellow Americans”. That is deeply misleading, grossly irresponsible and
can only contribute to a dangerous over-reaction from protesters, which
will in turn produce its own counter-reaction. This is the tenor of much
of the comment on CNN and in much of the mainstream American media. It
is at least as bad as anything Trump says or does and contributes to the
prevailing sense of crisis, drama and mutual and inexplicable hatreds.
Some
commentators talk of the return of the “riot ideology” of the 1960s. In
1967, liberal magazine The New Republic ran an editorial that said:
“Terrifying as the looting, the shooting, the arson are, they could mean
a gain for the nation if, as a result, white America were shocked into
looking at itself.”
This is liberal foolishness at its most extreme. And it made a big comeback this week.
There
is no doubt African-Americans are seriously disadvantaged, and that
this disadvantage arises from the brutal history their forebears
suffered. If the liberal Left tell them there is no hope because of
systemic racism — that their only recourse is defiance and civil
disobedience, that personal agency in work and education mean nothing
whereas identity politics is everything — then this will have tragic
consequences. Similarly, if the message of liberal ideology is that all
white people are complicit in racism and enjoy white privilege, that may
work OK as a meaningless affectation for affluent whites living in rich
neighbourhoods where they never meet street crime, but it will cause
suppurating retaliatory resentment among working-class, unemployed and
otherwise disadvantaged whites. It’s a recipe for needless racial
polarisation.
Many African-Americans,
like many poor people in the US generally, are caught in the
intersection of several US policy mistakes. The US ties health insurance
to jobs. If you don’t have a job, or don’t have a well-paid job, you
cannot afford health insurance. That means you don’t go to the doctor
when you’re sick. This is one reason African-Americans have suffered so
badly from COVID-19.
Globalisation has
contributed to the loss of blue-collar jobs, which are great entry-level
jobs. Truck driving is one of the last big employers of non-college
graduates that pays a living wage. This dynamic hurts blacks the most.
African-Americans
are concentrated in impoverished inner cities. The public schools are
wretched and the power of the teachers’ unions makes their reform all
but impossible. In wealthier districts, the schools are better.
The
legal system, while not formally racial in orientation, punishes minor
crimes that blacks typically commit much more heavily than minor crimes
that whites typically commit. Which white American will tell you they
didn’t smoke pot at college? But this never leads to jail.
And
here is the final tragic irony, more bitter than any other. Before
COVID-19 struck, Trump was actually delivering for African-Americans.
Their unemployment rate, at just over 5 per cent, was the lowest in
history.
Black poverty had declined
substantially under the Trump administration. Black incarceration also
declined under Trump. People with jobs don’t go to jail so much.
Despite
his reactionary reputation, Trump sponsored and signed the First Step
Act, which got thousands of non-violent black offenders out of prison.
The
US is not systemically racist. Despite its history, it is systemically
anti-racist. If the liberal elites, who more or less hate the US on
principle, push the systemic racism line long enough and hysterically
enough, they may create the reality they claim to oppose.
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