It bears no resemblance to reality — not in police forces, and not in America
By Andrew C. McCarthy
National Review
June 3, 2020
About twice
as many white people as black people are killed by police. In fact, in
about 75 percent of police shootings, the decedent is not black. Of
course, that is not what you would grasp from consuming media.
Take the website statista.com, specifically its breathless focus on
“Hate crime in the United States” — counterfactually insinuating that
any shooting involving a black victim must be a “hate crime.” Here’s
their big headline from Tuesday: “Black Americans 2.5X More Likely Than Whites to Be Killed By Police.”
It is fiction. It is sheer demagoguery, peddled as American cities
are besieged by rioters in the wake of George Floyd’s killing by
Minneapolis police. The falsity of the claim is demonstrated even by
statista.com itself. Just three days ago, the site posted another series of bar graphs, showing that, in fact, whites are nearly twice as likely as blacks to be shot to death by police. Here are the numbers:
Year White Black
2017 457 223
2018 399 209
2019 370 235
2020 (so far) 42 31
The rest of the bar graphs break out the numbers of Hispanic
decedents (slightly lower than black, significantly lower than white),
as well as those whose heritage is described as “other” and unknown.
Right underneath its chart, statista.com writes, “Sadly, the trend of
fatal police shootings in the United States seems only to be
increasing.” In point of fact, it is steady — and if I wanted to play
games like statista.com does, by, say, weighting the numbers to account
for population growth while ignoring all other relevant factors, I could even pretend that the number was decreasing. The Washington Post acknowledges
that fatal shootings by police have run steadily at around 1,000 per
year since 2015 — 995 (2015), 963 (2016), 987 (2017), 998 (2018), and 1,004 (2019).
As Heather Mac Donald relates in an insightful Wall Street Journal
op-ed, blacks make up only a quarter of the total number of people
killed in police shootings annually, a ratio that has held steady since
2015. The reigning canard, however, is that this 25 percent figure
proves racism since African Americans make up just 13 percent of the
U.S. population.
Ridiculous as this syllogism is (as we’ll see, it conveniently elides
more consequential factors), it still puts the lie to the slanderous
narrative that police are hunting down black men. Even if we ignore the
fact that an increasing number of police officers — obviously including
those involved in encounters with black suspects — are themselves
African Americans, the percentage of black deaths from police shootings
would be much higher if blacks were being targeted.
Police do not go looking for people to shoot. In shooting situations,
police are confronting crime suspects, the majority of whom are armed.
But given that George Floyd was unarmed, let’s consider unarmed people
killed in such encounters. Such unarmed decedents, too, were twice as
likely to be white as black in 2019 — i.e., 19 unarmed whites, nine
unarmed blacks. As Ms. Mac Donald observes, this ratio is not stable
(and there is some looseness in what the media define as “unarmed”): In
2015, it was 38 unarmed blacks to 32 unarmed whites.
The Floyd killing has been injected into the bien pensant
narrative of innocent, unarmed black men murdered by cops. But the
number of unarmed black men killed by police is vanishingly small. As
Mac Donald notes, there were 7,407 black homicide victims in the United
States in 2018, the last year for which final numbers are available.
Assuming a comparable number in 2019, the nine unarmed men killed in
police shootings would represent just 0.1 percent of black homicides.
In stark contrast, she asserts, “a police officer is 18½ times more
likely to be killed by a black male than an unarmed black male is to be
killed by a police officer.”
The media, the bipartisan political class, the academy, and the
commentariat concoct their “systemic,” “institutional,” “unconscious”
racism fiction by statistical tunnel vision: We must conclude that
African Americans — in particular, young black men — are being targeted
by police because the percentage of killings of blacks significantly
overrepresents the black population. It makes no sense, however, to look
only at the percentage of blacks involved in police shootings, as if it
were the only attribute that mattered — as if it were the only
attribute by which blacks are overrepresented compared to their
percentage of the overall population.
While African Americans are involved in two times more police
shootings than their percentage of the population would seem to warrant,
they commit 53 percent of murders and 60 percent of robberies — well
over four times their percentage of the population. The
political establishment would have you assume this statistical disparity
is caused by institutional racism that myopically beams police
attention onto black men. But we know the statistics accurately reflect
reality because crimes get reported by victims — a large percentage of whom are black (also outstripping their share of the overall population).
If you just focus on interracial crime, though, Mac Donald (writing this time in the City Journal)
has crunched those numbers. “Between 2012 and 2015, blacks committed
85.5 percent of all black-white interracial violent victimizations.”
This, she qualifies, excludes interracial homicide. Powerline’s Paul Mirengoff fills in that blank: “Blacks commit around 70 percent of black-white interracial homicides.” For this, he draws on FBI crime statistics for 2016.
They show that, of 776 black–white homicides, blacks committed 533 and
whites 243. Neither of these numbers, by the way, nor their combined
total, comes anywhere close to the number of blacks killed by blacks: a
staggering 2,570 — the overwhelming majority male.
The most dangerous threat to the African-American community in
America is not cops. It is liberals. The United States is not
institutionally racist. The political system, the criminal-justice
system, and academe overflow with political progressives. The notion
that they would tolerate racism in their institutions would be laughable
if sensible people were encouraged to think about it rather than
mindlessly accept it. Nor could we conceivably be “unconsciously”
racist. Let’s put aside that to discriminate is to choose, and
that, where it exists, racial discrimination is a conscious state of
mind. The reality is that our institutions of opinion are so obsessively
racialist, no one in America has the luxury of being unconscious about
racism.
The African-American community is not a monolith. Like other segments
of the American population, it is diverse and dynamic. The policies
pushed by progressives damage the parts of it that need the most help.
And the false narrative of racist police, which pressures law
enforcement to back off from the communities most victimized by crime,
is now destroying entire cities.
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