Thomas Sowell [courtesy of Jewish World Review] recently asked this rhetorical question:
Are Race Riots News?
When I first saw a book with
the title, "White Girl Bleed A Lot" by Colin Flaherty, I instantly knew
what it was about, even though I had not seen the book reviewed
anywhere, and knew nothing about the author.
That is because I had encountered that phrase before, while doing
research for the four new chapters on intellectuals and race that I
added to the revised edition of my own book, "Intellectuals and
Society," published this year.
That phrase was spoken by a member of a mob of young blacks who
attacked whites at random at a Fourth of July celebration in Milwaukee
last year. What I was appalled to learn, in the course of my research,
was that such race riots have occurred in other cities across the United
States in recent years — and that the national mainstream media usually
ignore these riots.
Where the violence is too widespread and too widely known locally to
be ignored, both the local media and public officials often describe
what happened as unspecified "young people" attacking unspecified
victims for unspecified reasons. But videos of the attacks often reveal
both the racial nature of these attacks and the racial hostility
expressed by the attackers.
Are race riots not news?
Ignoring racial violence only guarantees that it will get worse. The
Chicago Tribune has publicly rationalized its filtering out of any
racial identification of attackers and their victims, even though the
media do not hesitate to mention race when decrying statistical
disparities in arrest or imprisonment rates.
Such mob attacks have become so frequent in Chicago that officials
promoting conventions there have recently complained to the mayor that
the city is going to lose business if such widespread violence is not
brought under control.
But neither these officials
nor the mayor nor most of the media use that four-letter word, "race."
It would not be politically correct or politically convenient in an
election year.
Reading Colin Flaherty's book made painfully clear to me that the
magnitude of this problem is even greater than I had discovered from my
own research. He documents both the race riots and the media and
political evasions in dozens of cities across America.
Flaherty's previous writings have won him praise and awards, but this
book has been met largely with silence or abuse. However much ignoring
the ugly realities that his book reveals may serve the interests of the
media or politicians, a cover-up is a huge disservice to everyone else —
whether black, white or whatever.
Even the young hoodlums who launch these mass attacks on strangers
would be better off to be stopped now, rather than continue on a path of
escalating violence that can lead to a lifetime behind bars or to the
execution chamber.
The dangers to the nation as a whole are an even bigger problem. The
truth has a way of eventually coming out, in spite of media silence and
politicians' spin. If the truth becomes widely known, and a white
backlash follows, turning one-way race riots into two-way race riots,
then a cycle of revenge and counter-revenge can spiral out of control,
as has already happened in too many other countries around the world.
Most blacks and most whites in the United States today get along with
each other. But what is chilling is how often in history racial or
ethnic groups that co-existed peacefully for generations — often as
neighbors — have suddenly turned on each other with lethal violence.
In the middle of the 20th century, Sri Lanka had a level of mutual
respect and even friendship between its majority and minority
communities that was rightly held up to the world as a model. Yet this
situation degenerated over the years into polarization and violence that
escalated into a civil war that lasted for decades, with unspeakable
atrocities on both sides.
All it took were clever demagogues and gullible followers. We already
have both. What it will take to nip in the bud the small but widely
spreading race riots will be some serious leadership in many quarters
and that rarest of all things in politics, honesty.
Race hustlers and mob inciters like Al Sharpton represent such
polarizing forces in America today. Yet Sharpton has become a White
House adviser, and Attorney General Eric Holder has been photographed
literally embracing him.
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