Ferguson
If this is your first visit, please
read “Introduction” first. In fact, even if you have been here
before, take a look at it. It has been edited.
It is time for me to express the rest
of my thoughts regarding the unfortunate events in Ferguson, MO. I
have been working on this piece for several weeks and I am still not
100% sure it captures all I want to say.
I want to headline this opinion by
attempting to communicate the level of heartbreak I feel for our
inner city poor. The hopelessness that permeates these communities
has gone on for far too long. It is not only a tragedy for those
trapped in the cycles of poverty, it is a huge waste of human
potential and a drag on our society culturally, psychologically, and
economically.
I also better make sure we understand
the term “inner city poor”. “Inner city” is not really a
geographic description, but is a shorthand term to characterize what
amounts to ghetto communities. They are not necessarily located in
the geographic inner city, but they share the characteristics of many
of the east coast inner cities. As one moves west, it is likely that
the “inner city” areas are actually located outside the urban
core.
The characteristics include a
population that is predominantly black, very high unemployment rates,
a high percentage of poorly maintained buildings, almost universal
poverty, high levels of drug and alcohol abuse, and high crime
levels. Other characteristics may include few intact families,
strained relations between the people and government officials
(particularly police), failing schools, and gangs in primary control
of the streets.
The existence of these communities is a
national tragedy.
The complete elimination of poverty is
not possible in a free society. Some will always make poor decisions.
I guess I better define “poverty”.
Staying true to my contrary nature, I refuse to define poverty in
accordance with the common understanding. I will not define poverty
as a lack of money. The reason is that I know people who do not have
much money, but they are not in a state of poverty. They happily
enjoy a simple life uncluttered with large quantities of material
possessions.
Rabbit Trail:
Those living a simpler life may be very good examples for the rest of
us. Though that may smack of the old Roman attitude that virginity
is a noble attribute best found in others.
No. I define poverty, and I believe it
is a defensible position, as a person who does not attain their full
potential. That may pertain to all of us to some degree or other, but
it clearly applies to all those who have attained nothing.
In the United States (I was about to
say “in a country such as ours”, but there are no other countries
“such as ours”) everyone enjoys the liberty to make their own
decisions. Some people will invariably make poor life decisions.
Some people are unable to make good
life decisions, or even make life decisions at all. That is a
completely different subject for another discussion.
I also must make sure that everyone
understands that we are talking about the United States (which I will
abbreviate from this point forward as “America”). In America we
have freedoms and opportunities that other countries do not enjoy.
In many other countries breaking free of poverty may be impossible
for the average person. I am not talking about those countries.
Rabbit Trail: I will not use the
term “African-American”. Black Americans are not half African and
half American. They are fully American. Just as I am not a
Scots-American, or Canadian-American (I am an immigrant), I am fully
an American. America, the only country in the World where you can
come from somewhere else and become not just a citizen, but
recognized as “one of us”.
The people who are trapped in inner
city poverty are, for the most part, normal people who have no innate
problems that would preclude them from making the kinds of decisions
that would free them from the clutches of poverty and allow them to
succeed.
So why do we see these problems arise?
It looks like a puzzle. Even going back
to the Trayvon Martin case. If one reads the evidence presented at
trial, it is clear that Trayvon was the aggressor. So why is the
not-guilty verdict viewed by so many intelligent people as an
injustice? The evidence presented to the grand jury in the Michael
Brown case supports the jury's decision not to indict Darren Wilson.
The question again arises, so why is this viewed as an injustice? By
smart people?
Part of the explanation must be laid at
interests that profit from racial tension. Those interests include
the left wing press (ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN) who want a story that
garners viewers and supports and promotes the left wing narrative,
and the race hustlers (Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton and that ilk) whose
fame and fortune depend on racial hatred.
There are also the usual bunch of
trouble makers who will use any excuse to riot, loot and burn.
But these interests cannot drum up the
tensions from within a vacuum. There has to be some fuel to the fire
upon which they can throw gasoline.
The rage is real. It exists. It cannot
be denied as irrational. The people who are trapped in the inner city
communities have real grievances.
Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown are
symbols. Their deaths serve as rallying points for people who have
grievances but feel they have no voice.
Race is not the issue. The idea that
the white police are out hunting down blacks, or that anyone can kill
a black without consequences is simply not true. Likewise, the
concept that the white establishment (particularly conservatives) are
dedicated to denying blacks opportunities is a fiction. Systemic
racism is dead. That conclusion is supported by the evidence. Last
time I looked, the President of the United States was black. At
least as of 10:00 PM last night, so was the Attorney General. In the
previous, Republican, administration, the two most important cabinet
posts were held by blacks. A current possible presidential candidate
is retired from the most prestigious chair in American medicine and
is black. Blacks occupy important positions in major businesses
throughout the country. There are blacks serving as CEO's in some of
the largest corporations in the country.
The evidence is clear. You can attain
your vision, in America, regardless of race.
The message of Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr., a man of wisdom, faith, peace and reconciliation, reverberated
throughout the country and changed hearts and minds. I firmly believe
that Dr. King was given a prophetic message, from God, to call
America to live up to its stated ideals.
And there is not a single other issue.
The issues are many and varied. The following narrative lists only
the biggest issues. There are others.
The first issue is the general culture.
There is a pervasive attitude within the communities that to do those
things that point toward success are “too white” or anyone who
engages in them is a traitor to their race. To some degree, the
legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King has been wasted. For a young black
seeking acceptance within his community, it is very difficult to buck
that attitude, especially if he has no positive male role model to
follow. If all of his male role models are gangsters, guess what.
The second issue is the almost complete
collapse of the black family within the inner city communities. I
don't need to start quoting the statistics here, you can easily look
them up yourself, but the number of black children born into single
parent households is appalling. I am not here to diminish the
efforts of single moms (most single parents are moms). It is a heavy
burden made heavier still by having to watch one's children travel
down a path of poverty and crime. The path that has led to this
situation has to be laid firmly at the feet of well-intentioned
liberalism. Yes. I was once a supporter of the very philosophies,
attitudes and programs that are at the center of the problem. I don't
need reminding. The combination of the sexual revolution that
denigrates the responsibilities associated with sexual activity (male
and female), a women's movement that devalues marriage and the
importance of the mom and dad partnership, and welfare programs that
discourage marriage, while damaging middle class families to some
extent, has absolutely devastated the black family.
The third issue is the state of public
education within the inner city communities.
It is not my intention here to cast
aspersions on classroom teachers. The teaching profession requires a
high level of dedication, patience and, yep, the “L” word, love.
Everyone who enters the profession knows that they will have a career
of long hours, successes and failures, and they will never be
wealthy. Every teacher I have met has been an extraordinary person.
Having said that, public education in
America has been on a steady decline, despite the spending on
education as a percentage of GPD having risen. Throwing money at it
has not worked. Not only have the results deteriorated, but classroom
teachers still earn salaries that do not reflect their value to
society, still work hours more typical of small business owners,
still have to pay for their own continuing education, and often have
to purchase classroom supplies from their own pockets.
And that is public education in
general.
In the inner cities, the above problems
are multiplied by dilapidated facilities, severe lack of supplies,
lack of textbooks, problems associated with students living in
poverty, and plagued by a subculture opposed to success in education.
All spiced up by the chance of being assaulted by a student schooled
in the rules and methods of the street gang.
The totality of the issues render the
possibility of anyone having hope of breaking out of the cycle
unlikely. That it happens at all (see Ben Carson “America the
Beautiful”) is amazing to me.
Those stuck in the cycle can hardly be
expected to have a vision for a better life. Without a vision, the
people perish (somehow Biblical wisdom always seems insightful). For
many in the inner city communities it seems the only way out is crime
or professional sports. Crime only lands one in prison (or the
morgue), and only a very few can expect to succeed in the brutally
competitive world of professional sports.
This is not a black problem, or a white
problem, or an inner city problem, or even a government problem. It
is an American problem. And this is America, the United States. The
once and still greatest country on Earth, ever. We can solve this. We
have solved big problems before. But we have to look at the real
issues and work out real solutions.
I have some thoughts on that. I wish I
had the wisdom to layout a program for every issue that I am positive
would work. I am not that wise. What I propose are actions I have
thought about, that others, wiser than I, have thought about. The
point here is to lay something out.
Though we have succeeded in solving big
problems, we have also failed. Prior to 1865 America was divided into
two economies, one based on free labor, the other based on slave
labor. Without a rational solution the tensions became so intense
that it resulted in the bloodiest war in history up to that time.
Just over 500,000 military personnel were killed. It destroyed the
economy of half the country. The south did not recover from the Civil
War for over 100 years.
We cannot afford to let the problems of
the inner city communities escalate to that extent.
The first thing to do is to stop the
hate. Whites are not out targeting blacks. In fact, the statistics
indicate that if anybody is hunting anybody it is blacks hunting
blacks. Whites have no interest in denying opportunities to blacks.
Those who are not liberals understand that helping someone else
prosper helps everyone prosper. Nor are all blacks criminals who want
to riot, loot and burn.
Everybody needs to ignore the haters.
The second major issue that can be
addressed is the education system. That it is broken cannot be
denied. I believe that “delegating down” is the most efficient
means of improvement. Let's put the power back in the hands of the
parents and the classroom teachers. One way of doing that would be to
institute a voucher system. Parents would receive vouchers for each
of their children that can be redeemed at any accredited school
anywhere in the country. That would allow parents to send their kids
to the best schools, and it would encourage each school to be the
best in order to attract students. I have heard the argument that a
voucher system would destroy the public education system as we know
it.
Good.
Fixing the family will be very
difficult. The forces in our society that work against intact
families are large and well entrenched. And some of the forces are
intertwined with other aspects of the poverty mentality. When there
is no hope for a better life, the pleasures of the moment, like sex,
but also including drugs and even violence, have a strong attraction
with no offsetting admonishment that they may ruin your life. If
your life is already ruined, why worry? So establishing a vision for
a better life (see the following paragraph) will help. But educating
young men that when you jump on your lady you accepting some very
large responsibilities, and helping young women to understand that a
life-long partnership with a responsible man will mean a better life.
Rabbit Trail, sort of: The womens
movement has reduced the respect for motherhood. Motherhood is viewed
as something separate to a career. On the contrary, motherhood is the
highest calling to which a woman can answer. But engaging in that
career, completely, requires a partnership with a responsible man,
because being Mom is a 24/7 career. Yes, I know of Moms who have had
other careers and have successfully raised awesome kids, my ex-wife
is one of those. But those women are truly exceptional. Face it. For
the average person, one career at a time is plenty.
The other difficult nut to crack is
changing the culture. Ignoring the haters would be a good start. But
those who have broken free of the cycle of poverty through education
and hard work need to be welcomed and encouraged to return to the
inner city communities to serve as examples and mentors and provide
inspiration.
To provide a vision that a better life
can be had.

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