Profiling
by
Walter E. Williams
Recently
by Walter E. Williams: Political
Rope-A-Dope
Right now,
there isn't enough known about the circumstances surrounding the
fatal shooting of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, a black, by George
Zimmerman, a 28-year-old part-Hispanic, during his neighborhood
watch tour in an Orlando, Fla., suburb. If evidence emerges that
Zimmerman's actions were not justified, he should be prosecuted
and punished; however, there's a larger issue that few people understand
or have the courage to acknowledge, namely that black and young
has become synonymous with crime and, hence, suspicion. To make
that connection does not make one a racist. Let's look at it.
Twelve years
ago, a black Washington, D.C., commissioner warned cabbies, most
of whom were black, against picking up dangerous-looking passengers.
She described "dangerous-looking" as a "young black guy ... with
shirttail hanging down longer than his coat, baggy pants, unlaced
tennis shoes." She also warned cabbies to stay away from low-income
black neighborhoods. Did that make the D.C. commissioner a racist?
In some cities,
such as St. Louis, black pizza deliverers have complained about
having to deliver pizzas to certain black neighborhoods, including
neighborhoods in which they live. Are they racists? The Rev. Jesse
Jackson once remarked, "There is nothing more painful for me at
this stage in my life than to walk down the street and hear footsteps
and start thinking about robbery – (and) then look around and see
somebody white and feel relieved." Does that make the reverend a
racist?
The former
Charleston, S.C., black chief of police, Reuben Greenberg, said
the problem facing black America is not racial profiling. He said,
"The greatest problem in the black community is the tolerance for
high levels of criminality." Former Los Angeles black police Chief
Bernard Parks, defending racial profiling, said: "It's not the fault
of the police when they stop minority males or put them in jail.
It's the fault of the minority males for committing the crime. In
my mind, it is not a great revelation that if officers are looking
for criminal activity, they're going to look at the kind of people
who are listed on crime reports." Are former police Chiefs Greenberg
and Parks racist?
According to
the Uniform Crime Report for 2009, among people 18 or younger, blacks
were charged with 58 percent of murder and non-negligent manslaughter,
67 percent of robberies, 42 percent of aggravated assaults and 43
percent of auto thefts. As for murder, more than 90 percent of the
time, their victims were black. These statistics, showing a strong
interconnection among race, youth and crime, are a far better explanation
for racial profiling and suspicion than simple racism.
Black
Americans have spoken out against racial profiling by police. They've
been insulted by store personnel who might give them extra scrutiny.
There's the insult of the sound of a car door being locked when
a black approaches. It's insulting to have taxi drivers pass up
a black person and pick up white people down the street. In a similar
vein, I'm sure that a law-abiding Muslim is insulted when given
extra scrutiny at airports or listening to Fox News reporter Juan
Williams, who was fired by National Public Radio in 2010 for publicly
saying that he gets nervous when he sees people on a plane with
clothing that identifies them as Muslim. Blacks and Muslims who
face the insults of being profiled might direct their anger toward
those who've made blacks and crime synonymous and terrorism and
Muslims synonymous.
God would never
racially profile, because he knows everything, including who is
a criminal or terrorist. We humans are not gods; therefore, we must
often base our decisions on guesses and hunches. It turns out that
easily observed physical characteristics, such as race, are highly
interconnected with other characteristics less easily observed.
For most blacks
to own up to the high crime rate among blacks is a source of considerable
discomfort. Beyond that, it creates suspicions and resentment, which
are destructive of good race relations, and it's devastating to
the black community, which is its primary victim.
March
27, 2012
Walter
E. Williams is the John M. Olin distinguished professor of economics
at George Mason University, and a nationally syndicated columnist.
To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate web page.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
The
Best of Walter E. Williams
|