America's New Racists
by
Walter E. Williams
Recently
by Walter E. Williams: Our
Moral Dilemma
The late South
African economist William Hutt, in his 1964 book, The
Economics of the Colour Bar, said that one of the supreme
tragedies of the human condition is that those who have been the
victims of injustices and oppression "can often be observed to be
inflicting not dissimilar injustices upon other races."
Born in 1936,
I've lived through some of our openly racist history, which has
included racist insults, beatings and lynchings. Tuskegee Institute
records show that between the years 1880 and 1951, 3,437 blacks
and 1,293 whites were lynched. I recall my cousin's and my being
chased out of Fishtown and Grays Ferry, two predominantly Irish
Philadelphia neighborhoods, in the 1940s, not stopping until we
reached a predominantly black North or South Philly neighborhood.
Today all that
has changed. Most racist assaults are committed by blacks. What's
worse is there're blacks, still alive, who lived through the times
of lynching, Jim Crow laws and open racism who remain silent in
the face of it.
Last year,
four black Skidmore College students yelled racial slurs while they
beat up a white man because he was dining with a black man. Skidmore
College's first response was to offer counseling to one of the black
students charged with the crime. In 2009, a black Columbia University
professor assaulted a white woman during a heated argument about
race relations. According to interviews and court records obtained
and reported by Denver's ABC affiliate (12/4/2009), black gangs
roamed downtown Denver verbally venting their hatred for white victims
before assaulting and robbing them during a four-month crime wave.
Earlier this year, two black girls beat a white girl at a McDonald's,
and the victim suffered a seizure. Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel ordered
an emergency shutdown of the beaches in Chicago because mobs of
blacks were terrorizing families. According to the NBC affiliate
there (6/8/2011), a gang of black teens stormed a city bus, attacked
white victims and ran off with their belongings.
Racist black
attacks are not only against whites but also against Asians. In
San Francisco, five blacks beat an 83-year-old Chinese man to death.
They threw a 57-year-old woman off a train platform. Two black Oakland
teenagers assaulted a 59-year-old Chinese man; the punching knocked
him to the ground, killing him. At Philly's South Philadelphia High
School, Asian students report that black students routinely pelt
them with food and beat, punch and kick them in school hallways
and bathrooms as they hurl racial epithets such as "Hey, Chinese!"
and "Yo, Dragon Ball!" The Asian American Legal Defense and Education
Fund charged the School District of Philadelphia with "deliberate
indifference" toward black victimization of Asian students.
In many of
these brutal attacks, the news media make no mention of the race
of the perpetrators. If it were white racist gangs randomly attacking
blacks, the mainstream media would have no hesitation reporting
the race of the perps. Editors for the Los Angeles Times,
the New York Times, and the Chicago Tribune admitted
to deliberately censoring information about black crime for political
reasons. Chicago Tribune Editor Gerould Kern recently said
that the paper's reason for censorship was to "guard against subjecting
an entire group of people to suspicion."
These
racist attacks can, at least in part, be attributed to the black
elite, who have a vested interest in racial paranoia. And that includes
a president who has spent years aligned with people who have promoted
racial grievance and polarization and appointed an attorney general
who's accused us of being "a nation of cowards" on matters of race
and has refused to prosecute black thugs who gathered at a Philadelphia
voting site in blatant violation of federal voter intimidation laws.
Tragically, black youngsters who are seething with resentments,
refusing to accept educational and other opportunities unknown to
blacks yesteryear will turn out to be the larger victims
in the long run.
Black silence
in the face of black racism has to be one of the biggest betrayals
of the civil rights struggle that included black and white Americans.
June
21, 2011
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
© 2011 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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