All Races Suffer from Police Violence

June 4, 2020

Americans are so brainwashed that even some of my readers cannot believe that police violence affects more white people than black people.  The majority of victims are white; but disproportionately (blacks are a smaller percent of the population) they are black. In turn, this disproportion can be explained by the fact that according to US Department of Justice statistics, blacks commit a disproportion of homicides. Being only 13% of the population, blacks commit 52% of murders. Consequently, police regard confrontations with blacks as being more dangerous to police, and this affects police behavior. See this.

Here are recent statistics provided by Statista.

As I have explained, Americans are unaware of the facts for these reasons:

 (1) The presstitutes do not report (except locally) police violence against white people, because it does not fit the white racism explanation.

 (2) Unlike blacks, white people do not protest.  Whites have not been educated to regard violence against themselves as racism or as something specifically to do with being white. Moreover, there is no national reporting or days of national news coverage of police violence used against whites, so no one, white or black, is aware of the extent of police violence against white people.  Therefore, white people tend to give the police the benefit of the doubt.  White complaints are also restrained by the fear that coming down too hard on police will make the police more hesitant and less effective in law enforcement.

 (3) The Identity Politics that dominates our time has no interest in destroying its white racist explanation of US society.  Indeed, the strengthening of the racist explanation of America is the purpose of the New York Times 1619 Project.

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The Best of Paul Craig Roberts

Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration, associate editor and columnist for the Wall Street Journal, Business Week’s first outside columnist, columnist for the Scripps Howard News Service, contributor to the editorial page of the Los Angeles Times, and columnist for the main French and Italian newspapers, and for Creators Syndicate in Los Angeles. He served in numerous academic appointments in US universities and was  appointed to the William E. Simon Chair for Political Economy at Georgetown University’s Center for Strategic and International Studies where his colleagues were Henry Kissinger, Zbigniew Brzezinski, James R. Schlesinger (one of his former professors), and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Thomas Moorer. His article, “How the Law Was Lost,” was published in the January 1999 Cardozo Law Review.