chicagotribune | What mattered for police shootings wasn't the makeup of the police
department, it was the makeup of the city. In all measured cities, an
increase in black residents brought an increase in police shootings. In
smaller cities, a substantial change in the proportion of black
residents resulted in a slight increase in the predicted number of
police-caused homicides. And in the larger cities, the same change
increased the chance for police-caused homicides by a factor of 10
compared to smaller cities. Put another way, the quickest way to predict
the number of police shootings in a city is to see how many blacks live
there.
And,
in turn, the most likely victims of fatal police shootings are young
black males. According to a ProPublica analysis of federal data on
police shootings, young black males ages 15 to 19 are 21 times more
likely to be shot and killed by police than their white counterparts.
"One way of appreciating that stark disparity," notes ProPublica, "is to
calculate how many more whites over those three years would have had to
have been killed for them to have been at equal risk. The number is
jarring — 185, more than one per week." What's most relevant for the
diversity of police departments is this fact: While black officers are
involved in just 10 percent of police shootings, 78 percent of those
they kill are black.
The
glib response to stats on blacks and police is to cite so-called "black
crime" or "black criminality." But this depends on a major analytical
error. Yes, blacks are overrepresented in arrest and conviction rates.
At the same time, "criminal blacks" are a tiny, unrepresentative
fraction of all black Americans. If you walked into a group of 1,000
randomly selected blacks, the vast majority — upward of 998 — would
never have had anything to do with violent crime. To generalize from the
two is to confuse the specific (how blacks are represented among
criminals) with the general (how criminals are represented among
blacks). Statisticians call this a "base rate error," and you should try
to avoid it.
In fairness, you could apply this to police as well.
The number of cops who shoot — much less shoot black Americans — is a
small percentage of all cops. Why judge the whole by the actions of a
few?
But there are problems here. Policing is a profession backed
by the state and imbued with the right — and reasonable latitude — to
use lethal force. Even if we're looking at a small number of cops, it's
still a serious problem when those who shoot are most likely to kill
people from a specific group. Moreover, the problem of blacks and police
goes beyond shootings to general interactions between black communities
and law enforcement. We know, for instance, that officers are more
likely to use force against black protesters than white ones. The stats
on shooting are just one part of a larger dynamic that applies to police
departments across the country, not just individual cops.
The
history of American policing is tied tightly to its relationship with
black Americans and other minorities. The earliest police antecedents
were slave patrols and anti-native militias, built to suppress rebellion
and combat Native Americans. After the Civil War, Southern whites used
police as a new tool for control, terrorizing blacks under the guise of
law enforcement, from lynchings — often organized or supported by local
sheriffs — to convict leasing. Elsewhere, in the industrial cities of
the Northeast and Midwest, policing became a pathway for immigrant
mobility. At the same time, police attention turned to black migrants,
who were condemned as lazy and criminal. As historian Khalil Gibran
Muhammad describes, police during the New York race riots of 1900 and
1905 "abdicated their responsibility to dispense color-blind service and
protection, resulting in ... indiscriminate mass arrests of blacks
attacked by white mobs."
The
antagonism between blacks and police would continue through the 20th
century. As BuzzFeed's Adam Serwer notes in an essay on Ferguson, the
urban riots of the 1960s — and beyond — were fueled by police abuse,
"The recipe for urban riots since 1935 is remarkably consistent and the
ingredients are almost always the same: An impoverished and politically
disempowered black population refused full American citizenship, a
heavy-handed and overwhelmingly white police force, a generous amount of
neglect, and frequently, the loss of black life at the hands of the
police." For a more vivid picture, there's James Baldwin's 1960 essay on
Harlem — "Fifth Avenue, Uptown" — where he describes the meaning of the
white policeman in the black ghetto:
They represent the force of the white world, and that world's
real intentions are, simply, for that world's criminal profit and ease,
to keep the black man corralled up here, in his place. The badge, the
gun in the holster, and the swinging club make vivid what will happen
should his rebellion become overt.
This isn't ancillary to
the present question of diversity and policing, it's vital. The culture
of policing evolved in a context of racial discrimination and racial
control, where departments were charged with containing blacks, not
protecting them. The demographics of policing have changed since the
middle of the 20th century, but the culture has moved more slowly. And
while we have minority officers, they — like their white counterparts —
operate in an atmosphere of suspicion and distrust between communities
and law enforcement.
2 comments:
Stated more accurately---> The number of people police are required to justifiably shoot or inadvertently choke to death, is directly proportional to how many black people live there. People genetically endowed with proper FTO tendencies, behave themselves and don't tend to have these problems. BTW, the 20th anniversaary of The Bell Curve just occurred this month, but, of course, has been totally ignored by the politically-correct media---> http://www.vdare.com/posts/charles-murray-on-the-20th-anniversary-of-the-bell-curve?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=charles-murray-on-the-20th-anniversary-of-the-bell-curve
What you mean is "stated more precisely" because your statement is hardly accurate.
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