Tag: Race

Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America get a kick out of Trump protesters arguing about who is more oppressed. They also rip New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker for testifying against the nomination of Sen. Jeff Sessions to be attorney general. And they sigh as the insane people from Code Pink repeatedly disrupt the Sessions confirmation hearings.

Contributor Post Created with Sketch. I’m Losing Faith in My City Government

 

Indianapolis is an amazing city. Having lived in Washington DC, the suburbs of New Jersey, and the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles, Indy has been a welcome joy. World-class food. Great art. Sports on sports on sports on sports, and huge job growth in tech and other sectors. Yes, Indianapolis is booming. And yes, like all growing mid-major cities, Indy has it’s problems, starting with its City-County Council.

If Indy wants to be taken seriously, change must happen in the focus and the attitude of the city government.

There were 149 murders in Indianapolis in 2016, making it the deadliest year on record. It was four more than in 2015, which was the deadliest year on record until 2016. While most of the violent crime happens in the same areas of the city, the Indianapolis metropolitan area can’t afford to have murder rates this high. Literally, can’t afford it; tourism, housing and good-paying jobs, and investment all suffer when a city is viewed as unsafe.

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Recently, I read a post written by a Christian brother that really touched me and I felt that there needed to be a critique of it. I did not want to dismiss what he wrote on racism, but I did want to offer loving criticism with another person on my podcast. It worries me that […]

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Ours is a nation that continues to refuse to face its own history of slavery and racism. Peter Salovey, President and Chris Argyris Professor of Psychology, Yale University, 27 April 2016 For President Salovey’s statement to be true, here’s a truncated list of events from U.S. history that must be both inconsequential and insincerely motivated. […]

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Black Lives Matter (BLM) has brought together a diverse group of people, each with their own particular goals. Its organic nature makes it difficult to define, but that is also a source of its strength. While most people will associate BLM with police shootings of black men the organization’s leadership has a more coherent left-wing […]

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Recommended by Ricochet Members Created with Sketch. What African American Supreme Court Justice?

 
AA Smithsonian
The National Museum of African American History & Culture, Joel Mason-Gaines.

It turns out the new National Museum of African American History and Culture determined the second African American Justice on the Supreme Court, Clarence Thomas, considered to be one of the greatest jurists of our time, has made no contributions worthy of note.

Welcome to the Harvard Lunch Club podcast for September 27, 2016! It’s the Trump Rocked It, But the Media Won’t Say It! edition, brought to you by SimpliSafe!

The morning after the Thrilla in Hampstead, nanophysicist Mike Stopa and radio talk host Todd Feinburg tell you who won the debate and how. Then we’ll share our prerecorded predictions (just to make ourselves look dumber than usual), followed by our shower thoughts and our Hidden Gem from the band XTC.

Contributor Post Created with Sketch. Race and Its Implications

 
World_Map_of_Y-DNA_Haplogroups
Image Credit: https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=27947271

It’s hard to imagine a subject more likely to inspire anger, misunderstanding, and bitter recrimination than race. An understanding of what race itself consists of is probably the first place to go in order to understand why it’s such a vexatious problem. In order to properly understand the subject, one must first internalize the fact that Homo sapiens as a species (or more precisely, our genetic ancestors) spread out from our ultimate ancestral home of Africa some 1.9 million years ago. Climate and distance had the effect of isolating groups of individuals in unique conditions for generations and subjecting them to different selective pressures. This in turn led to the dispersion of our species into its various racial components. But that’s merely the genetic part of the story.

Contributor Post Created with Sketch. The Democratic Party and the Smug White Liberal

 
Nikki Johnson-Huston
Nikki Johnson-Huston

Nikki Johnson-Huston, a Philadelphia attorney and lifelong Democrat, published a fascinating article in The Huffington Post earlier this week. Titled “The Culture of the Smug White Liberal,” she asks what exactly liberalism has accomplished for the black community, especially considering the nearly monolithic voting bloc they represent. Though she appreciates progressives who actually put in the hard work to improve society, she has no love for “the cocktail party liberals, the elites, who wear the cloak of liberalism to protect themselves from criticism and so they can keep a clear conscience.”

Contributor Post Created with Sketch. Private Accommodation

 

In The New York Times, Kristen Clarke writes about her experience as an African-American user of AirBNB:

Though August marks the off-season for tourism in Buenos Aires, I was rejected by the first three hosts I contacted. One host listed the days in question as available but nonetheless claimed my request overlapped with another reservation; another declined without explanation; and a third got back to me after a long delay, claiming to have missed my request. While my fourth request was accepted, the overall experience was a sour one. I am African-American, and because Airbnb strongly recommends display of a profile picture (which I provided) and requires its users to display an actual name, it was hard to believe that race didn’t come into play.

Promoted from the Ricochet Member Feed by Editors Created with Sketch. My Hipster Church and Ferguson

 

Some months after Ferguson (which is about 10 miles away from my house, as the crow flies), I wrote my pastor to carp about about how Christian pastors of hipster churches are not willing to be clear-eyed about the issues plaguing our black friends and neighbors. He invited me to be part of a roundtable discussion about race. We were evenly balanced racially and the discussion that made it to YouTube was thoughtful and productive in that the two views — white and black — were represented in a manner consistent with our faith. But neither side seemed to budge.

My resolution was that white racism, however it might exist, is nowhere near the most-pressing issue facing the black community. The week we taped the video, there had been a murder in Kansas City where drive-by shooters murdered a little girl who was playing in a home that had been riddled with bullets. I asserted that I cannot be non-racist enough to prevent people I have never met from shooting-up a home and killing a child. My black friends were simply having none of it. I sensed that they were affronted by my pointing-out black criminality, and rejecting racism as a meaningful cause.

Contributor Post Created with Sketch. Walker Activates Wisconsin National Guard

 

Via the WSJ:

MILWAUKEE—Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker declared a state of emergency in Milwaukee on Sunday and activated the state’s National Guard, a day after violence erupted in the city spurred by the fatal police shooting of an armed man following a traffic stop. At a Sunday news conference, Milwaukee Police Chief Edward Flynn identified the man who was shot by police as 23-year-old Sylville K. Smith, who, according to court records, was African-American. The 24-year-old officer who shot Mr. Smith is also African-American, according to Chief Flynn. The chief said he has reviewed the body-camera footage of the incident and said it shows Mr. Smith holding a gun. The footage hasn’t been publicly released.

Contributor Post Created with Sketch. A Coda to “All Lives Matter”

 

A note sent to me by a friend in New York about my “All Lives Matters” post. I share it with you, fellow Ricochet members.

I had a similar experience to you last week. I visited a great friend in Staten Island. His parents hadn’t seen me in years, but I was still family to them.

Contributor Post Created with Sketch. Do Black Lives Really Matter to Black Lives Matter?

 

NYC action in solidarity with Ferguson. Mo, encouraging a boycott of Black Friday Consumerism.If the Black Lives Matter movement cares about black lives, why don’t they protest every time a black man shoots another black man? Instead of pointing his finger at white people, why doesn’t President Obama decry the racism that exists within the black community? I know it’s a controversial statement, but black men treat other black men as if their lives are worth nothing.

The Founders of the Black Lives Matter movement are not social justice warriors, they’re not civil rights crusaders. The Founders of the Black Lives Matter movement are the new Weather Underground, — lesbian women whose goals include tearing down the rule of law in America. To do this, they divide and conquer. They pit black people against white people. They pit black people against police. They pit criminals against law-abiding Americans. Over and over we’re told its all white people’s fault. But when does the blame end?

Between the time period of January 1, 2009 through December 31, 2012, an average of 112 black men died from police-involved killings each year. This includes both justified and unjustified. Compare that to this number: During that same four-year period, an average of 4,472 black men were killed by other black men each year.

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There was a thread a day or two ago by Boss Mongo which discussed crime statistics and the like based on Heather Macdonald’s work, especially her latest book “The War on Cops.” Last night, CSPAN BookTV aired an interview of Ms Macdonald about “The War on Cops” with an interviewer (a leftist college professor) who […]

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I want to give a shout-out to Fred Cole and Jon Gabriel for including the death of Philando Castile in the Daily Shot. While the Facebook video begins after the shooting, and the public has no evidence right now of exactly what transpired in the seconds leading up to the shots being fired, the alleged […]

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Contributor Post Created with Sketch. What Government Can’t Do

 

shutterstock_116979886Let’s call this the most unsurprising headline of the year so far “Marriage Increases The Odds Of Surviving Cancer, Studies Find.” Next thing you know they’ll be discovering that salt makes you thirsty. I’m not actually belittling the science, more the opposite. Even the most cursory glance at social science data accumulated over the past, oh, 150 years, provides copious evidence that we humans do better pair-bonded for life. And if data doesn’t convince you, there’s also literature, anecdote, tradition, and intuition. But let’s stick with science for now.

Two studies published in the Journal Cancer found that among 800,000 adults diagnosed with cancer between 2000 and 2009, those who were married survived the disease at higher rates than single people — much higher rates. Especially men. The death rate among unmarried women was 19 percent higher than for married women, and for unmarried men the rate was 27 percent higher. The researchers controlled for factors like income, health insurance status, race, and other factors but still found that marriage was a key variable. Scarlett Lin Gomez of the Cancer Prevention Institute, one of the authors, told the Washington Post that money does not explain her results, but that “social support” is a “key factor.”

It’s interesting about the men, isn’t it? Marriage confers many benefits on women (though the early feminists were venomously anti-marriage), but study after study has found that when it comes to health and longevity, men benefit even more than women from tying the knot (and keeping it tied).

Contributor Post Created with Sketch. Por Qué Es Latino Identidad no Noticias Ted Cruz?

 

Ted.Cruz_.Jorge_.Ramos_.03.Jan_.2016I’m disappointed, albeit not surprised, at the media silence on the historical significance of America’s prospect of having its first Latino president, Ted Cruz. Not because I give a rat’s hind parts about identity politics. I don’t. I would just for once like a level playing field on race, where the media has made Republicans run uphill for the past 50 years.

When Barack Obama was a presidential candidate in 2008, there were endless references to how historic it would be to have our first black president. Some celebrities (and I surmise others) wanted it so badly they voted for Obama simply because he was black, and bragged about it.

I conceded Obama’s blackness on skin color and features. If I didn’t know of him and he walked into a room I’d see a black man, despite his Irish lineage. However, I never bought the “African American” label. That’s a sociological term of art for descendants of Africans who unfortunately can’t trace themselves to a country or tribe due to the ravages of slavery. Obama isn’t the descendant of African slaves. He is the descendant of slave owners, no different than other white presidents before him.

Promoted from the Ricochet Member Feed by Editors Created with Sketch. Government Regulations Block Child from Attending School of Choice Because He’s Black

 
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Segregated water fountains in North Carolina, 1950. (Photographer: Elliott Erwitt)

It’s a story that’s almost impossible to believe in 2016. Edmund Lee, a third-grader attending a charter school in St. Louis, recently learned that he would no longer be able to attend his school after his family moved to St. Louis County. Their new location isn’t the problem — other students from that area are allowed to attend Gateway Science Academy. He can’t attend his school of choice because he’s black:

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Before Obama was elected President, relations between various whites and minorities were probably as good as they have ever been since the 1960s. Morgan Freeman hadn’t yet embarrassed himself by voting for an empty suit, but instead offered this gem during a conversation with Mike Wallace on 60 Minutes:  FREEMAN: What do you do with yours? […]

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