Friday, September 23, 2016

Charlotte NAACP Leader Supports Open Carry, Second Amendment


 





Link to video

The President of the Charlotte, North Carolina NAACP, Corine Mack, made statements that should be music to Second Amendment supporters ears.  On CNN, she said that the mere fact that someone had a gun should not be enough to allow police to shoot someone.  From CNN:

MACK: At the end of the day, you know, a video may show a different perspective depending on the angle. And so if we don't have many different angles, you may not get the full picture. I think the most important part is the contrast in him having a book versus a gun. But in my mind and in most of the community's mind, it really doesn't matter if he had a gun. At the end of the day, we have the right, under the Second Amendment, to carry here in North Carolina. And their responsibility was to engage him in a more de-escalated way, to find out if he had a permit for his gun and allow him to go on his merry way and he would still be living today. That's not what happened. And so I don't want anyone to walk away from this conversation today thinking that a video showing he had a gun in any way says that he's guilty of anything.

Mack went on to say that police give white people who have guns different treatment than black people.  That is a common mis-perception.  It is true that black people commit violent crimes at far higher percentages than white people, but statistically, police are more likely to shoot white people who resist arrest than black people who resist arrest. From an analysis at wattsupwiththat.com:
Since the common thread in the killings is that the person was resisting arrest, we need to compare how often people of each race get killed by police, with how often people of the same race get arrested by police. But clearly, we’re not interested in arrests for jaywalking and the like. Since 97% of these deaths are occurring in the context of people violently resisting arrest, they are best compared to the corresponding number of arrests for violent crimes.
Here are the results of that comparison for 2015.
  • For every 10,000 white people arrested for a violent crime, 38 white people were killed by police (± 2).
  • For every 10,000 hispanic people arrested for a violent crime, 21 hispanic people were killed by police (± 3).
  • For every 10,000 black people arrested for a violent crime, 21 black people were killed by police (± 2).
Go figure … I was as surprised as you, so I’ve triple checked the numbers, and it’s true—the odds of a given arrest going bad and ending up in a death are much greater for white men than for black or hispanic men.
It does not surprise me too much.  Police know that there are no white groups who are likely to riot in the streets if a white criminal is killed during an arrest.  Police know they are much more likely to be sued for a black person killed during a arrest than a white person.  Police know that culturally, white people are more willing to give the police a pass on their behavior, especially if the person has a criminal record, and to condemn criminal acts.

There are no big city mayors who are going to condemn police for "racist" acts against white people. The President does not say that white people "have a legitimate grievance".

This does not mean the police consciously decide to shoot and kill a higher percentage of white criminals.  It could easily be a sub-conscious, lower level of care when dealing with white criminals.

I applaud Corine Mack for her support of the Second Amendment.  But the problem is not police racism.  The problem is the high level of black criminality, and its causes.

I suspect those causes are primarily a lack of trust in the rule of law in black urban cores.  All around the world a lack of trust in the rule of law is associated with high criminality. The constant drumbeat of "racism" reinforces the lack of trust in the police. It could be a lack of fathers in the home of black male children in those same high crime areas in the United States.  There is a high correlation with a lack of fathers in the home and high levels of criminality.

Enforce the law in the black urban cores impartially.  Encourage a strong family structure.  Encourage a trust in the rule of law. As trust in the rule of law increases, black crime rates will drop.


©2016 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice is included.
Link to Gun Watch


2 comments:

Wireless.Phil said...


Wife releases dramatic cell phone video of Charlotte shooting

USA TODAY - ‎23 minutes ago‎

CHARLOTTE - The family of Keith Lamont Scott, the black man shot dead by Charlotte police, released video on Friday that his wife recorded on her cellphone at the time of the killing that includes sounds of gunfire and her hysterical pleas for police ...
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2016/09/23/charlotte-mayor-calls-release-keith-scott-shooting-video/90899312/

Wireless.Phil said...

Everybody has it now.