Saturday, July 30, 2016

LA: "He was such a good boy" "It was his Own Fault."


America does not really have a "gun violence" problem.  America has a violent urban black culture problem.  If you want to look at the numbers more closely, you can add in a violent illegal immigrant problem.

There is a common theme that has become an Internet cliché when a young black man is shot and killed in the middle of a violent crime.

"He was such a nice boy."

"He was turning his life around."

"He was an aspiring rap star."

"They didn't have to shoot him."

It is refreshing when the mother of a young black man shot in the commission of a crime admits, after the tragic death of her son, that it was his own fault.

That is what happened when Devon Martes was shot and killed by a Jefferson Parish Sheriff deputy last week. You cannot help but feel sympathy for a woman who has lost two of her five sons in violent shooting deaths in the last eight years.  Devon was the youngest of eleven children. 

From nola.com:
"Devon was a really kind person but he just got himself caught up in too much stuff," Martes said of her son. "He really wasn't a bad boy, but he put himself in that situation. He put himself in harm's way."

Of the deputies, she said: "They had to do what they had to do."

Sheriff Newell Normand at a press conference listed Martes' criminal record, which, starting at the age of 10, includes shoplifting, distribution of drugs, trespassing, and attempted armed robbery.

(snip)

"He had brand new tennis shoes he never put on. There's no reason for you to do this," she said. "You got a momma and a dad. That's one blessing right there. We work, we come home. We work, we come home and we take care of them. We just took them Sunday to Gulfport, to the Gulf Island Water Park."
New Orleans has one of the highest murder rates in the country. Young male humans are risk takers and adventurers by nature. Evolutionists see it as the legacy of the killer ape. Christians see it as original sin. If you look at places with high violent death rates across the world, they occur in places where the rule of law is not dependable.   It is the default position of the human experience. It is the natural state of affairs.

Alesia Martes speaks of of how she attempted to teach her youngest son from the example of his older brothers violent death.
"Devon took Brandon's death real hard," Martes said. "But he loved them streets. I said, 'Devon, you have to stop being out there. Don't you see what happened to your brother? Didn't this wake y'all up?' But he was hardheaded. They're just hard to deal with, those teenagers."
It takes a lot of work and faith and trust to build a culture to the point where young men trust the rule of law more than their own instincts and weapons.  It is not easy, but it can be done.  Most of America and Western Civilization have done it, over the last 400 years.

It is almost impossible to reduce this violence if crime offers an easy payout not far from the front door. That can only be stopped if a large majority of the community cooperate with the authorities, and reject crime as a valid career choice. That rejection of crime has to be built into the communities DNA.  It has to become a cliche that crime does not pay.

We are being told, daily, that violence in black urban areas is the fault of the police.  Actually, it is a fault that comes from too much distrust of the police.  The urban black crime centers need more police, and more active policing. That can help reduce the violence. But the crime rates will not come down to levels we know are possible until the citizens in those areas realize that the police are part of the solution, and not the problem.  When that happens, fewer police will be necessary.

A false narrative has been created that the police are part of the problem.  It might have been true 50, even 40, perhaps, in spots, as late as 30 years ago. It is more likely that even then, the problem was neglect of proper policing, and corrupt policing, instead of too much policing. It is not true any longer.

It is time for the the black community to reject the easy blame game of the race hustlers who push the police and the "system" as the problem.  Those who reject responsibility for their own communities are pushing for young black men to reject civilization and choose the path of the streets. The black urban culture has to embrace responsibility and the idea that bad choices produce bad ends.

Only then can the black urban culture start the long climb to reach the same level of peaceful existence that most of the rest of America enjoys.  It will not be easy, but it can be done.

Alisia Martes shows that the base of that acceptance of responsibility is out there.  She shows it when she says "he put himself in harms way".  It is a start, but more is required.  When the Internet cliché changes from "he was turning his life around" to "he put himself in harms way", we will know that we are moving in the correct direction. When a gun is seen as means of defense against criminals, and not as a tool of a criminal career, we will be moving in the right direction.

Guns in the hands of peaceful, responsible black people are part of the solution.  When black people see that they are trusted with the same level of responsibility as is the rest of society, it helps build a community of mutual trust. When armed black men and police see each other as allies instead of adversaries, we will have started to win the war.

©2016 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.
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2 comments:

PANTERA VAZQUEZ said...

Well stated. Inner city communities oftentimes have civic "leaders" who love to blame anything/anyone, but the guilty. It is time to put "Din do nuffin" to rest. It is time to recognize that these areas are FUBAR by their own making........

Anonymous said...

This sounds really good then you look at what has happened In just the last few weeks. if you want mutual trust you have to stop training cops to freak out and shoot first. when you tell someone to give them your identification you do not shoot them for reaching for it. we have as much right to be armed as the police. In fact we have more right to carry than the police because the police use our delegated authority to be armed in the performance of their duties. the color of your skin is not a reason for distrust. I have had more problems with people of my own skin color than any other color. it would be a simple issue to resolve. let black cops patrol black neighborhood. Hispanic cops patrol Hispanic neighbor hoods and let white cops patrol white neighborhoods and let oriental cops patrol oriental neighbor hoods just like the reservation police patrol the reservations. for the Indian tribes. when people refuse to assimilate that is what you are stuck with. It certainly eliminates any complaints of profiling. Language barriers and cultural differences. Progressive ides do not work. I think we have ample proof of that. furthermore I think we have ample proof that police academy training is extremely flawed. cowards teaching cowards is not working. If you are being trained to instantly profile what can you expect but more profiling.. I'm white he is black therefore he is dangerous. I'm black he is white therefore he is more dangerous. How about he is human and I am human and until he gives me reason to fear I'll treat him with the same respect as any other person I deal with. Replace the cops because it is too difficult to retrain them. I refuse to keep a dog that bites.