Geraldo's Point
by Thomas Sowell
Recently
by Thomas Sowell: Race
and Rhetoric
It is not
often that I agree with Geraldo Rivera, but recently he said something
very practical and potentially life-saving, when he urged black
and Hispanic parents not to let their children go around wearing
hoodies.
There is no
point in dressing like a hoodlum when you are not a hoodlum, even
though that has become a fashion for some minority youths, including
the teenager who was shot and killed in a confrontation in Florida.
I don't know the whole story of that tragedy, any more than those
who are making loud noises in the media do, but that is something
that we have trials for.
People have
a right to dress any way they want to, but exercising that right
is something that requires common sense, and common sense is something
that parents should have, even if their children don't always have
it.
Many years
ago, when I was a student at Harvard, there was a warning to all
the students to avoid a nearby tough Irish neighborhood, where Harvard
students had been attacked. It so happened that there was a black
neighborhood on the other side of the Irish neighborhood that I
had to pass through when I went to get my hair cut.
I never went
through that Irish neighborhood dressed in the style of most Harvard
students back then. I walked through that Irish neighborhood dressed
like a black working man would be dressed – and I never had the
slightest trouble the whole three years that I was at Harvard.
While I had
a right to walk through that tough neighborhood dressed in a Brooks
Brothers suit, if I wanted to – and if I could have afforded one,
which I couldn't – it made no sense for me to court needless dangers.
The man who
shot the black teenager in Florida may be as guilty as sin, for
all I know – or he may be innocent, for all I know. We pay taxes
so that there can be judges and jurors who sort out the facts. We
do not need Jesse Jackson or Al Sharpton or the President of the
United States spouting off before the trial has even begun. Have
we forgotten the media's rush to judgment in the Duke University
"rape" case that blew up completely when the facts came out?
If the facts
show that a teenager who was no threat to anyone was shot and killed,
it will be time to call for the death penalty. But if the facts
show that the shooter was innocent, then it will be time to call
for people in the media and in politics to keep their big mouths
shut until they know what they are talking about.
Playing with
racial polarization is playing with fire.
Much has been
made of the fact that the teenager was unarmed. The only time I
have ever pointed a loaded gun at a human being, I had no idea whether
he was armed or not. All I knew was that I could hear his footsteps
sneaking up behind me at night.
Fortunately
for both of us, he froze in his tracks when I pointed a gun at him.
If he had made a false move, I would have shot him. And if it had
turned out later that he was unarmed, I would not have lost a moment's
sleep over it.
You know that
someone was unarmed only after it is all over. If he attacks, you
have to shoot, if only to keep the attacker from getting your gun.
It so happened
that the man I pointed a gun at was white. But he could have been
any color of the rainbow, and it would not have made the slightest
difference.
Let
the specific facts come out in the Florida case. That is why we
have courts.
Have we forgotten
the Jim Crow era, with courts making decisions based on the race
of the defendants, rather than the facts of the case? That is part
of the past that we need to leave in the past, not resurrect it
under new racial management.
Who is really
showing concern for the well-being of minority youngsters, Geraldo
Rivera who is trying to save some lives, or Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton,
and others who are hyping this tragic episode for their own benefit?
Race hustlers
who hype paranoia and belligerence are doing no favor to minority
youngsters. There is no way to know how many of these youngsters'
confrontations with the police or others in authority have been
needlessly aggravated by the steady drumbeat of racial hype they
have been bombarded with by race hustlers.
March
27, 2012
Thomas
Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford
University. His Web site is www.tsowell.com.
To find out more about Thomas Sowell and read features by other
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