ANYONE tempted to dismiss the slavery reparations movement should take a look at Cincinnati. A year after rioters beat white drivers and burned and looted businesses, their spokesmen have shaken down the city for tens of millions of dollars in social spending and police monitoring mechanisms.
ANYONE tempted to dismiss the slavery reparations movement should take a look at Cincinnati. A year after rioters beat white drivers and burned and looted businesses, their spokesmen have shaken down the city for tens of millions of dollars in social spending and police monitoring mechanisms.
And the riot apologists are not done. Scorning a recent settlement as “insultingly insufficient,” they vow to continue a destructive boycott until the city coughs up another $200 million. Racial extortion is alive and well in America.
Cincinnatis nightmare began April 7, 2001. A 19-year-old with 14 outstanding warrants led the police on a 2 a.m. chase through Over-the-Rhine, Cincinnatis most violent neighborhood. One pursuing officer turned a corner and came face-to-face with the fleeing man, Timothy Thomas, who appeared to be reaching for a gun. The officer shot him dead. The victim proved to be unarmed.
Thomas immediately became a martyr to “police brutality,” his name joining a list of 14 others killed by the Cincinnati police over the previous five years. Those “martyrs” included an ax-murderer, a pistol-whipping sadist, a fleeing bank robber and an armed-car thief, all of whom had tried to kill the police before they were shot. Such circumstances mattered not to Cincinnatis police-bashers, who brandished the phrase “fifteen black men” as a synonym for cop racism.
TWO days after Thomas death, rioting broke out in Over-the-Rhine and elsewhere. For Cincinnatis race industry, the timing was perfect. Two weeks earlier, an obscure protest group called the Black United Front, led by the Rev. Damon Lynch III, had filed a racial profiling suit against the city.
Their evidence was ridiculously weak. Typical was the lead plaintiffs claim that he had been stopped and harassed merely because of his race. He neglected to disclose that he had refused to stop after weaving across the yellow line, though signaled to pull over by a patrol car. The pleadings made no effort to show statistically that stop rates were disproportionate to law-breaking - the bare minimum for showing racial profiling - and the suits play for class-action status was laughable.
Having only reluctantly crushed the riots, Mayor Charlie Luken and the City Council were still desperate to demonstrate racial sensitivity. So rather than contest the suit, they voted to “mediate” its settlement. And even though Damon Lynchs demagoguery had inflamed the rioters, the mayor named him to a new three-man racial reconciliation committee, Community Action Now (CAN).
The city soon discovered the futility of appeasement. From his perch atop CAN, where he was supposed to be healing racial divisions, Lynch merely cranked up the volume of his tirades. He routinely denounced the city for practicing “economic apartheid.” He and his followers called the police murderers, rapists and terrorists, and railed against the “unjust system of absolute oppression” under which Cincinnati blacks are forced to live.
SUCH rhetoric could not be further from the truth. Cincinnati is a friendly, well-meaning town, whose major corporations have practiced affirmative action for years and contribute generously to whatever social uplift program is being peddled at the moment. Blacks have long sat on the City Council and in the city managers chair. There is no evidence that the police single out minorities.
Cincinnati does suffer from a high school dropout rate of between 60 percent and 70 percent. In poor minority neighborhoods, knots of young men mill around selling drugs or just hanging out. Contrary to Lynch, it is not racism that prevents them from getting jobs at local giant Procter & Gamble, but their own lack of skills.
However unmoored from reality, Lynchs vendetta worked. Bill Cosby, Wynton Marsalis, Whoopi Goldberg, a 3,000-room Baptist Convention and several music festivals canceled engagements under pressure from Lynchs boycotters, at a cost of $10 million, estimates the Cincinnati Post.
More devastating than the national publicity has been the boycotts effect on regional tourism. Cincinnatis crucial suburban patrons have been scared away by continuous coverage of the citys alleged racial problems.v
Lynchs boycotters are always careful to mention the possibility of more “unrest” should the city not provide “justice.” As a result, the areas most damaged by last Aprils riots are still struggling to survive.
The greatest victims of the boycott are poor, law-abiding minorities, who cant find jobs in the citys hotels and restaurants, and who now risk paying for the riots with their lives.
Cincinnatis police became less assertive after last April, having been constantly called murderers, and told that if they have “too many” law enforcement interactions with minorities, its because they are racist.
WHAT followed was the bloodiest summer in Cincinnati history. Black men shot each other at a rate nearly 20 times higher than the rate at which Cincinnatis police officers had killed the infamous “fifteen black men.”
And the crime wave has still not abated. In the first two months of 2002, crime was up 39 percent over the same period last year, but arrests were down 10 percent. Homicides may exceed last years record-breaking number.
For this wanton destruction, Cincinnati awarded Lynch the ultimate prize on April 4, 2002: settlement of the racial profiling lawsuit and many other goodies, just in time for the one-year anniversary of the riots.
The changes in police procedures and oversight will cost up to $20 million over five years. Add to that another $50 million for redundant social services and $1 billion in school construction, and youre talking real money, especially on top of the citys $27 million budget deficit.
The corporate community has been shaken down as well, agreeing to pick up the plaintiffs $600,000 attorneys tab, and promising 25 percent minority set-asides in a riverfront development project, notwithstanding a shortage of minority contractors.
TRUE to form, Lynch responded with contempt to the settlement, even as he signed it. The boycott would continue, he said, until the city granted amnesty to the riot thugs and coughed up more money.
As if to underscore his threats, Cincinnatis annual rhythm and blues festival - worth $25 million to the city - announced its cancellation for 2002 just two days after Lynch reaffirmed the boycott.
Most galling to Cincinnatis law-abiding citizens, however, was Lynchs glorification of the riots on their one-year anniversary. “Understand the power not just of April 7 [when Timothy Thomas was shot], but of April 9 through 11 [the riot days],” he told protesters commemorating the shooting. “The only reason you have a [mayors race relations panel] is . . . because people hit the streets.”
vLynchs paean to violence produced results a mere week later, when a crowd of 300 blacks in Over-the-Rhine attacked police officers and white drivers while yelling “get whitey.”
PASTOR Ed Gaines of the Calvary Chapel is heartsick at the citys capitulation to “the mob.” Lynchs celebration of the rioters “sends the most devastatingly negative message that could ever be: that violence is the way to justice,” Gaines laments. “Someone with authority should stand up and speak the truth. If we keep on appeasing, well be like Pilate handing over Jesus.”
The “truth” of Cincinnati, in Gaines view, is that opportunity is available for anyone who wants to work. “We need to get to children in school and tell them: Theres no one to hold you back but yourself, no one responsible for your own destiny but yourself. Its not the white man whos responsible. ”
Unfortunately, the opposite message reigns. “Students are hearing: You wont be treated fairly no matter what you do, ” notes Gaines. “A lot of young people have bought into that lie, and they throw in the towel.”
Over the last decade, Cincinnati lost 10 percent of its population, critically eroding its tax base.
The “problem in Cincinnati is not that white and black people do not get along, but that white and black people are not sticking around,” says former councilman Phil Heimlich. The perception that the city has caved in to the rioters will accelerate suburban flight and discourage greater contacts between regional residents and downtown, Heimlich predicts.
FITTINGLY, Charles Ogletree Jr., the legal director of the reparations campaign and a Harvard law professor, has praised Cincinnatis rioters. Speaking at an NAACP dinner last October, he compared the vandals and assailants to the American revolutionaries of 1776.
Ogletree undoubtedly feels an affinity for these blackmailers, and must be taking heart from their victory in Cincinnati.
The best way to defuse the reparations movement before it gathers more steam is to start granting equal time to those legions of black Americans who stand up for personal responsibility, hard work and education as the keys to American success.
Original Source: http://www.manhattan-institute.org/html/_nypost-rewarding.htm