January 5, 2017

Should we talk about the incident or how the press covered it?

"Vicious Hate Crime in Chicago Whitewashed by Press."

ADDED: I looked to see how the NYT handled the story. On a front page sidebar right now, there's:



Race is clearly stated. What's not mentioned is that the "white teenager" is mentally disabled. And the word "beaten" doesn't describe the attack accurately at all.

On the "U.S." page within the NYT there's:



That's a big reference to race, but with no specificity about which races are involved and who's attacking whom. Again, the verb is "beat" (not "torture").

The newest article — which went up in the last hour — is not linked from the front page or the U.S. page. I found it by searching the archive: "The Latest: Police: Race Not Motive Behind Video Attack." This is an AP article, with no photograph or video.
Chicago police say they don't believe a man beaten in an assault broadcast live on Facebook was targeted because he was white. 
But the attackers are saying "Fuck white people" as they torture the white man! How did the police arrive at this strange belief?
Police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said Thursday morning that charges are expected soon against four black suspects. Guglielmi says the suspects made "terrible racist statements" during the attack, but that investigators believe the victim was targeted because he has special needs, not because of his race.
I didn't watch the video. I don't intend to. Do the attackers make statements about the young man's disability? Does the fact that attackers choose a weak victim mean that no other factors were involved? Would they have selected a mentally disabled black victim if they'd found one first?
Guglielmi says it's possible the suspects were trying to extort something from the victim's family. Video from Chicago media outlets appears to show someone off-camera using profanities about "white people" and President-elect Donald Trump. Chicago Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson said Wednesday that the victim has mental health challenges, and he called the video "sickening."

Guglielmi said police are working with prosecutors "to build the strongest case."
I guess one way to build "the strongest case" is to forget about the hate crime element. It's just one more thing the government has to prove. But why then ever prosecute hate crimes? If you already have a physical attack, why make proving the case more difficult? Answering that question, the government must avoid viewpoint discrimination. It must not be that you go the extra distance and charge a hate crime when the hate goes in the way that you want to highlight for public consumption and you forget about it when it doesn't serve your agenda.

AND: As you consider whether the attack was motivated by racism against white people, consider whether the press coverage exemplifies racism against black people. Ironically and unwittingly, the journalists' speech betrays a negative stereotype about black people — that their words are not to be taken as seriously as the words of white people. That is an old and shameful stereotype.

MORE: The hate crime question focuses on whether the victim was selected because of his race, and the police seem to think that the man's disability is what made him a target. We can understand how cowardly people looking for a victim might choose someone weak. That's also a reason for choosing a female or an old or a small victim. It seems easier. But victims have multiple characteristics. If you were looking for an easy victim, you might select a small, old, disabled female. Now, add race. If you were an evil coward looking for the easiest victim, would you take race into account? Remember the Wisconsin State Fairground attacks in August 2011:
Police in West Allis, Wis., say some attacks by black teenagers on white people outside the gates of the Wisconsin State Fair on Aug. 4 were racially motivated and should be prosecuted as hate crimes.

One African-American teenager arrested Wednesday confirmed witness statements suggesting that the large group of black teens, who had originally fought among themselves, specifically targeted white people as they spilled out of the large fairgrounds on the outskirts of Milwaukee at closing time. According to the West Allis Police, he said he personally picked out white people because they were "easy targets."

214 comments:

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Churchy LaFemme: said...

One of the whole things about the Roof trial is how classy the victims and families have been. Sure we have our problem cases, gangs and thugs, but on the whole I think Southern blacks are just a better class of folks than all these stories you see from big northern cities (& LA).

walter said...

EMD said...Wouldn't the appropriate term be 'blackwashing'?
--
Or in the case of the perps, per Van Jones: "blacklashing"

mockturtle said...

The death penalty should be more widely applied and frequently applied. No one who has been put to death has ever committed another crime.

Hear, hear!!!

Jon Ericson said...

Homicide map of Chicago

HT said...

Is this the story on the group of black youths attacking the white man who is mentally challenged? I just heard a story on it on NPR, identifying the attackers as black and the attacked as white. The chief of police opined on it as well. Race was openly acknowledged. Race crimes are often committed by people who feel powerless. Sometimes one group benefits residually, but tremendously from the intimidation, economically speaking.

n.n said...

Didn't Obama disparage mentally and physically impaired individuals on national TV?

The concern with capital punishment is that guilt is established with a high standard of evidence. For all the semantic differences, capital punishment is not elective abortion, and does not receive quasi-religious protection from the usual civil and human rights proponents, and scientific adherents.

Michael K said...

"Homicide map of Chicago"

Where I grew up, South Shore, is not the worst at least. It is +10 on your map.

It was one of the nicest areas of the city when I lived there in the 40s and 50s. There are lots of big nice homes.

I feel sorry for the guy who owns my parents' home in South Shore. He saw me stop to take a photo a few years and asked me in for a tour. He is trying so hard to live a middle class life in the midst of a crime wave.

I did a blog post on our lives then.

ken in tx said...

If they had yelled Allahu Akbar, that would prove that this had nothing to do with Islamic Terrorism--same principle.

HT said...

"There was never a question whether or not this incident qualified to be investigated as a hate crime," Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson said at a news conference Thursday afternoon, citing the victim's mental capacity, race and other factors. "The actions in that video are reprehensible."

Guildofcannonballs said...

I should like to think, as Buckley, we should talk about both or none or one or the other, whatever suits our collective fancy, or not, for none or infinite reasons or lack thereof.

ken in tx said...

"The actions in that video are reprehensible." "and have no place in the State of Chicago." That last part was left off in NPR but not Fox News.

walter said...

Kidding, right?

wildswan said...

The crime is so terrible there is nothing to say. And also the left has no way to talk about crimes resulting from black racism. And no incentive to talk about crimes resulting from the hatred the media and the left daily incites against Trump and his supporters. So the story is the coverage but the coverage is suppression of the story. WTW

Quaestor said...

The whole root of hate crime legislation is because the KKK had a lot of support for decades and there was a need to eradicate it.

I fail to understand why the established laws regarding kidnapping, assault, vandalism, extortion, conspiracy, etc. were not sufficient to "eradicate" the KKK. As I read the history of the Klu Klux Klan, it was the ancient techniques of corruption, collusion, extortion, and jury tampering that protected the Klan, and not the absence of a special class of thought crime.

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