Are Police Friend or Foe? Police Go Where the Crime Is

Contact Your Elected Officials

Are the police friend or foe? Are they necessary to preserve order, or are they unnecessarily intrusive? Do they have society’s best interest in mind, or are they racist and violent? Heather Mac Donald, Senior Fellow at the Manhattan Institute, analyzes the numbers behind these hot-topic questions.

Transcript

The police are my friends a senior citizen blurted out in the middle of a police community meeting I attended in the South Bronx. I’ve heard variations on the theme dozens of times, from the law-abiding residents of high-crime communities. These hardworking people don’t loath the police, quite the opposite. They understand what so many seem to have forgotten or never understood. Police spend most of their time in minority communities, that is mostly black communities, because that is where innocent people are most being hurt by violent street crime. To put it plainly, police go where the crime is.

In the 75 largest US counties about 60% of robbery and murder defendants are black, even though blacks comprise only 15% of the population in those counties. In New York city blacks make up 73% of all shooting victims though they are 23% of the city’s population. In Chicago in 2016 there were 4300 shooting victims, almost all black. Among the two dozen victims under the age of 12 was a three-year-old shot on Father’s Day who is now paralyzed for life and a 10 year old shot on Labor Day whose pancreas and spleen was ripped apart. This is the reality that police commanders in urban areas face every day. And every day they get calls from law-abiding citizens in high-crime neighborhoods begging for assistance.

So are the police friend or foe? Are they engaging in an epidemic of deadly racist violence as we so often hear? In 2019 the police kill 235 blacks, most of them armed and dangerous, out of a 1004 police shooting victims over all. That 25% ratio is actually less than what the black crime rate would predict, since police shootings are a function of the rate at which officers encounter violent suspects.

What about the unarmed victims of fatal police shootings. As of June 1, 2020 The Washington Post database of fatal police shootings in 2019 showed 9 unarmed black victims and 19 unarmed white victims of fatal police shootings. By comparison about 7,500 blacks died of criminal homicide a year. You know about George Floyd and Brianna Taylor, but what about Tony Timpa? In 2016 three Dallas police officers held the handcuff Timpa, a white man, on the ground for 13 minutes with a knee to his back while he pleaded for help. His death was ruled a homicide caused by the officers physical restraint and by cocaine. The point here is not to justify police misconduct, but to rebut the claim that questionable tactics occur only, or even disproportionately, in the case of black suspects.

Indeed it is premature to conclude the killing of George Floyd was a product of racial animus at all, as opposed to poor training and the officers unfit temperament. Ideally officers would take no one’s life in the course of their duties, but in light of the number of arrests that officers make each year, around 10 million, and the number of deadly weapons attacks on officers 27 a day, it is not clear that a thousand civilian deaths, the vast majority occurring in the face of potentially deadly attack, show a lw enforcement profession that is out of control.

Can police methods be improved? Of course they can. With more hands-on tactical training, more practice in de-escalation and better techniques to control stress. What won’t help is defending police agencies. Officers in depleted departments who cannot get backup when they face dangerous suspect will be even more stressed out and more at risk of making bad decisions. Response times will increase. Cash starved agencies will train less not more.

If the goal is to reduce crime, shifting police funding to social services is also a mistake. For decades New York City was spending 1/7 of all government welfare dollars in America, yet crime started falling in the city only when the NYPD adopted the data-driven policing that has now become the norm across the country, sending officers to the areas where they are most needed. That norm is now threatened.

Sure there are bad cops of all races who must be removed. That is true of every profession and always will be. But so is this. The overwhelming majority of officers are motivated by a desire to help the most vulnerable among us. Police is not the problem. Racism is not the problem. Crime is the problem. The law-abiding citizens of high-crime communities, the ones who will pay the price of a diminished police presence get it. If you believe that all black lives matter, you should too.

I’m Heather McDonald senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute for Prager University.

The Thinking Conservative
The Thinking Conservativehttps://www.thethinkingconservative.com/
The goal of THE THINKING CONSERVATIVE is to help us educate ourselves on conservative topics of importance to our freedom and our pursuit of happiness. We do this by sharing conservative opinions on all kinds of subjects, from all types of people, and all kinds of media, in a way that will challenge our perceptions and help us to make educated choices.

Kamala, Please Run Again

Kamala Harris hinted she wants to run for President in 2028, despite poor poll numbers and her loss in 2024. If she runs, the big winners will be the GOP.

Rosie O’Donnell vs. Her Therapist

Rosie O’Donnell's therapist attempted to artfully introduce to her client to the possibility that Rosie's outrage might be performative. It didn’t take.

Hamas’s Stubborn Grip on Arms Signals No Desire for Genuine Peace

Hamas’s rhetoric reflects its founding ideology, prioritizing armed resistance over civilian welfare or diplomatic progress.

Off the radar

In the longstanding and brutal ledger of religious persecution, Nigeria now occupies its own grim chapter with its enduring pogrom against Christians.

The New Jackboots? A Wake-Up Call on Antifa and Fascism

An analysis of whether Antifa truly opposes fascism by comparing its tactics and behavior to historical signs and movements of fascist regimes.

Louisiana GOP State Lawmaker Announces Run Against Incumbent U.S. Senator

Louisiana Rep. Julie Emerson launches a campaign against Sen. Bill Cassidy, entering the state’s first Republican primary race in 50 years.

Trump Says His MRI Test Performed at Walter Reed Was ‘Perfect’

“I did,” Trump confirmed. “I got an MRI. It was perfect. I gave you the full results. We had an MRI, in the machine … the whole thing.”

Fox News to Air First TV Interview With Erika Kirk Following Husband’s Assassination

Erika Kirk, new CEO of Turning Point USA, will give her first TV interview next month, two months after the assassination of her husband, Charlie Kirk.

Judge Rules Charlie Kirk Assassination Suspect Can Wear Civilian Clothes in Pretrial Hearings

A judge ruled on Oct. 27 that the man accused of assassinating Charlie Kirk last month can appear in civilian clothing during all pre-trial hearings.

Trump Hikes Canada’s Tariffs by 10 Percent for Not Pulling Anti-Tariff Ad Immediately

Trump announced he will increase tariffs on Canada by 10% after ad by provincial government of Ontario misrepresented President Reagan’s speech on tariffs.

Trump Rolls Back Emissions Rules on Copper Smelters

President Trump issued a proclamation aimed at reversing a Biden-era environmental rule that enforced stricter air emission standards on copper smelters.

Donor Gives $130 Million to Cover Shortfall in Troop Pay During Shutdown

Trump announced on Oct. 23 that an anonymous donor sent $130M to cover military pay during the ongoing government shutdown.

‘Frustration’ With Canada Led to Trump Scrapping Talks, Not Just Ontario’s Ad: US Official

President Trump cited Ontario’s TV ad as the reason for halting Canada trade talks, but officials say it stems from rising U.S. frustration with Ottawa.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central