Elsewhere (165)
Heather Mac Donald on post-Ferguson policing:
This incessant drumbeat against the police has resulted in what St Louis police chief Sam Dotson last November called the “Ferguson effect.” Cops are disengaging from discretionary enforcement activity and the “criminal element is feeling empowered,” Mr Dotson reported. Arrests in St Louis city and county by that point had dropped a third since the shooting of Michael Brown in August. Not surprisingly, homicides in the city surged 47% by early November and robberies in the county were up 82%.
See also Thomas Sowell on the same. And the last item here now seems somewhat prophetic.
And Theodore Dalrymple on social work and deservedness:
I called a social worker and made a disastrous mistake in my first sentence. “I have a particularly deserving case,” I said, thinking to arouse her interest and forgetting for a moment that desert in any traditional sense was a concept that had long been banned from the lexicon of social work. Far from arousing her interest, let alone compassion, it aroused her hostility. If I thought a case was particularly deserving, it followed that I must have thought that some cases were relatively or even absolutely undeserving. In short, I was judgmental, that is to say censorious, cruel and Victorian.
The abandonment of distinctions between the unfortunate and the merely verminous is a phenomenon we’ve seen before. As when the Guardian’s Zoe Williams wanted us to believe that the problem with ‘problem families’ is simply that they’re poor, and nothing whatsoever to do with how they choose to abuse their equally poor neighbours. And so attempts to deal with people who repeatedly play loud music at 3am or throw pets from top floor windows are framed as a “demonization of the poor” and “trying to shunt people out of society for not being rich enough.” According to Zoe, we should be “unstigmatising,” which is to say, non-judgmental. A result of which is that empathy, or feigned empathy, is shifted from the working class victim of crime and antisocial behaviour to the working class perpetrator of crime and antisocial behaviour, on grounds that the thug or criminal is in some way being oppressed and, unlike their neighbours, being made to misbehave.
Presumably Ms Williams’ own neighbours have little in common with, say, the delightful Stuart Murgatroyd, a father of twelve who has never worked and boasts an extensive criminal record, not least for robbing the elderly in graveyards, and whose attempt to challenge an antisocial behaviour order was cut short at the very last minute due to him being arrested for assaulting the mother of his children, herself a convicted getaway driver, on the steps of the courthouse. And I suspect our infinitely compassionate Guardianista has yet to experience an all-night eleven-hour rave being hosted next door, which would doubtless give her an opportunity to practise that non-judgmental piety.
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Fixed.
OT
This is a couple of months old, so I don’t know if I’m the last person to hear about this, but it’s so capitally stupid on all fronts that I just had to share it for anyone else who hasn’t yet seen it.
This is the story of Jeannie Harrell and Larry Lee.
Lee, who is Chinese, decided to name his Chinese restaurant Chop Chop Chinaman.
Harrell, who is quite clearly not Chinese, was so offended on behalf of all Chinese people everywhere, including presumably Lee himself, that she got out a lipstick to scrawl:
“Fuck this hate crime shit, it’s 2015.”
all over the restaurants windows, before sharing an image of her handiwork on social media.
As of June 5th, Lee’s restaurant “has been closed for several days just four months after opening” but the would be restaurateur “is hoping to reopen after finding an investor.
Score to Harrell.
One can only imagine what the fearless Harrell makes of popular entertainers Four Poofs and a Piano or indeed ‘This is Gangsta Rap’s catchy little ditty “Nigga Nigga Nigga”.
I’m not sure there’s enough lipstick in the world for her to be able to chastise all the individuals that might conceivably fall under the glare of her ferocious disapproval.