10 Years - A Bad Anniversary
This month
marks the tenth anniversary of events that changed the trajectory of
this country, and not for the better. On August 9, 2014, Officer Darren
Wilson fatally shot Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri. Riots
erupted the next day and continued for months nationwide. Black
Lives Matter exploited the mayhem it had helped cause, helping
it swell into a global force. The activist model
pioneered at Ferguson has had a lasting impact on American politics,
as this year’s pro-Hamas demonstrations prove, as these demonstrations are direct descendants of the Black Lives Matter movement.
Let me state right up front that the shooting was a personal tragedy, but in a vacuum, it should not have erupted into the out of control destructive force that it became. Wilson was a cop, and
Brown had just robbed a convenience store, violently overpowering the
clerk. When Wilson tried to stop him in the street, Brown scuffled
with him, reaching inside his police SUV through the driver’s
window. Brown then ran off and Wilson gave chase. At some point,
Brown turned around and charged Wilson. That was when Wilson shot and killed
him. To quote Kevin Bacon, in A Few Good Men, "These are the facts of the case, and they are undisputed."
The
entire encounter, the Department of Justice later said in a revealing
report,
lasted two minutes. And that’s how long the story would have
lasted, too, except that Wilson was white and Brown was black, and
had just turned 18 less than three months earlier. A life ended much too soon.
Those with
political motivations, nitwits like Al Sharpton and Hillary Clinton, manipulated the tragedy in several ways. They
claimed that Brown had tried to surrender, raising his hands and
pleading with Wilson, “Hands up, don’t shoot!” but the
policeman still wantonly gunned him down. That fed the narrative that
the killing was part of an epidemic of police shooting/killing unarmed blacks
in America. And this, in turn, reinforced a theme that the country is
“systemically racist” and oppressive.
Each
of these contentions was, and is, patently false. Some who repeated them didn’t know
better, while others deliberately advanced the lies to bring
about political change. Journalists and Democratic members of
Congress, for example, acted like bratty children themselves by raising their hands in
mock surrender poses. They did not apologize after the DOJ report
concluded that Brown had never surrendered. Nor did they admit fault
after Attorney General Eric Holder (himself Black) said
that it
was “essential to question how such a strong alternative version of
events was able to take hold so swiftly, and be accepted so readily.”
Not that it
would have mattered. Ferguson went up in flames and ten years later has not
recovered. The mayhem that began in Missouri eventually engulfed the
country and led to crime spikes and cultural chaos that persist to
this day. Marxists and
progressive activists descended on the St. Louis suburb from around
the nation and the world from mid-August to strategize. They
forged BLM into not just a movement but a group of organizations that
could receive donations and exercise political and cultural clout.
The
hashtag #BlackLivesMatter had been around for a year at that point,
arising after the July 2013 acquittal of Trayvon Martin’s killer,
George Zimmerman. But as Travis Campbell of the University of
Massachusetts and others have
shown,
the movement exploded in 2014, when more than 125 cities saw their
first BLM protests.
Several
militants used Ferguson as a launching pad, including hundreds of
Palestinian activists
taken there by
Hamas front groups. Indeed, the links between BLM and pro-Palestinian
activism were underscored in early 2015, mere weeks after the riots
ended in Ferguson. That’s when BLM co-creator and self-described
Marxist Patrisse Cullors paid a high-profile visit to the West Bank,
along with progressives such as Marc Lamont Hill, in a trip sponsored
by something called Dream
Defenders,
an organization supportive of the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine, a Syrian-based terrorist group. Some dream...
Ferguson
thus helped cement a “red-green” alliance that endures to this
day. BLM-affiliated groups, starting in 2014, have leveraged
protesters’ energy to create a revolutionary network unprecedented
on American soil. The pro-Hamas demonstrators who disturbed life on
U.S. campuses and cities this spring were supported by the
same revolutionary
ecosystem that
gathered at Ferguson and has supported every anti-American and
anti-Western cause since.
In
just one
telling example of
the radical projects that emerged at the Ferguson riots, the National
Domestic Workers’ Alliance (NDWA) had sent its “special projects
director” Alicia Garza—also a BLM co-founder—to Missouri to
organize. The NDWA had been concocted at the founding conference of
the U.S. Social Forum in Atlanta in 2007, created at the instigation
of Venezuelan dictator Hugo Chavez to establish a revolutionary
beachhead on U.S. soil.
The
George Soros-funded NDWA got its money’s worth. Garza told the
Marxist publication In
These Times that
she used Ferguson to “make sure the organizations and activists on
the ground had the capacity to really hold this moment and extend it
into a movement . . . I spent some time really sitting with folks and
helping them strategize.” Her organizing in Ferguson, she added,
was informed by “Third World liberation movements.”
Two
key BLM groups, the Movement for Black Lives (M4BL) and the Black
Lives Matter Global Network Foundation (BLMGNF), were incorporated in
the months after the Ferguson riots. BLMGNF was closely involved in
many of the nationwide disturbances of 2020 following the police
killing of George Floyd, sending out that year 127 million emails
that led to 1.2 million “actions,” according to its own 2020
Impact Report.
The 2020 riots were the costliest in U.S. history and turbocharged
changes that had been gaining momentum since Ferguson. They prompted
our cultural gatekeepers to embrace the “systemic racism” lie,
and to “decolonize” museums, libraries, classrooms, offices, and
even churches and barracks.
Those
riots, too, were based partially on a lie—namely, the idea that
America suffers an epidemic of police shooting of unarmed black
people. As a Manhattan Institute paper reported,
some 80 percent of black Americans and half of white Joe Biden voters
believe that “black men were more likely to be shot to death by
police than to die in a car accident.” Even one-fifth of “very
conservative” respondents believed that “‘about 1,000’ or
more” unarmed black men get killed annually by police. The
reality, per the paper, is that “confirmed fatal police shootings
of unarmed African-Americans number about 22 per year.”
The
lies told about police violence in 2020 and 2014 brought devastating
consequences. The Ferguson riots helped trigger a sharp rise in
the murder rate in U.S. cities with populations over 250,000, where
BLM was more likely to have held protests. In these places,
“homicides rose by 15.2 percent between 2014 and
2015,” wrote Richard
Rosenfeld from the University of Missouri and others in late 2017.
“By any reasonable standard, these are noteworthy increases,”
they added. Similarly, Campbell found that
between 1,000 and 6,000 extra murders occurred between 2014 and 2019
in areas where BLM protested. This increase was caused by the
so-called “Ferguson effect,” in which law enforcement disengaged
in protest-ridden areas or in communities that embraced the
police-shooting epidemic narrative.
Ferguson,
in other words, inflicted immeasurable suffering on America, not just
in lives lost but in a degraded culture. “Around 2014,” Jonathan
Haidt wrote,
“something big changed in American society...as if a
flock of demons was unleashed upon the world.” He places the blame
elsewhere, but to many people, it’s Ferguson. As the Communist Vijay
Prashad boasted,
“The ability for mass struggle is here in the United States.” You know when a young, dopey Communist feels comfortable uttering a sentence like that...you're in trouble.
Americans of all races,
most of whom probably don't want to see mass struggle on their soil,
have, unfortunately, allowed all this to happen. Maybe it’s because the
media skirts around certain issues and/or truths, or because they fear being called
racist or worse if they gripe about it. Or maybe they think the
country is already lost and they no longer give a damn. In any case, ignorance is exactly what those
who organized Ferguson have counted on—then and now.
write to Peter: magtour@icloud.com
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