Who dies and where they were shot determines how much attention their deaths get and how many questions are asked.
Brooklyn, New York -
Anti-gun community activists protest against a recent shooting on a
street corner in Brooklyn in which a young man was wounded outside a
school in the middle of the afternoon.
Gun violence is an American epidemic seemingly
without a political solution. After every mass shooting, there is a lot
of hand wringing as newspapers print editorials calling for a ban on
military-grade assault weapons and basic background checks that would
make it more difficult for the mentally ill to buy a weapon.
All of these debates, however, continue to ignore the grim statistical reality of homicide
in the US. Who dies, and where they are shot, remain the key factors in
how much media attention their deaths receive, and the extent of public
outrage over how easy it was for the shooter to have a gun in the first
place.
The vast majority of deaths from shooting occur in
the poorest neighbourhoods of America's cities because young black men
are killing other young black men.
This grim cycle of violence is easily ignored by
other Americans. It happens "over there", in a section of town or a
neighbourhood wealthier citizens rarely visit. Both the killers and
victims are referred to as "gang members". Sometimes that is true.
Sometimes it is not. But the facts behind each killing are not
important. By marginalising the dead, nothing needs to be done about it.
New York City has achieved historically low homicide rates,
unlike much more violent urban centres such as Chicago or New Orleans.
Tough gun laws are in place. Well-trained homicide detectives solve the
majority of murders.
Money is spent on organising community groups to
try and steer young kids away from settling disputes with guns, and the
former mayor, the billionaire Michael Bloomberg, is a national leader in
his efforts to ban guns.
In the late 1980s, at the height of the crack cocaine epidemic, almost 2,000 people were murdered in New York City each year. Now the numbers barely reach 350.
The political establishment sees this as a reason to celebrate. But the victims, their friends, and their grieving families can find no joy in the cold numbers. Each day in New York City, someone is shot.
In the late 1980s, at the height of the crack cocaine epidemic, almost 2,000 people were murdered in New York City each year. Now the numbers barely reach 350.
The political establishment sees this as a reason to celebrate. But the victims, their friends, and their grieving families can find no joy in the cold numbers. Each day in New York City, someone is shot.
Many black activists who are coming of age during
an era of protests over excessive police violence realise that the
struggle must begin at home. While white police officers patrolling
their neighbourhoods with little respect for the people who live there
remain a problem, young black men are most likely to die at the hands
of other young black men.
The justification for all of these shootings can
be alarmingly petty. A rival disrespected them, or lives on the other
side of some invisible barrier. But of course, the real reasons are much
deeper, and harder to solve. Unemployment, poverty, failed schools,
three centuries of neglect, and yes, a nation that refuses to roll up
its sleeves and actually make guns illegal, all play their part.
The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.
The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.
Source: Al Jazeera
Comments
Post a Comment