CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 2020 OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 2020 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“IT’S NOT JUST RAGE AT RACISM, BUT ALSO
ECONOMICS”
For decades, academics warned that the
ever-widening income gap in America could have dire consequences for California
and the rest of the nation unless someone did something about it. Nothing
happened.
Then came the wholly unjustified
police killing of the African American Minneapolis resident George Floyd, touching
off protests from coast to coast, from near the Canadian border to near the
Mexican border. The protests broke out in Seattle and Phoenix, in Los Angeles,
Sacramento, San Francisco, Miami, Atlanta, New York, Philadelphia – almost
everywhere with significant minority populations.
These began peacefully. But then
crowds began expressing pent-up anxiety and rage left from the 11-week coronavirus
lockdown, with its loss of jobs and continuing spread of the plague itself. Both
hit minorities far harder than whites largely because of their vastly
contrasting living conditions and educational levels.
Over a week of steady demonstrations, looters
eventually began exploiting the protests. Some of their raids looked well
organized, likely via social media. They went after high-end shopping areas in San
Francisco and Emeryville, Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills and the Santa Monica
Promenade.
In Santa Monica on Sunday, May 31, legitimate
demonstrators and looters split sharply, soon conducting their activities blocks
apart. On swank Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles Saturday, May 30, and on Santa
Monica’s Broadway the next afternoon, looters literally trampled groups of legitimate
peaceful protesters trying to divert them from storefronts.
The thieves went after goods from
sneakers to sweaters, jeans to jewelry, TVs to computers and cellphones. The booty
so packed their cars, SUVs and pickups that looters themselves almost could not
fit in with it. Look for much of that easy-to-sell stuff in swap meets across
America.
Outside some brand-name sneaker stores,
the bandits’ vehicles lined up in what seemed a systematic pattern, police so outnumbered
in many places that they could not safely intervene.
Some conservatives including President
Trump soon tagged “Antifa” as the culprit, with no evidence. Of course, no one
knows exactly who Antifa is, so it’s a convenient, anonymous scapegoat.
But there’s much more at work here
than the usual “outside agitator” suspects, to whom conservatives appear to be
applying the Antifa tag, after a group that has not been very active for the
last few years.
Doing that intentionally downplays and
ignores the legitimate grievances of African Americans, who have time after
time seen police injure or kill unarmed persons of their race. It bypasses at
least one legitimate question: Why are police trained in the knee-on-neck
technique used by Minneapolis policeman Derek Chauvin to kill Floyd while three
other cops stood by as Floyd moaned that he could not breathe?
But there are deeper issues.
California exemplifies them, Los Angeles in particular. Said one businessman
who recently relocated to the posh L.A. district of Bel Air, “It’s been hard
for me to believe that I can live in luxury here, but less than five miles away
are some of the poorest people in America.”
Academics have noted that contrast for years, sometimes
warning it could lead to violence. The New York-based Urban Institute, for one
example, reported that between 1963 and 2016 families near the bottom of wealth distribution (those at
the 10th percentile) went from averaging no wealth to being about $1,000 in
debt, while families near the top (at the 90th percentile and above) saw their
wealth increase fivefold between 1963 and 2016. That’s compounded inequality.
Long
before the Floyd murder, then, there was plenty of inequality and reason for
minority rage. The rage is now in the open. That’s why it was no coincidence
when, at least in California, protesters and their piggy-backing looters headed
to high-end areas.
With
a long, hot summer ahead, this outbreak may lapse, but its causes won’t go
away. California can hope this is not the start of the class war some scholars
warned of, but the only way to make sure of that is to do something about the blatant
inequalities in economics, policing, housing and many other areas.
That could lead to
a guaranteed monthly income for all, or something else. But there must be
movement, or the troubles may only be starting.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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