The city of Baltimore has reached a tragic milestone, as May became its deadliest month in over four decades. Last month, Baltimore experienced 43 homicides, and the city has not seen these numbers since December 1971, when 44 were killed. This news should receive as much attention as the police killing of Freddie Gray, correct? If not, then why not?
The news comes as former Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley,
also former mayor of Baltimore from 1999 to 2007, announced his bid for
the Democratic presidential candidacy. In a perfect example of bad
timing, O’Malley has come under fire by community activists for
installing “zero tolerance” policing and “broken windows” policies as
mayor, as well as a data-tracking management tool called CityStat, all
of which facilitated a sharp rise in arrests of black people during his
tenure.
On Saturday, activists staged a die-in at Federal Hill Park — where
O’Malley announced his candidacy — blaming O’Malley’s policies for the
death of Freddie Gray, 25, the black man who was killed by a severed
spine while in police custody on April 12, 2015. As the former mayor
takes credit for a drop in crime in the city, critics question the effectiveness of the former mayor’s tough-on-drugs
and stop-and-frisk policies that targeted minor, low level offenses.
After all, crime dropped elsewhere around the nation, including cities
that did not implement such hardline measures.
Meanwhile, June 2 was National Gun Violence Awareness Day, in honor of Hadiya Pendleton, 15, a Chicago honor student who was shot in the back on January 29, 2013. June 2 would have been her 18th birthday. Everytown for Gun Safety, the gun control nonprofit organization, asked people to wear orange
that day to honor the “88 Americans whose lives are cut short by gun
violence every day — and the countless survivors whose lives are
forever altered by shootings each year.” Orange is the color hunters
wear to announce to other hunters they are not targets. And yet,
America is a killing field, where nearly 32,000 people — including
over 2,800 children — die from gun violence each year. The U.S. is the
world leader in gun homicides because it is by far the most
heavily-armed nation, with as many as 270 to 310 million guns — one for every American.
This national gun problem is a uniquely American phenomenon, and
black communities beyond Baltimore are catching more than their fair
share of bullets.
As Congresswoman Robin Kelly (D-Ill.) noted in her 2014 report Gun Violence In America, while African-Americans are 13 percent of the U.S. population, they are 55 percent of gun murder
victims. Most white firearm deaths are suicides. Easy access to guns,
and little attention paid to socioeconomic or mental health issues,
allows minor problems to escalate into deadly scenarios. And this
country, unlike others, fails to place restrictions on gun use that
would prevent this senseless killing.
“If New Orleans were a country, it would be the second deadliest
nation in the world, with a gun murder rate of 62.1 per 100,000
citizens. Detroit’s murder rate mirrors El Salvador,” the report said.
“Chicago is a carbon copy of Guyana. Washington, D.C., our nation’s
capital, has a higher gun homicide rate than Brazil — a nation that has
long experienced high crime rates stemming from narcotics trafficking
and other violent gang activity.”
In a country where black life is devalued and discounted on a
regular basis, rampant gun homicides in places such as Baltimore
receive little attention. Yet, this loss of black life to guns is a
pressing human rights issue linked to America’s legacy of racial
discrimination and bias.
According to a report
on African-American gun violence victimization submitted last year to
the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (or CERD,
an international treaty), the U.S. is not upholding its duty to protect
life under international law, particularly as it concerns black people.
The report, prepared by the Violence Policy Center, Amnesty
International and others, argues that gun violence disproportionately
impacts people of color through hate crimes; implicit racial bias as in
the case of Stand Your Ground laws; and predominantly black areas kept
poor by racial discrimination, where blacks become both victims and
perpetrators. Further, the report also notes that despite the
disproportionate gun deaths and injuries among blacks — and
overwhelming public support for gun control legislation — the U.S.
Congress has failed to act but rather has enacted legislation
protecting the proliferation of illegal guns. This has been due to the
power of the NRA:
The National Rifle Association (NRA) represents a
powerful political lobby that has received an estimated tens of
millions of dollars from the firearms industry to support political
lobbying and firearm marketing efforts. This organization has a
documented history, spanning many years, of multiple board members
issuing either overt racial slurs or racially insensitive comments
without consequence to their position in the organization…..
The NRA uses its financial capital to influence politicians at the
state and federal levels of government to support or oppose specific
pieces of legislation despite the negative consequences associated with
it.
In the 2012 election, the NRA
spent $32 million on lobbying. Meanwhile, gun violence reduces black
male life expectancy by one year (as opposed to five months for
whites), and black men are 7 times more likely to die from firearm homicide than white men.
Moreover, the leading cause of death among black teens is gun
homicide. Of the more than 116,000 children killed by guns since 1979,
over 44,000 were black — more than 13 times the total number of
recorded lynchings of black people between 1882 and 1968.
What we are witnessing is an epidemic of violence, of genocide. But do we have the will to end it?
This commentary originally apeared in The Grio
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