The Friday morning report from the Philadelphia Police Department’s Current Crime Statistics page shows the city on the edge of another milestone: with 299 souls sent early to their eternal rewards, the 300th murder will almost certainly happen sometime today, but the PPD only updates the site on weekdays; we will (probably) not get the totals until Monday morning. As of 11:59 PM EDT on Thursday, the city was seeing 1.5255 homicides per day, on pace for 557 for 2021, a number which is actually down slightly.
We have previously noted how some residents in Philadelphia have, in effect, put themselves in jail, by barring up their row homes to protect themselves from the bad guys who roam their streets. The image to the right, which the reader can enlarge by clicking on it, shows four row homes, out of six, in which the residents have caged themselves in at night.
Now comes Jabari K. Jones, the President of the West Philadelphia Corridor Collaborative, telling us of the effect that “gun violence” is having upon black business owners in the City of Brotherly Love:
West Philly business owners have lost faith in the City to keep them safe
I have spoken to countless West Philadelphia business owners who would love to be open longer each day, but they choose to close at nightfall because they have no confidence they will be safe.
by Jabari Jones | July 14, 2021 | 9:00 AM EDT
Visit one of our historic commercial corridors in West Philadelphia or any predominantly diverse community after sundown, and the sight is the same: silver shutter gates, dark storefronts, and empty businesses that have closed for the day.
Now, on that same day, visit Center City after dark. Bars and restaurants are thriving, people of all ages stroll by storefronts, and everyone is open for business.
The reason for the difference? Public safety.
I have spoken to countless West Philadelphia business owners who would love to be open longer each day, but they choose to close at nightfall because they have no confidence in the City of Philadelphia to keep them or their patrons safe from the rising tide of gun violence.
In the last two months, a Dunkinā Donuts manager in North Philly was murdered as she was opening the store at dawn, and West Philadelphia fashion designer Sircarr Johnson, Jr. was shot and killed when his cookout was sprayed with over 100 rounds.
According to the Pew Charitable Trust, only 2.5% of Philly businesses have Black owners, even though Black people represent nearly 44% of city residents. But data from the West Philadelphia Corridor Collaborative show that, on certain corridors in West Philly, Black people own a majority of businesses. A stroll through Center City, however, shows mostly larger corporate stores and white-owned businesses. For years, business and city officials have studied why the cityās racial demographics arenāt reflected in business ownership, and why BIPOC-owned businesses fail at higher rates.
There’s more at the original, and I’d really like to republish it all, but that would be plagiarism, and exceed Title 17 U.S.C., Ā§107 “Fair use” standards. Briefly, Mr Jones tells the reader that “white-owned businesses” in Center City have several more hours per day in which they can be open, meaning several more hours per day in which they can sell their goods and services, and make money. I’d encourage people to follow the link and read the whole thing.
Nevertheless, Mr Jones still danced around the real issue. While pointing out that the economic damage was heavily skewed to black-owned businesses, in heavily black neighborhoods, he could not bring himself to point out that the city’s “gun violence” problem is a black “gun violence” problem. The black shooters aren’t just wounding and killing people, but black-owned businesses as well.
The next day came Inquirer columnist Will Bunch, with a similar sense of denial of reality:
Thereās nothing more progressive than stopping city kids from getting shot
Progressives need to understand what’s behind rising city homicides and develop plans to reduce shootings ā without yesterday’s police abuses.
by Will Bunch | July 15, 2021
The easiest part of writing this column was the beginning ā finding the most up-to-date examples of the gun violence in Philadelphia that has steadily risen since the start of the pandemic and has lately spiked again, in the long hot summer of 2021.
Just hours earlier ā at 1 a.m. on an unseasonably muggy Thursday morning ā a man bounded onto SEPTAās Nite Owl bus on Broad Street near Chestnut, in the beating heart of Center City, and started shooting, critically wounding a 29-year-old man and utterly terrifying the 15 other passengers onboard. Just a few hours earlier, a car chase in the cityās Logan section had ended with a gunman from one car shooting and wounding two teenagers, aged 19 and just 14, from the other car after it had crashed into an SUV with four occupants. At roughly the same time in West Philadelphia, an unrelated shooting wounded a 15-year-old and 13-year-old.
Go back to the night before, or the night before that, and youāll find similarly grim stories: Philadelphia teenagers ā their names, along with their stories and their humanity, rarely identified ā wounded or even killed by the latest burst of gunfire. Of the more than 1,200 people shot so far in Philadelphia in a year thatās barely half over, more than 100 have been children. With 297 people murdered so far, thereās a more than decent chance that the so-called City of Brotherly Love will pass its all-time homicide record of 500 back in 1990. This is a human-rights crisis in Americaās sixth-largest ā and founding ā city.
And yet, as many conservatives and mainstream-media contrarian types have been so quick to point out, rising murder rates ā occurring right now in most American big cities ā havenāt been a front-burner for the political left in 2021. Indeed, thereās been a habit, at least on social media, of tsk-tsking the problem by pointing to āif it bleeds, it leadsā media sensationalism (a real thing) or noting that overall crime rates, including the violent crime category, havenāt really spiked and remain near historical lows. This seems prompted by fears that making urban gun violence a top-tier issue will both hurt the movement against social injustices like police brutality and mass incarceration, and also distract from other issues on the progressive to-do list.
I have to give Mr Bunch credit here: whether he realized it or not, he told the truth: many credentialed media sources fear telling the truth, because the truth goes against the liberal narrative. We have previously noted, many times, that the Inquirer doesn’t bother to report on murders in Philadelphia unless the victim isĀ an innocent, like Christine Lupo, a āsomebody,āĀ like a local high school basketball player, or a cute little white girl,Ā like the 2,782 site search results for Rian Thal. For the Inquirer to actually tell the truth would be for that publisher-directed “anti-racist news organization” to undermine its political direction.
Mr Bunch called “mass incarceration” a “social injustice,” yet had Delaware Superior Court Judge Vivian L. Medinilla been perhaps a little less concerned with “mass incarceration,” Christine Lugo and several other people in Philly and New Castle County, Delaware would almost certainly still be alive today. Mr Jones, in his column, had noted Jovaun Patterson was given a sweetheart plea deal, dropping an attempted murder charge, for shooting and permanently crippling a West Philly shop owner, 3Ā½ to 10 years,[1]Perhaps they should be satisfied with what they got, given that, in 8,500 Philadelphia shootings since 2015, suspects have been charged in 1 out of 5 cases and convicted in just 9%. by District Attorney Larry Krasner, whom the Inquirer incredibly endorsed for re-election. Mr Bunch, and in part Mr Jones, didn’t want to see the one program which actually does reduce shootings and killings: keeping the bad guys locked up, for as long as the law allows.
Let’s tell the truth here: in a city that is only 42.13% black, according to the Philadelphia Shooting Victims Dashboard, 75.53% of all shooting victims are black males, and another 6.72% are black females; 82.25% of all victims are black. Just 4.06% are white males, with 0.86% being white women.
If the problem is the availability of firearms, as the Inquirer so often tells us, why aren’t white people, 40.66% of the city’s population, shooting and killing each other at rates similar to blacks?
If you don’t tell the truth to yourself about the problem, you can never solve the problem! And the truth is that there is something in the urban black culture in the City of Brotherly Love — and let’s be honest here, in other large cities as well — which tells young black men that shooting each other is acceptable behavior.[2]TheĀ Inquirer has reported that, āNearly 94% of the 10,000 people shot since 2015 were Black or brown, according to the cityās data. Three-quarters of the victims were Black males.ā Thereās … Continue reading The killing of Sircarr Johnson, Jr, which the Inquirer did cover because he was a ‘somebody,’ had the shooters fire off more than 100 rounds toward a crowd at a cook-out, about as indiscriminate a killing action as one can imagine.
The Inquirer doesn’t report the truth because the #woke[3]From Wikipedia: WokeĀ (/ĖwoŹk/) as a political term ofĀ African-AmericanĀ origin refers to a perceived awareness of issues concerningĀ social justiceĀ andĀ racial justice.Ā It is derived from … Continue reading there can’t handle the truth.
References
↑1 | Perhaps they should be satisfied with what they got, given that, in 8,500 Philadelphia shootings since 2015, suspects have been charged in 1 out of 5 cases and convicted in just 9%. |
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↑2 | TheĀ Inquirer has reported that, āNearly 94% of the 10,000 people shot since 2015 were Black or brown, according to the cityās data. Three-quarters of the victims were Black males.ā Thereās something wryly amusing that theĀ InquirerĀ followsĀ the Associated Press stylebook change, in which the AP noted that they would capitalize āblackā in reference to race, but not āwhite,ā and in this case, the writers capitalized āblackā but not ābrownā. As per ourĀ stylebook, we do not capitalize ācolorsā when referring to race. |
↑3 | From Wikipedia:
I shall confess to sometimes āironic usageā of the term. To put it bluntly, I think that the āwokeā are just boneheadedly stupid. |
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