Chaos and Confusion
By Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz
This year is turning out to be
quite a difficult one. A new virus that emanated from China is affecting
millions of people around the world and has caused more than 100,000 deaths in
this country alone. As the country began crawling out of the government-enforced
stay-at-home lockdown, riots erupted in cities across the United States. Forty
million people are out of work and businesses are closed, their proprietors
desperately trying to hold on somehow. Schools are closed, children are missing
out on vital studies and social contact, and their parents are at their wits’
end.
Storekeepers attempting to open
are shut down by police armed with executive orders of politicians who set
capricious rules based on arbitrary numbers. People such as New York City Mayor
Bill de Blasio warn shopkeepers that if they disobey his order to remain
closed, he will go after them mercilessly and shut them down for good. While
Republican states are open for business and their citizens are free to resume
normal lives, residents of Democrat states are still under emergency orders,
expected to remain in their homes except for vital outings.
Then a bad cop, who served on an
unprofessional police force with improperly trained officers, killed an unarmed
man and resulted in cities across the country being set ablaze. Law and order
disintegrated, and cops who had been expending their energies shutting down
mom-and-pop stores were now confronted with high-octane police work and coming
up empty.
Plunder, carnage and savagery have
supplanted the talk about the importance of maintaining social distancing and
wearing masks, if for no other reason than “as a symbol,” in the words of Dr.
Fauci. The terrifying collapse of the rule of law has sucked out the oxygen of
stubborn governors who still claim that a shutdown is in order.
De Blasio Demands
‘A Light Touch’
On the same weekend, both the best
and the worst this country has to offer were on display: in a new milestone, a
rocketship blasted off for outer space; at the same time, a black man was
murdered by a Minneapolis policeman, triggering rioting, arson and looting in
dozens of cities, ostensibly in protest.
Nearly every major city in America
saw crowds face off against police, burning businesses, police cars and
anything else they could throw a match at. Chaos reigned for six nights, as
thousands of protesters, claiming to be grieving over a man senselessly killed
by a policeman, created mayhem.
New York City was no exception,
and when police responded forcefully against the criminal elements threatening
them and destroying property, the mayor pushed back. “The anger out there is
real and, unfortunately, very justified,” Mayor de Blasio said. “I really
believe that the NYPD knows how to handle protests and respect whoever is
protesting, but I want to see a light touch, because people are undeniably
angry for a reason.”
The same mayor who was quick to
drop everything and run off to a Brooklyn levayah to enforce social
distancing, tweet about how dangerous the Jews are and how they must be dealt
with forcefully, felt comfortable condemning the actions of police
fighting back against violent demonstrators who of course were not social
distancing. Not to defend anyone’s actions, but he legitimized the anger of the
looters, while not doing the same when it came to the pain of law-abiding
people who wanted to pay last respects to a revered leader. There was no room
for any compassion and understanding that day in Williamsburg. Nor was there
any compassion for the people struggling to keep their heads above water and
opened their shops on Lee Avenue and Thirteenth Avenue. Talk about a double
standard.
Rampaging groups ran through New
York City’s poshest areas, emptying one store after the other, setting fires,
causing mayhem and leaving a trail of destruction in their wake. There were no
police in sight; nobody was there to stop them. But don’t take that as an
indication that the NYPD is soft on crime. On Monday afternoon, cops chased
young Chassidic children from a city playground in Williamsburg. They were
disobeying the law. Parks are closed, as are small businesses of all types,
unless you happen to be protesting the death of George Floyd.
De Blasio went further in his
condemnation of the police, saying, “Anytime you see a protestor just
arbitrarily thrown to the ground by a police officer, that does not reflect our
values and there need to be consequences. The NYPD has to do better. We’ve seen
some videos that do not reflect the philosophy of this city; the values of this
city; the values of this administration. That is not neighborhood policing, and
we will not accept any of that behavior.”
The Sergeants Benevolent
Association responded to the mayor via Twitter: “If Mayor de Blasio wants a
light touch, then let him stand in front and take the first brick to the face.
Or perhaps he can sit in a police vehicle and catch the Molotov cocktail that’s
thrown into it.”
Over Shabbos in New York
City, at least 345 people were arrested, at least 47 police vehicles were
damaged or destroyed, and 33 police officers were injured. In Beverly Hills,
2,000 people stood on Rodeo Drive chanting, “Eat the rich,” as stores were
looted. Over the first six days of the rioting, at least 5,600 people were
arrested in 145 cities. National guardsmen were deployed in 15 states in a bid
to get an upper hand on the riots. At least 60 Secret Service agents were hurt
protecting the White House from rioters. In a dramatic portrayal of the chaos,
confusion and anarchy which is reigning supreme in America’s cities, on Friday
night the president of the United States was whisked to an underground bunker
for his protection.
Lessons From the
Past
In 1967, Detroit and Newark
exploded in racial rioting. Those cities never came back, still sitting in a
state of disrepair, with poverty and hopelessness everywhere. The riots left
lasting scars in the cities of this country, and now, all these years later,
the same images are being flashed again. Protesting inequality and injustice,
people all across this country have taken to the streets, burning businesses
and police vehicles. Mobs have taken control of the streets and government
officials stand by, not knowing how to put a stop to the chaos.
We see the pictures and wonder
what’s going on here. After all this country has been through, how can a policeman
be so callous to purposefully kill an unarmed black man? Setting aside the
officer’s personal views and racism, did he not know that an act such as the
one he perpetrated would lead to no good? Did he not realize that it would
cause billions of dollars of damage, hundreds of people will lose their
livelihoods, hundreds would be injured, and deep wounds would be created and
not easily healed? What could he have been thinking?
What about the three officers who
stood by and witnessed the murder, without attempting to intercede to save the
life of another human being? Isn’t their job to protect, defend and serve?
Rudolph Giuliani took control of
New York City at a time when crime was rampant. During the infamous Crown
Heights riots, his predecessor allowed rioters to let off steam for a couple of
days, as properties went up in flames and Jewish lives were threatened.
Giuliani instituted the “broken windows theory” of policing and turned around
the city. The thinking behind the theory is that if you look aside from small
crimes, such as people breaking windows and jumping subway turnstiles to escape
paying, the criminals will escalate the severity of their crimes. To make the
city safe again, it would be necessary to show zero tolerance for crime, petty as
well as severe. It worked, and Giuliani was on his way to becoming a hero. His
leadership following 9/11 cemented his stardom.
Apparently, it works the other
way, as well. Assuming policemen join the force for the right reasons, to serve
the community, this zero tolerance can cause them to slowly begin looking down
at the people they are paid to protect. Invariably, their interactions with the
community usually involve stopping people for traffic infractions and engaging
in crimes. Slowly, they lose their sympathy for the “little” people and begin
viewing themselves as superior. When they give a traffic ticket, very rarely is
there any compassion or kindness. When they encounter a person they think is a
criminal, courtesy goes out the window, lest it be perceived as weakness.
Eventually, some of them are overtaken by a callous mentality.
Treating Fellow
Citizens as People
When they engage in actions such
as shutting down stores at the behest of a doltish mayor or governor, some show
compassion for the people whose livelihood is being hurt, but others are
heartless and cruel as they go about their duty. The superiority mentality
festers and grows if not kept in check by supervisors and a system that reminds
the men and women who carry a gun and badge that they are public servants. They
are hired to serve, not to act as cruel and oppressive tyrants who wield power
unjustly.
It is the responsibility of
governors, mayors, police chiefs, and district captains to maintain discipline,
but also to establish lines of communication between their men and the people
they serve, known as “community policing.” This ensures that police become
familiar with the citizens so that when it comes time to interact, the theory
goes, they will treat their fellow citizens as people, not subjects.
This country has come a long way
in race relations and the way it treats Jews and other minorities. Blacks have
been elected to every office including the presidency. But at least once a
year, an incident occurs such as the one in Minneapolis, where an
out-of-control cop demonstrates that he has so little regard for a citizen’s
life, he can casually snuff it out. Murder should not be tolerated, no matter
who does it, and racism should have no place in the modern world. But when
perpetrated by men in blue, the impact is far greater. Because rabble rousers,
rumor mongers and political opportunists invariably exploit the crime to
inflame the masses for their own reasons. The poor suffer. Storekeepers suffer.
Schools suffer. Everyone suffers. Then things simmer down for a while until the
next eruption caused by a bigoted arrogant lawman.
The unrest has brought people to
streets rendered empty by the coronavirus, lumping together all police, and
blaming them and prosecutors for the actions of a few. Despite the great
progress the country has made in leveling the playing field for all races, when
an incident like the Minneapolis episode occurs, the Sisyphean wheel rolls
everything decades back.
Encouraging
Anarchy
The mayor of Minneapolis fed the
rioting, issuing a statement that said, “The city urges everyone to exercise
caution and stay safe, while participating in demonstrations, including wearing
masks and physical distancing as much as possible to prevent the spread of
Covid-19. The city has made hundreds of masks available to protesters this
week” - as if the lack of masks and social distancing was the problem and
violence is an acceptable way to address issues.
If there are no consequences for
the looting and violence, if anarchy takes hold of the streets and police stand
back offering masks, their fear of acting is seen by the rampaging thugs as a
signal that they can act with impunity. Billions of dollars of damage is caused
across the country, as rioters let off steam and “express their pain”. Stores
that fed and clothed their own communities will be forever shut. Businesses
will close and take their jobs and services with them to safer pastures.
Eventually, the rioting quells and
peace and quiet return to the currently shuttered cities. People store what
happened in the recesses of their brains and return to their daily activities.
But if nothing is done and the broken windows theory of policing is not brought
to the police precincts, training the men and women to serve with compassion
and dignity, then, inevitably, another policeman whose arrogance causes him to
see people as objects will become unhinged and the story will repeat itself
again and again, just as it has since 1967.
Government has to be more
effective. Police need to be more empathetic and justice has to be more just.
In this day and age, the people won’t settle for anything less.
As the country battles multiple
crises at once, we can use the current period as a reminder to always carry
ourselves in a pristine fashion, not permitting the callousness, chaos,
confusion and unruliness around us to affect us and our families. We are
expected to conduct ourselves on a higher level, with refinement, respect and
dignity at all times.
May Hashem
continue to protect us each and every day, and may our actions, both public and
private, be a source of nachas to Him.
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