Anarchists are throwing bombs at cops, officers are driving into
crowds and looters are smashing stores. That’s the good news. New York
could survive a one-off riot. But the city has lost equilibrium — and has no leader.
It’s a fundamental test of Gotham’s ability to govern itself.
The only proper political response to street protests in a pandemic
is: “Don’t protest.” Stay home. Corey Johnson, Scott Stringer, Eric
Adams should go out together, unguarded, to say: “Go home, now. We will
do one-on-one video calls with you. It does no good to George Floyd’s
memory for more people to die of COVID.” Problem is, constructive
advocates for change are staying home, without being told. Crowds, thus,
are self-selected people, who are, by definition, heedless of personal
safety.
So there aren’t enough responsible protesters to balance anarchists
and looters. On a normal Saturday night, violent “protesters” wouldn’t
get far — it would be hard to smash windows amid throngs of restaurant-goers and club kids, out for a good time.
Put aside sensationalist scenes, and this has been the city’s dilemma
for months. Looting? We’ve had slow-motion looting since the lockdown
started.
For the 28 days ’til Memorial Day, burglary, including theft of
defenseless pets, soared 35 percent; auto theft rose by 63 percent.
These aren’t crimes of poverty, sending a message. They are crimes of opportunity. There are no — rational — eyes on the street.
Pointless violence? Murder is up — to 24 from 19 over the month until Memorial Day, plus four stabbing deaths in one day last week.
It isn’t that New York has suddenly become more violent. It’s urban
disequilibrium. Mamadou Diallo, an essential Uber Eats worker, was shot
and killed waiting for a bus — because subways were closed.
Empty streets provide opportunity for retaliation. Over the month,
shooting victims have doubled, to 97 from 47. In mid-May, 16-year-old
Tyquan Howard died on a Crown Heights sidewalk, his murder likely
revenge for group-beating a teen girl.
It is really hard, perhaps impossible, to police your way out of lost
equilibrium, though bail “reform” that looses violent suspects on
streets hardly helps.
So Mayor Bill de Blasio’s riot strategy is wrong: He thinks the NYPD can get us out of this. It can’t. Policing is one tool to keep balance in a well-balanced city.
The NYPD is deploying the crowd-control tactics that it would for a
parade. This is not that. These are anarchists who want to provoke
police into bad action. The police are their props.
Police SUVs and guns are useless — and liabilities — unless police
are going to drive or shoot into crowds. Let’s pray they will not,
because de Blasio, in throwing crowds of police to face off with crowds
of literal bomb-throwers for days on end, is counting on prayer.
All it takes is one loud noise.
A healthy community mostly polices itself. It has trusted leaders —
elected, business, community — who can speak credibly to different
groups, including unsavory ones.
It has elected officials who aren’t afraid to say: “It is wrong to
throw IEDs at police officers, and doing so makes the police vulnerable
to fear, anger and panicked actions.” But we don’t even have leaders who
say that burgling pandemic-shuttered stores is unacceptable — and will
be met with stronger charges for aggravating circumstances.
Paying criminals the compliment of demanding they act with
self-restraint in a crisis would anger some anonymous scold on Twitter —
so the political, business and community-organizer classes stay quiet.
We face months of this — and risk driving away our tax base, scared
to come back and reopen in a city re-shuttered by wildcat unrest. That
will solve poverty.
What we need, oddly, is a John Lindsay. Lindsay was flawed. But he
didn’t hide behind his police. He went out — alone — in 1968 to face
angry crowds and prevent rioting that killed other cities. De Blasio is
no John Lindsay.
Who is?
Nicole Gelinas is a Manhattan Institute senior fellow.
https://nypost.com/2020/05/31/to-keep-the-streets-safe-new-york-city-needs-its-crowds-back/
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