A MINORITY VIEW
BY WALTER E. WILLIAMS
RELEASE: WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER
12, 2007, AND THEREAFTER
Racial
Hoaxes and the NAACP
Last May, firefighters at a Baltimore, Md., fire station
came under scrutiny for displaying a deer with an afro wig, gold tooth, gold
chain and a cigarette hanging from its mouth.
Marvin "Doc" Cheatham, president of the Baltimore
chapter of the NAACP, went ballistic, charging, "There is now and has been
a culture of racism and white supremacy within the Baltimore City Fire
Department."
As it turns out, it was a black fireman who dressed up the
critter. Cheatham refused to apologize for his accusations of fire department
racism, maintaining "there is now and has been a culture of racism and
white supremacy within the Baltimore City Fire Department."
On Nov. 21, a hangman's noose was found at the fire station
with a note, "We can't hang the cheaters, but we can hang the failures. No
EMT-1, NO JOB." The noose and note turned up on the heels of an
investigation into allegations of cheating on the test that emergency medical
technicians must take for certification.
Baltimore Mayor Sheila Dixon, a black, in a written
statement said, "I am outraged by this deplorable act of hatred and
intimidation. Threats and racial attacks are unacceptable anywhere, especially
in a firehouse." Doc Cheatham said, "We're going to demand that this
be handled as a hate crime. This thing really needs to end here in Baltimore
city." The incident prompted a federal investigation.
Last week, Donald Maynard, a black firefighter-paramedic,
confessed to having placed the noose, note and drawing depicting a lynching on
a bunk in the firehouse. City officials said Maynard was recently suspended,
prior to his confession, from the department Friday for failing to meet
requirements for advanced life-saving training. A spokesman for Mayor Dixon
said there would be no criminal charges filed.
In response to Maynard's confession, NAACP President
Cheatham still blamed white racism, saying, "It really saddens us to hear
that evidently things have reached a stage that even an African-American does
an injustice to himself and his own people as a result of a negative culture in
that department."
Doc Cheatham is a poster boy for demonstrating a much larger
problem, namely that the once proud and useful NAACP has outlived that
usefulness and has in some instances become an impediment to black progress.
The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, a black
liberal-to-moderate Washington-based think-tank, reported that 88 percent of
blacks favored educational choice plans. A Gallup Poll found 72 percent of
blacks support school choice. The NAACP, acting as handmaidens for the
teachers' unions, is solidly against school vouchers. A Gallup Poll shows 44
percent of blacks are for the death penalty and 49 percent against it, but the
NAACP is solidly against it.
The major problems confronting a large segment of the black
community have little or nothing to do with racism -- problems such as
unprecedented illegitimacy, family breakdown, fraudulent education, crime and
rampant social pathology. If white people became angels tomorrow, it would do
nothing to solve problems that can only be solved by blacks.
But I'm somewhat optimistic. More and more blacks are seeing
through race hustlers such as Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson and Doc Cheatham. An
even more optimistic note is the financial decline of the NAACP. Declining
black support is good evidence that the civil rights struggle is over and won.
That's not to say there are not major problems but they are not civil rights
problems.
Today, most civil rights organizations get their financial
support from white businesses and foundations caving in to intimidation or
seeking to sooth feelings of guilt. For them, I have a cheaper alternative,
"Proclamation of Amnesty and Pardon Granted to All Persons of European
Descent," available at walterewilliams.com.
Walter E. Williams is a professor
of economics at George Mason University. To find out more about Walter E.
Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists,
visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2007 CREATORS
SYNDICATE, INC.