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- <text id=93HT1087>
- <title>
- 68 Election: The Fear Campaign
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1968 Election
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- October 4, 1968
- COVER STORY
- The Fear Campaign
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The presidential campaign of 1968 is dominated by a
- pervasive and obsessive issue. Its label is law and order. Its
- symptoms are fear and frustration and anger.
- </p>
- <p> Everyone is for law and order, or at least for his own
- version of it. Few Americans can define precisely what they
- mean by the term, but the belief that law and order is being
- destroyed represents a trauma unmatched in intensity since the
- alarums generated by Joe McCarthy in the Korean era. The issue
- has virtually anesthetized the controversy over Vietnam. It has
- distorted debate over pressing urban problems. It has perverted
- the presidential election, the closest thing in this secular
- republic to a sacred collective act.
- </p>
- <p> For millions of voters who are understandably and
- legitimately dismayed by random crime, burning ghettoes,
- disrupted universities and violent demonstrations in downtown
- streets, law and order is a rallying cry that evokes quieter
- days. To some, it is also a short-hand message promising
- repression of the black community. To the Negro, already the
- most frequent victim of violence, it is a bleak warning that
- worse times may be coming.
- </p>
- <p> The law-and-order issue has elevated George Wallace from
- a sectional maverick to a national force, making the two-party
- system seem suddenly vulnerable. It has lured Richard Nixon and
- Spiro Agnew to the edge of demagogy, as they watch the national
- atmosphere darken and Wallace's popularity grow. For reasons of
- his own, Hubert Humphrey has played less heavily on the fear of
- lawlessness, and he finds himself losing ground as a result.
- </p>
- <p>The Mood of Crisis
- </p>
- <p> So roiled is the country's mood that Wallace describes his
- election as necessary not merely to contain dissent and
- disturbance but also to protect dissenters and disturbers from
- repressions worse than any that he would impose on them. His
- implication is clear: only his victory can placate the New
- Right sufficiently to prevent vigilante action. This artful
- threat of ever more taut confrontation carries with it the
- prospect of still more violence, which in turn could lead to
- curtailment of traditional civil liberties. Some hard-core
- rebels of the farthest left would welcome exactly that. They
- reason that the resulting disorder could only weaken the system
- that they seek to overturn.
- </p>
- <p> In this, they face the united opposition of the great mass
- between the extremes. Every citizen has a valid right to demand
- that his government provide security for his person and his
- property. This is perhaps the public's first civil right. No
- responsible element quarrels with it. It is ironic that law and
- order, at best the glory of any society and at least an
- unobjectionable cliche, should have turned into a controversy.
- Partly it has happened because many vocal protesters put forth
- the old but troubling idea that, in certain circumstances, law
- and order must be defied for the sake of a higher justice.
- </p>
- <p> Every pollster's report, every sounding by reporters,
- attests to the momentum of the law-and-order issue. The surveys
- fuel the rhetoric from the right. Eighty-one percent of the
- public believe that law enforcement has broken down. Even more
- believe that a "strong" President can do something about it. By
- large margins, the public wants looters gunned down on the
- streets. By varying majorities, people blame Negroes, the
- Mafia, Communists, rebellious youth, the courts. Opinion Analyst
- Samuel Lubell travels the country and concludes: "To most
- voters, crime and lawlessness and the Negro are part of the same
- issue. The vehemence and profanity with which white voters voice
- their racial views have risen over the last two months." A New
- York-based writer visits Baltimore and Washington, and finds
- that "crime--Negro crime--is almost the only topic of
- conversation." The Aldine Printing Co. in Los Angeles, the
- world's largest manufacturer of bumper stickers, reports that
- its bestseller is SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL POLICE, the old Birch
- slogan.
- </p>
- <p> In communities that have experienced serious disorders and
- high crime incidence and where racial tension is a constant
- fact of life, there is a desperate urge to do something, almost
- anything. Firearms sales are at an all-time high. In Newark, a
- white organization, the North Ward Citizens Committee, has been
- openly arming for "self-defense." Elsewhere, store owners are
- organizing self-protection groups. In Kansas City, 25 merchants
- in a racially mixed neighborhood are threatening to close their
- shops en masse.
- </p>
- <p> "Block clubs" have been organized in some white areas
- adjoining Chicago's South Side ghetto. Suspicious of
- interlopers, the clubs keep track of autos passing through the
- streets. They also follow up on arrests and prosecution of
- offenders. Joe Lenoci, 35, a factory production controller who
- heads one block club, says that he is not a racist or a fanatic.
- He just wants "the law changed so that police are not so
- handicapped." Lenoci is uncertain what new powers he would give
- the police, and he cannot name the Supreme Court decisions he
- objects to.
- </p>
- <p>Vicarious Troubles
- </p>
- <p> There is hardly a single big city in which the individual
- feels completely safe on the streets at night. The fear of
- violence permeates the entire nation, wafted by television and
- newspaper headlines into areas that only vicariously experience
- serious trouble. In western Nevada, Ormsby County Sheriff
- Robert Humphrey warns: "What I'm afraid of is that the public
- will demand that we take too much authority. That is the real
- danger. But the alternative might be some kind of vigilantes."
- </p>
- <p> Utah is a peaceful state by any measure. Negroes make up
- three-fifths of 1% of Utah's population. Yet a Bear Lake resort
- owner declares that "the politicians ought to move the Negroes
- back to the South, where they will be happy." A Salt Lake City
- Mormon bishop says of youthful protesters: "They have been
- infected by drugs, and the drugs were supplied by Mexicans,
- Negroes or Chinese."
- </p>
- <p> State and local politics reflect the impact no less than
- national politics. New Hampshire is tranquil, but talk about
- law and order is rampant. Democratic Governor John King, now
- running for the Senate, discerns a fine grey line between reason
- and dissent: "We have reached the point where we had better draw
- that line and say, `You shall not pass.'" John Sears,
- Republican sheriff of Suffolk County (Boston) has been
- appointing Negro deputies, attempting to work with ghetto
- groups, and telling his men that they need not carry weapons at
- all times. His innovations have loosed a cascade of criticism
- from voters that, he admits "will probably cost me the
- election."
- </p>
- <p> In Warren, Mich., a blue-collar town, Mayor Ted Bates has
- been pleading with his constituents to "unload your guns"--literally.
- Warren residents, predominantly of Eastern European
- and Italian descent, have been apprehensive ever since last
- year's uprising in Detroit. Yet Warren has had a decreasing
- crime rate, and Bates observes: "We have no problems with
- hippies, yippies or zippies." George Wallace draws strong
- support in Warren. Among Negroes in the surrounding area, the
- word is out that to get a flat tire or an empty fuel tank in
- Warren or neighboring Dearborn is to run a serious risk of
- physical assault. In upper-income Grosse Pointe, a matron
- laments about the Detroit area: "This place is becoming a
- jungle." She is considering moving to California. In suburban
- Los Angeles, Morris Boswell, 52, a bulldozer operator, says that
- Wallace will be elected. Then, he says, "the punks, the queers,
- the demonstrators and the hippies--we're going to put them on
- a barge and ship 'em off to China. Or better yet, sink it."
- </p>
- <p> In Winnetka, a prosperous suburb of Chicago, Mrs. John A.
- F. Wendt reads the Chicago Tribune, has a son working in Vietnam
- for the State Department, and views the home front with horror:
- "This great country, with the great people who are in it, to
- have these things happen, you get the feeling it was all
- planned, all stirred up. I definitely think this Negro rioting
- is tied into this Communist thing."
- </p>
- <p> In cooler terms, Professor Philip Hauser of the University
- of Chicago analyzes what he calls the "social-morphological
- revolution," the changing forms within society. Its four
- elements, according to Hauser: the population explosion, the
- population implosion that has made for densely populated
- central cities, the mixing of diverse population groups, and
- the accelerated tempo of technological and social change.
- </p>
- <p> Few laymen can separate things so neatly in their own
- minds. The elements of turmoil blend into an ill-defined whole.
- But the three main tributaries that converge to make the
- law-and-order issue so powerful are: 1) the revolt of youth,
- whether against the war, the draft or the social system as a
- whole; 2) Negro militance and ghetto rioting; and 3) the
- individual's intense personal fear of criminal attack.
- </p>
- <p>The Young Radicals
- </p>
- <p> The disorders of recent years have deeply offended the
- middle-class American's traditional values. Mrs. Wendt speaks
- for many millions when she talks about "this great country." For
- the majority, the U.S. has been and continues to be great in
- its bounty of personal freedom and material goods. And for the
- majority in recent years, there has been every reason to
- believe that good times were here to stay. Thus there is genuine
- outrage when protesters screaming "Liberty!" and "Justice!"
- defile an American flag that for most Americans has always
- symbolized liberty and justice. To most who have fought for that
- standard, the spectacle of youngsters waving Viet Cong flags
- comes as near-blasphemy.
- </p>
- <p> Nor are the most visible young dissenters the recognizable
- types of 30 years ago--the trade unionists or the ideologues
- who peddled assorted versions of Marxism. They had specific
- programs and demands, many of which could be accommodated in
- relatively rational terms, and eventually were. With today's
- breed of kid revolutionaries, who would close a campus for
- reasons incomprehensible to most older Americans, the
- authorities cannot even find a bargaining table, let alone a
- frame of reference in which to negotiate.
- </p>
- <p> A working-class father who may have sacrificed for years
- in order to send his son to college cannot remotely comprehend
- why middle-class youths cry that "the system" is rotten. To him,
- they are all spoiled brats, profane, obnoxious, unwashed,
- promiscuous, to whom everything has been offered and from whom
- nothing has been demanded. To the more affluent, youthful
- rebellion represents a rejection of principles that have stood
- the test for generations. The fact that student discontent is
- an international phenomenon and has been more violent elsewhere--Japan,
- France and currently Mexico, for instance--is cold
- comfort.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. was born in revolution but it was a revolution of
- Whigs against the Crown rather than one of Jacobin against the
- establishment. Tom Paine did not remain a national hero in the
- young Republic, and what is thought of as democracy today was
- some time in coming after independence. The radical has always
- offended most Americans, even if many of his ideas were
- eventually accepted.
- </p>
- <p>The Black Militants
- </p>
- <p> Disconcerting though the hippies and yippies may be, their
- contribution to the present malaise is minor compared with
- Negro militance and ghetto riots. From the late 1940s to the
- mid-1960s, most Americans believed that justice was being done
- to the Negroes, that perhaps the American dilemma was soluble
- after all. Through presidential orders, civil rights acts and
- court decision, the Negro was being propelled upward in legal
- status. Through generally rising prosperity and later the
- antipoverty program, the Negro appeared to be making economic
- progress as well. There were more black faces over white
- collars, more Negroes going to college, more owning their homes,
- more being admitted to clubs and fraternities and the ranks of
- government.
- </p>
- <p> If to the blacks the more still seemed to be very few, it
- was reasonable to assume that evolution would take care of
- that. If the white man's income was still rising faster than
- the black's, Negroes were counseled to have patience. (In 1947,
- the gap between white and black median family income was $2,174;
- 19 years later, on the basis of constant dollars, the difference
- had grown to $3,036.) When brutal opposition to Negro progress
- persisted in the persons of the Bull Connors, and black
- children were dynamited to death in church, most Americans were
- shocked that such things could still happen. But they trusted
- Martin Luther King to keep his folks nonviolent. When blacks
- sang We Shall Overcome, the last word of the refrain was
- "someday."
- </p>
- <p> Yet, for all the symbols of progress, the economic and
- social pathology of urban ghettos worsened. "Some day" became
- "Freedom Now." Malcolm X and Stokely Carmichael decided that
- the Negro should no longer obey The Man's timetable or believe
- in his good will. They echoed Isaiah: "What mean ye that ye beat
- my people to pieces and grind the faces of the poor?"
- </p>
- <p> One by one, the ghettos exploded. These spasms of violence
- were accompanied by ever more urgent demands upon the white
- community from such moderate Negro leaders as King, Whitney
- Young, Roy Wilkins and A. Philip Randolph, who needed concrete
- accomplishments with which to counter the militants. All at
- once, Northern liberals discovered that integration could mean
- demonstrations in front of their school, protest marches on
- their main streets. All at once, Negroes were not just a
- faceless social cause, but a community of individuals, some of
- whom could be as intractable, nasty, destructive--and racist--as
- some whites had been all along. And through these
- discoveries ran the nagging realization that the more the
- Negroes got the more they demanded. That this is a universal
- trait was beside the point.
- </p>
- <p> Violence, Rap Brown observed, "is as American as cherry
- pie." History that most whites would rather forget supports
- him. Quite aside from the Ku Klux Klan's brand of oppression in
- the South, Northern whites rampaged against Negroes in riots in
- New York City; Springfield, Ohio; Greensburg, Ind.,
- Springfield, Ill.; East St. Louis, Ill.; and Detroit long before
- Negro upheavals came into vogue. The U.S. Civil Rights
- Commission counted 2,595 lynchings of Negroes in Southern states
- between 1882 and 1959. Not one resulted in a white man's
- conviction. Dennis Clark, writing in the Jesuit magazine
- America, makes the point that 100 years ago "the Irish were the
- riot makers of America par excellence."
- </p>
- <p> But violence in those days was absorbed in the onward rush
- of American life and the abiding faith in progress. Violence
- today is different, compressed in vast, complex, overcrowded
- cities; and blacks are not immigrants nor do they share the
- immigrants' optimism. Actually there are signs at present that
- black riots are abating. Despite the chain reaction of violence
- in April, after Martin Luther King's assassination, the Justice
- Department counted 25 "serious to major" disturbances from June
- through August, compared with 46 during the same three-month
- period last year. The number of deaths went down from 87 to 19.
- The figures are hardly cause for rejoicing or complacency, but
- at least the trend is hopeful.
- </p>
- <p> Still, TV has shown some of America's greatest cities
- under siege. It has shown Negroes carrying out loot from
- burned-out stores, sometimes while policemen and troops looked
- the other way. This sight, perhaps more than any other,
- contributes to the belief that Negroes are basically indolent
- and immoral, that law enforcement in the U.S. has broken down,
- that the black man is getting preferential treatment. That
- conclusion is directly contrary to the hallowed Anglo-Saxon
- tradition of property rights. The fact that mass arrests are not
- always feasible in chaotic conditions is ignored. The fact that
- indiscriminate shooting in a few of the riots, particularly
- Newark and Detroit, killed innocent citizens is forgotten, and
- the fact that police gunfire can prolong and worsen the initial
- disturbance is often overlooked.
- </p>
- <p>Personal Crime
- </p>
- <p> What concerns most people even more directly than student
- rebels and black riots is the fear of crime against the
- individual, of "the prowlers and muggers and marauders," in
- Nixon's words. No one questions that crime is growing. The
- issue is just how much, and whether the election-year emphasis
- on it is exaggerated. The primary fever gauge is the FBI's
- Uniform Crime Reports. The last full-year figures, for 1967,
- show an absolute 16.5% increase over the previous year in the
- offenses covered. The crime rate, taking increasing population
- into account, was up 15.3%. For murder, the increase has been
- 8.9%; for burglary, 14.6%. But one symptom of how haphazardly
- the U.S. has dealt with lawlessness is that, despite these
- seemingly precise figures, there is no certain knowledge of just
- how badly off the country is. Statistics have been kept only
- since 1930, and their basis--reports of known offenses
- submitted to the FBI by local authorities--is seriously
- flawed. In some categories, accurate comparisons between eras
- and areas are impossible because methods of collecting data have
- changed and local police departments vary in efficiency and
- candor.
- </p>
- <p> There are other quirks as well. For decades, the FBI has
- used a $50 minimum in defining larcenies that make up an
- important part of its crime index. Obviously, the shrinking
- value of the dollar changes the meaning of those figures; partly
- as a result, larceny has been the fastest-growing category on
- the crime index recently. Another example: for as long as anyone
- has kept track, youths form the mid-teens to early 20s have
- committed the largest number of offenses in all categories.
- During the '60s, the post-World War II baby crop came of
- criminal age. The fact that there are proportionately more
- Negroes than whites in the age group 15 to 24 explains at least
- in small part the higher arrest rate among Negroes.
- </p>
- <p> Negroes do, in fact, account for more violent crimes in
- the cities than do whites: the poor usually do. Although Negroes
- make up 11% of the U.S. population, black arrests for murder
- last year numbered 4,883, compared with 3,200 for whites. The
- overwhelming majority of victims of violent crime are set upon
- by members of their own race. That is why Negroes suffer far
- more from lawlessness of almost every sort than do whites. It
- explains why 2,000 residents of Watts recently petitioned their
- council representatives for better police protection. James
- Jones, Negro owner of a Washington steak house, is not alone in
- lamenting: "There are a lot of black fools in this world. If
- they are the chief violators of the law, then they are the ones
- who ought to be punished."
- </p>
- <p> The Negro's exposure to black criminals makes him all the
- more indignant over the racial connotations of law-and-order
- rhetoric. William V. Patrick, head of New Detroit, a peace-
- keeping committee formed after the riot, protests: "It's a
- horrible phrase, a euphemism for racial repression. First you
- had slavery. Then you had Jim Crow laws. Then it was called
- `separate but equal.' Now it is called `law and order.'"
- </p>
- <p> Even on the basis of the FBI figures, the notion that a
- virus of violence has suddenly infected a peaceful society is
- simply not true. During the 1950s, when reporting of offenses
- was less comprehensive than in the computerized '60s, the FBI
- reported a 66% increase in crime, taking population growth into
- consideration. The comparable figure for the '60s so far is
- 71%. While Nixon and Wallace charge that Supreme Court
- decisions bearing on eliciting confessions and the suspect's
- right to counsel have hindered law enforcement, studies
- conducted by the Los Angeles district attorney's office, the
- Yale Law Review and the Georgetown University Law Center show
- that this is not so.
- </p>
- <p>What the Candidates Say
- </p>
- <p> For the moment, much of the campaign talk is only adding
- to public confusion. Nixon reiterates that there can be no
- order without justice, that progress and peace go hand in hand.
- He goes on from there to attack the Democratic Administration
- for "grossly exaggerating" the relationship between poverty and
- crime. Nixon insists that doubling the conviction rate would
- accomplish more than quadrupling the antipoverty effort.
- Despite pressure from Republican liberals like Senator Edward
- Brooke, he is far less specific about social justice than he is
- about law and order.
- </p>
- <p> Essentially, Nixon is trying to steer between the crass
- appeals to animosity of Wallace and the orthodox liberal
- approach of Humphrey. Eschewing concrete proposals, Wallace aims
- at his listeners' gut feeling that crime must be quashed by any
- means available. Nixon attempts to sound both alarmed and
- controlled at the same time, but the element of alarm seems to
- be winning out. He cites the FBI figures without qualification:
- "If the present rate of new crime continues, the number of rapes
- and robberies and assaults and thefts in the U.S. today will
- double by the end of 1972." He talks of the U.S. as the country
- with the "strongest tradition of law and order, now racked by
- unprecedented lawlessness."
- </p>
- <p> Nixon belabors the Supreme Court for "hamstringing the
- peace forces in our society and strengthening the criminal
- forces." The court has borne the imprint of a Republican Chief
- Justice appointed by Dwight Eisenhower. Nixon has nonetheless
- succeeded in putting Humphrey on the defensive. Humphrey
- supports the Supreme Court. He lauds the Kerner commission
- report, which Nixon accuses of blaming everyone except the
- rioters and which Wallace terms "asinine and ludicrous." To
- underscore the truism that neither party has a monopoly on
- crime, Humphrey points out that Wallace's Alabama leads the
- nation in the number of murders, and that states with Republican
- Governors also have high crime rates ("if that means anything").
- Humphrey likes to point out that he is running for President,
- not sheriff.
- </p>
- <p> In the position papers issued so far, both Humphrey and
- Nixon propose large-scale federal assistance to local law-
- enforcement, judicial and correction agencies. Both emphasize
- the need for a major attack on organized crime and an enlarged
- role for the Justice Department. However, Humphrey's proposals
- are considerably more detailed. He recommends, for instance,
- the establishment of "regional crime institutes" to do research
- and provide training and technical services for local
- law-enforcement agencies. And it is Humphrey who envisions the
- more prominent role for the Federal Government. To this, the
- Vice President adds strong and constant stress on the need for
- a wholehearted attack on the social and economic problems that
- he insists are at the root of lawlessness.
- </p>
- <p> Humphrey is in trouble on the issue partly because his
- stand is not responsive to many whites' fears of the Negro; but
- more importantly because even well-meaning whites have become
- deeply skeptical about the liberal proposition that social and
- economic improvements necessarily diminish crime.
- </p>
- <p>What to Do
- </p>
- <p> When Wallace says that force is the only way to ensure law
- and order he is far from alone. Last week the Democratic
- National Committee received results of four regional polls on
- the issue, each asking whether respondents believed that the
- police should shoot to kill looters. The majorities answering
- yes ranged from 63% to 71%--and included many Negroes.
- </p>
- <p> A legitimate concern for both white and black is the low
- estate of the nation's crime-fighting apparatus. Only 22.4% of
- all reported offenses even resulted in arrests last year, and
- that percentage is falling. The nation's police are in dire
- need of all manner of help, and perhaps require a total
- redefinition of their role. A study by the President's crime
- commission last year included a unique survey of 10,000 families
- that indicated many serious crimes--in some categories as many
- as 50%--are never reported at all.
- </p>
- <p> Law breakers who are caught get little benefit from the
- experience in terms of rehabilitation. Accurate figures do
- exist on recidivism, and they are appalling. Fully 60% of those
- arrested have at least one prior offense on their record. For
- those under 20, the figure is 70%. Generally speaking, the more
- serious the offense, the greater the chance that the accused is
- a repeater. It is no new theory that the entire criminal-law
- and corrections apparatus is in need of major overhaul. The same
- case was made more than 30 years ago by the Wickersham
- Commission, and has periodically been reconfirmed by other
- expert groups.
- </p>
- <p> Of jails there are plenty, yet their major function is to
- provide custody and punishment, not rehabilitation. There are
- roughly 1.3 million people in jail or on probation or parole.
- There are only 25,000 social workers, teachers, psychiatrists
- and psychologists, parole and probation officers employed to
- attempt to salvage them. In one recent poll, the public
- indicated full awareness that the nation's corrections system
- is a failure--and came out 2 to 1 against paying higher taxes
- to reform it.
- </p>
- <p> Poverty's precise role in the etiology of crime is not
- easily assessed. Dr. Leon Radzinowicz, a leading British
- criminologist, pointed out last week that England and Wales
- have had a constantly increasing crime rate for the past 25
- years, despite historic social reforms and improved economic
- conditions. At the same time, it is an established fact that
- most criminals come from slums and have limited education, and
- that the incidence of crime in low-income, congested areas and
- among broken families is severalfold that found elsewhere.
- </p>
- <p>The Kerner Recommendations
- </p>
- <p> At the tactical level, the Kerner commission report
- recommended a number of obvious steps to curb riots, such as
- developing greater rapport between police and the ghettos, and
- avoiding overreaction to very minor incidents.
- </p>
- <p> The main thrust of the Kerner report, however, was aimed
- at basic causes and cures. Its central thesis was that the
- black's adversity is attributable to white racism. That
- conception, while historically supportable, has only served to
- exacerbate the law and order fever. Nicholas Katzenbach,
- recalling his experiences in the Justice Department, puts it
- this way: "In many places, we have had law and order without
- justice, operating extraconstitutionally. Often it is really
- nothing more than socially condoned violence." It is doubtful
- that the majority of whites will agree with a point of view that
- amounts to Walt Kelly's Pogoism: "We have met the enemy and he
- is us."
- </p>
- <p> Nor is it likely, given the nation's mood, that the
- commission's long-range proposals for social and economic
- programs at the federal level will soon be enacted on anything
- near the scale recommended. The report has provoked intense
- interest and prompted reforms in some areas; in many, it has
- been largely ignored. Mayor John Reading of Oakland, Calif.,
- even accuses the Kerner commission of being partly responsible
- for the militants' takeover of Oakland's black leadership.
- "Permissiveness will do us in," says Reading, "and the Kerner
- answer was permissiveness." To this, New York Mayor John
- Lindsay, who was vice chairman of the Kerner commission, replies
- that if repression becomes society's reaction to disorder, "we
- might then have to choose between the random terror of the
- criminal and the official terror of the state. We might have to
- concede, openly and candidly, that The Great Experiment in
- self-government died, the victim of violence, before its 200th
- birthday."
- </p>
- <p> In the hope that the U.S. will hold a birthday party
- instead of a wake in the '70s, the Kerner commission offers some
- cogent proposals. The nation's welfare system must be reformed
- and upgraded to provide basic sustenance where needed and to
- discourage the breakup of families. The commission urges
- creation of 2,000,000 jobs within three years, with remedial
- training where necessary. That may be an impossible goal, but
- it would get at the largest single source of criminal raw
- material--the out-of-school, out-of-work kids.
- Prekindergarten, primary and secondary education in the slums
- is another vast target, but it is universally acknowledged that
- public education does not do much for ghetto children. One
- commission proposal that deserves serious consideration is a
- twelve-month school year for the culturally undernourished.
- </p>
- <p>Challenge King George
- </p>
- <p> It is largely true, as politicians never tire of
- remarking, that respect for law and authority--whether in the
- form of the cop or the university or the President--has
- diminished markedly in the last generation. However, a society
- that expects to keep challenge within reasonable bounds must
- retain a sense of perspective. Demands that the letter of every
- law be enforced to the full are risible. Myriad statutes range
- from Internal Revenue Service rulings to Coast Guard safety
- regulations for pleasure boats, and hundreds of such laws are
- widely flouted by the most respectable citizens. It is seldom
- that a responsible businessman engages in fraud or embezzlement,
- but when he does it is apparent to the poor that his
- transgression, however grandiose, rarely draws a penalty
- comparable in economic terms to that meted out to the petty
- thief. To which the responsible businessman is apt to reply that
- he spends a great deal of time and effort satisfying government
- laws and regulations, while the common criminal goes lightly
- punished--or so it sometimes seems to the embittered affluent
- citizen.
- </p>
- <p> No one can argue that income tax evasion--or winking at
- gambling, prostitution or even pot--is comparable to major,
- violent crime. Yet such common transgressions symbolize an
- important fact: some laws are simply petty, unrealistic,
- unenforceable or unjust. The discrepancies affect the most
- trivial as well as the most important matters. If no one had
- had the courage to challenge state and local segregation
- ordinances in the South, would the cause of justice have been
- served? And what if no one had challenged King George's laws and
- magistrates in the 1770s? When a society's leadership lets too
- many oppressive or unworkable laws accumulate, or takes them
- too literally, it lessens genuine respect for laws that are just
- and necessary. But to break laws in order ultimately to change
- the Law is a near-desperate step permissible only when every
- possible hope of peaceful change has been exhausted; very few
- Americans would argue that, for all the country's ills, that
- step is justified today.
- </p>
- <p> In the end, the decisions in a democratic society must be
- made by the majority, and any violent challenge to its will
- must be dealt with firmly. The tyranny of a minority is far
- more obnoxious than the tyranny of a majority. And at present,
- the majority clearly feels that law and order must somehow be
- reasserted. But it would be tragic if in the process the nation
- were to allow its legitimate fears to be exploited, its
- understandable concern to be exaggerated. The balancing of law
- and order against freedom is at the very heart of
- civilization's work. That work must be done by the leaders of
- the U.S. with a measure of magnanimity, a major effort at
- clarity--and a great deal of coolness. It will take an immense
- interlocking effort of more efficient and enlightened law
- enforcement, social reform and moral leadership. What is at
- stake is more than just the present election; it is, in many
- ways, the quality of American society for years to come.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-