"With respect to Baltimore, let me make a couple of points. First,
obviously our thoughts continue to be with the family of Freddie Gray.
Understandably, they want answers. And DOJ has opened an
investigation. It is working with local law enforcement to find out
exactly what happened, and I think there should be full transparency and
accountability.
Second, my thoughts are with the police officers who were injured in
last night’s disturbances. It underscores that that’s a tough job and
we have to keep that in mind, and my hope is that they can heal and get
back to work as soon as possible.
Point number three, there’s no excuse for the kind of violence that
we saw yesterday. It is counterproductive. When individuals get
crowbars and start prying open doors to loot, they’re not protesting,
they’re not making a statement -- they’re stealing. When they burn down
a building, they’re committing arson. And they’re destroying and
undermining businesses and opportunities in their own communities that
rob jobs and opportunity from people in that area.
So it is entirely appropriate that the mayor of Baltimore, who I
spoke to yesterday, and the governor, who I spoke to yesterday, work to
stop that kind of senseless violence and destruction. That is not a
protest. That is not a statement. It’s people -- a handful of people
taking advantage of a situation for their own purposes, and they need to
be treated as criminals.
Point number four, the violence that happened yesterday distracted
from the fact that you had seen multiple days of peaceful protests that
were focused on entirely legitimate concerns of these communities in
Baltimore, led by clergy and community leaders. And they were
constructive and they were thoughtful, and frankly, didn’t get that much
attention. And one burning building will be looped on television over
and over and over again, and the thousands of demonstrators who did it
the right way I think have been lost in the discussion.
The overwhelming majority of the community in Baltimore I think have
handled this appropriately, expressing real concern and outrage over the
possibility that our laws were not applied evenly in the case of Mr.
Gray, and that accountability needs to exist. And I think we have to
give them credit. My understanding is, is you’ve got some of the same
organizers now going back into these communities to try to clean up in
the aftermath of a handful of criminals and thugs who tore up the
place. What they were doing, what those community leaders and clergy
and others were doing, that is a statement. That’s the kind of
organizing that needs to take place if we’re going to tackle this
problem. And they deserve credit for it, and we should be lifting them
up.
Point number five -- and I’ve got six, because this is important.
Since Ferguson, and the task force that we put together, we have seen
too many instances of what appears to be police officers interacting
with individuals -- primarily African American, often poor -- in ways
that have raised troubling questions. And it comes up, it seems like,
once a week now, or once every couple of weeks. And so I think it’s
pretty understandable why the leaders of civil rights organizations but,
more importantly, moms and dads across the country, might start saying
this is a crisis. What I’d say is this has been a slow-rolling crisis.
This has been going on for a long time. This is not new, and we
shouldn’t pretend that it’s new.
The good news is, is that perhaps there’s some new found awareness
because of social media and video cameras and so forth that there are
problems and challenges when it comes to how policing and our laws are
applied in certain communities, and we have to pay attention to it and
respond.
What’s also good news is the task force that was made up of law
enforcement and community activists that we brought together here in the
White House have come up with very constructive concrete proposals
that, if adopted by local communities and by states and by counties, by
law enforcement generally, would make a difference. It wouldn’t solve
every problem, but would make a concrete difference in rebuilding trust
and making sure that the overwhelming majority of effective, honest and
fair law enforcement officers, that they're able to do their job better
because it will weed out or retrain or put a stop to those handful who
may be not doing what they're supposed to be doing.
Now, the challenge for us as the federal government is, is that we
don't run these police forces. I can't federalize every police force in
the country and force them to retrain. But what I can do is to start
working with them collaboratively so that they can begin this process of
change themselves.
And coming out of the task force that we put together, we're now
working with local communities. The Department of Justice has just
announced a grant program for those jurisdictions that want to purchase
body cameras. We are going to be issuing grants for those jurisdictions
that are prepared to start trying to implement some of the new training
and data collection and other things that can make a difference. And
we're going to keep on working with those local jurisdictions so that
they can begin to make the changes that are necessary.
I think it’s going to be important for organizations like the
Fraternal Order of Police and other police unions and organization to
acknowledge that this is not good for police. We have to own up to the
fact that occasionally there are going to be problems here, just as
there are in every other occupation. There are some bad politicians who
are corrupt. There are folks in the business community or on Wall
Street who don't do the right thing. Well, there’s some police who
aren’t doing the right thing. And rather than close ranks, what we’ve
seen is a number of thoughtful police chiefs and commissioners and
others recognize they got to get their arms around this thing and work
together with the community to solve the problem. And we're committed
to facilitating that process.
So the heads of our COPS agency that helps with community policing,
they're already out in Baltimore. Our Assistant Attorney General for
the Civil Rights Division is already out in Baltimore. But we're going
to be working systematically with every city and jurisdiction around the
country to try to help them implement some solutions that we know
work.
And I’ll make my final point -- I’m sorry, Mr. Prime Minister, but this is a pretty important issue for us.
We can't just leave this to the police. I think there are police
departments that have to do some soul searching. I think there are some
communities that have to do some soul searching. But I think we, as a
country, have to do some soul searching. This is not new. It’s been
going on for decades.
And without making any excuses for criminal activities that take
place in these communities, what we also know is that if you have
impoverished communities that have been stripped away of opportunity,
where children are born into abject poverty; they’ve got parents --
often because of substance-abuse problems or incarceration or lack of
education themselves -- can't do right by their kids; if it’s more
likely that those kids end up in jail or dead, than they go to college.
In communities where there are no fathers who can provide guidance to
young men; communities where there’s no investment, and manufacturing
has been stripped away; and drugs have flooded the community, and the
drug industry ends up being the primary employer for a whole lot of
folks -- in those environments, if we think that we're just going to
send the police to do the dirty work of containing the problems that
arise there without as a nation and as a society saying what can we do
to change those communities, to help lift up those communities and give
those kids opportunity, then we're not going to solve this problem. And
we’ll go through the same cycles of periodic conflicts between the
police and communities and the occasional riots in the streets, and
everybody will feign concern until it goes away, and then we go about
our business as usual.
If we are serious about solving this problem, then we're going to not
only have to help the police, we're going to have to think about what
can we do -- the rest of us -- to make sure that we're providing early
education to these kids; to make sure that we're reforming our criminal
justice system so it’s not just a pipeline from schools to prisons; so
that we're not rendering men in these communities unemployable because
of a felony record for a nonviolent drug offense; that we're making
investments so that they can get the training they need to find jobs.
That's hard. That requires more than just the occasional news report or
task force. And there’s a bunch of my agenda that would make a
difference right now in that.
Now, I’m under no illusion that out of this Congress we're going to
get massive investments in urban communities, and so we’ll try to find
areas where we can make a difference around school reform and around job
training, and around some investments in infrastructure in these
communities trying to attract new businesses in.
But if we really want to solve the problem, if our society really
wanted to solve the problem, we could. It’s just it would require
everybody saying this is important, this is significant -- and that we
don't just pay attention to these communities when a CVS burns, and we
don't just pay attention when a young man gets shot or has his spine
snapped. We're paying attention all the time because we consider those
kids our kids, and we think they're important. And they shouldn’t be
living in poverty and violence.
That's how I feel. I think there are a lot of good-meaning people
around the country that feel that way. But that kind of political
mobilization I think we haven’t seen in quite some time. And what I’ve
tried to do is to promote those ideas that would make a difference. But
I think we all understand that the politics of that are tough because
it’s easy to ignore those problems or to treat them just as a law and
order issue, as opposed to a broader social issue.
That was a really long answer, but I felt pretty strongly about it."
3 comments:
me too! thanks for posting it.
He said it well. The problems are complex but these hooligans have been burning down the homes of those who live in their community, destroying businesses where they work. This is robbery and arson as he said. What gets me is when anybody tries to excuse it by anything else. It turns some humans into less responsible than the rest. We obviously have a national problem but justifying destruction won't help it.
Destruction won't help and just throwing money at the problem won't help either. The system must change. Every child in this country deserves a full belly, a safe place to live, a good education, and hope.
As the proverb goes, give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day; show him how to catch fish, and you feed him for a lifetime.
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