Tag Archives: black lives

Do Black Lives Actually Matter?

Black-Lives-matterLet me first say that it is not up to me to decide. There is an old joke where a guy walks into an auto parts store and asks, “do you have a set of spark plugs for a Red ford?” This is as  if the color of the car really has anything to do with the parts that go into it. That is the way I look at race and color.

After driving a taxi for twelve years where almost all of my colleagues were immigrants and passengers were of one race or another, usually different than my own, I kind of got used to dealing with everybody.  The common ground among cab drivers was always more pronounced than any commonality based on race. Drivers of all races had the same fear of working in rough neighborhoods. Robbers didn’t seem to care what race or nationality their victims were. All drivers were pretty much on the same page in this respect. White drivers were a minority but there was never a problem with that. I had personal friends from Mexico who were here illegally. I don’t mean a just few. To get a handle on what people are really like, it pays to work and associate with them in every day life.

I think a better question is what does any life matter? We don’t even know what life is.  So, “does any life matter?” is not that easy of a question to answer.  There are all kinds of lofty answers these kinds of questions. But, a quick glance at reality shows that our lives matter to ourselves, friends, family but not automatically to anyone else.

To others our lives are worth the utility we have to them. To a billionaire your life matters because you are a customer. To a politician your life matters because you are a potential voter.

Now, back to, “Do black lives actually matter?” In my opinion black lives matter a lot. There are lots of reasons. With respect to utility, blacks have taught me over half of what I know about music. Black economists like Thomas Sowell taught me things about economics I could not have learned anywhere else. Of  course I know a lot of blacks personally. Military graveyards are full of black soldiers who died for various national causes.

Personally I believe black lives matter immensely.  Black lives are of such high importance that I think it is an absurdity for them to put their lives in the hands of Hillary Clinton.

 

 

Thank You Black Americans

BALTIMORE, MD - ARPIL 21:  Protestors participate in a vigil for Freddie Gray down the street from the Baltimore Police Department's Western District police station, April 21, 2015 in Baltimore, Maryland.  Gray, 25, died from spinal injuries on April 19, one week after being taken into police custody. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)Who has the guts to stand up to authority? It is certainly not middle class whites and other prosperous ethnic groups. Our founding fathers founded this country on the basis of lack of trust for government. So blacks in Ferguson, Baltimore, New York and other places take to the streets because they don’t trust the police. Distrust of authority is the most important factor in maintaining freedom and is the exact principle on which the United States was founded.

Isn’t it interesting that the only group of American who had no rights in the beginning are now carrying the water for the rest of the country in standing up to authority. Perhaps they have become distressed enough to notice that all important things that happen in government are caused by pressure from outside the system. Without money to buy results in congress, perhaps they reason that demonstrating in public is their best option.

Why would a black American try to accomplish anything through the formal system? We all have short memories when it comes to things we would rather not remember. Is the United States a terrorist nation? I would say, not now but we used to be. I don’t know for sure, but I think there were lynchings as late as the 1950s and 1960s. Is lynching not terrorism? Things like this are not that easy to forget for the people who were abused. When a lynching occurred, law enforcement looked the other way. The lynchings were not once in a while. There were lots of them. Sure these things were a while back but I think blacks would be stupid to forget and go on as if nothing happened. I don’t think it is reasonable to expect to expect black people to have the same trust of law enforcement as other Americans.

This is not the same as carrying on a vicious vendetta against the rest of the country. Blacks have experienced the brutality a government can inflict and probably understand a lot better why the founding fathers didn’t trust government. Distrust of government is prudent.00_logo_1