Baltimore knows carnage
The city should adopt the new president's outrage
over urban violence
In his speech, Mr. Trump referred to the “different reality” that exists for mothers and children trapped in poverty in our inner cities where decent jobs are non-existent and where dysfunctional schools leave “young and beautiful students” deprived of knowledge and where “crime and the gangs and the drugs ... have stolen too many lives and robbed our country of so much unrealized potential.” Mr. Trump dramatically proclaimed that “this American carnage stops right here and stops right now.”
The self-consciously cerebral editorial boards of newspapers like The New York Times and The Washington Post accused Mr. Trump of overstating the problem. In attacking the president for a “graceless and disturbingly ahistoric vision of America,” The New York Times referred to Mr. Trump's description of inner city violence as a “sweeping exaggeration” at odds with the fact that crime in general remains far lower than in past decades. The Washington Post accused Mr. Trump of painting a “false picture of an impoverished, crime-ridden country,” although conceding that Mr. Trump's “dystopia” may exist in some places.
Yeah, like in a significant number of neighborhoods in Baltimore. Maybe the bluebloods who write editorials from their offices on Eighth Avenue in Manhattan and K Street in Washington would like to take a walk in the Coldstream Homestead Montebello or Belair-Edison neighborhoods in Baltimore. On second thought, taking a walk through those neighborhoods is not such a great idea, but they can take look at some statistics from the safety of their desks.
A report by Justin George of The Baltimore Sun last year revealed that in the previous five years there had been 75 shootings in Coldstream Homestead Montebello, 32 of them fatal; in Belair-Edison
The editorials by The Times and The Post missed the bigger picture: the need for an end to the business-as-usual attitude of our political leaders in which the daily violence on city streets almost is accepted as an immutable fact of urban life. Why not view Mr. Trump's statement on the issue as a rallying cry for immediate and concerted action that should be echoed by state and local officials? Sometimes you need passion to drive solutions to complex problems; it is part of leadership.
Several weeks ago, The Sun
Ask the dean of the University of Maryland School of Social Work to chair the summit, because the underlying problems are socioeconomic in nature. In some sense
Gov. Larry Hogan can deliver the keynote address. If he does, he could do a lot worse than borrow the words of President Trump in referring to citizens who live in neighborhoods like Coldstream Homestead Montebello and Belair-Edison: “We are one nation and their pain is our pain. Their dreams are our dreams. And their success will be our success.” A productive summit and words like that might give us something else that has been in short supply in Baltimore as the murder rate continues unabated: Hope.