Ethics Quote Of The Month: Heather Mac Donald

“When government abdicates its responsibility to maintain public safety, a few citizens, for now at least, will step into the breach. Penny was one of them. He restrained Neely not out of racism or malice but to protect his fellow passengers. He was showing classically male virtues: chivalry, courage and initiative. Male heroism threatens the entitlement state by providing an example of self-reliance apart from the professional helper class. And for that reason, he must be taken down.”

—Heather Mac Donald, in her scorching essay, “Daniel Penny is a scapegoat for a failed system”

That paragraph continues,

A homicide charge is the most efficient way to discourage such initiative in the future. Stigma is another. The mainstream media has characterized the millions of dollars in donations that have poured into Daniel Penny’s legal defense fund as the mark of ignorant bigots who support militaristic white vigilantes.

There is no way law enforcement can or should avoid at least exploring a manslaughter charge when an unarmed citizen is killed after a good Samaritan intervenes in a situation that he or she sees as potentially dangerous. Nevertheless, what appears to be the planned vilification of ex-Marine Daniel Penny by Democrats and the news media to put desperately-needed wind back in the metaphorical sails of Black Lives Matter and to goose racial division as the 2024 elections approach graphically illustrates just how unethical and ruthless the 21st Century American Left has become. (I know, I know, we don’t need any more evidence…). Mac Donald’s essay is superb, as many of hers often are. Do read it all, and them make your Facebook friends’ heads explode by sharing it.

Here are some other juicy and spot-on excerpts:

“Neely has been turned into a symbol of a racist system of law enforcement and of civilian values that exaggerate the threat of mentally ill vagrants to keep minorities down. Three weeks after Neely’s death, on May 21, another homeless man in New York City slammed a woman’s head into a subway car, likely paralyzing her for life, if she even survives. Neely’s champions have been silent about this latest subway assault.”

I didn’t know about that attack, because apparently the mainstream media didn’t think it was important….or at least important enough to risk undercutting their allies’ narrative.

Jordan Neely was a standard product of New York’s homelessness empire. A thirty-year-old schizophrenic drug addict, Neely…[d]espite his predilection for assaulting the elderly, he had been repeatedly allowed to skip out of treatment and jail. In 2019, Neely punched Filemon Castillo Baltazar in the head as the sixty-five-year-old waited for a subway in Greenwich Village. In June 2021, he walloped Anne Mitcheltree in the head inside a deli in the East Village; she was in her late sixties. In November 2021, Neely broke the nose and fractured the eye socket of a sixty-seven-year-old woman as she exited a subway  on the Lower East Side....

None of these attacks landed Neely in long-term mental health confinement…

Again, the scourge of Democrat-run cities deliberately allowing criminals and threats to law-abiding citizens escape consequences of their actions…

…while vagrants have a right to shelter, they have no obligation to use it. They are free to continue colonizing public and private spaces if they prefer. Taxpayers, meanwhile, have no choice in whether they pay for the scorned shelter; it must always be available to the finicky homeless, whether it is accepted or not. Conferring such choice on street colonizers guarantees that the street population will remain “unhoused,” since the vast majority of that population prefers the street lifestyle of uninhibited drug use and bounteous handouts to even the most nonjudgmental, anything-goes shelter. And, most critically, that unhoused population provides lifetime employment for government bureaucrats and private social service providers.

So add the city to Neely’s family and warped woke priorities as responsible parties for his death.

New York’s medical examiner ruled that Neely died from compression of the neck. But because Neely’s autopsy report has not been released, it is impossible to know whether drug intoxication, exacerbating stress on the heart, or other complicating factors may have contributed to Neely’s death

Déjà vu, anybody?

[A]s soon as the video became public, a glad cry must have gone out at the headquarters of Race-Baiting, Inc.: Penny was white, and Neely was black! Therefore, white supremacy killed Neely, just as it has allegedly killed so many other black homicide victims….A New York state senator called Neely’s death a “lynching.” Yusef Salaam, a New York City Council candidate, announced at Neely’s funeral that the public had “witnessed the lynching, a lynching, a lynching in the public square, a lynching of a Black man who was never given a chance by the system that was designed to keep him oppressed.” … The fact that Penny was not immediately arrested and indicted showed the “systemic racism that robs us of our basic humanity in life and death,” according to the speaker of the New York City Council. New York Mayor Eric Adams echoed Barack Obama’s statement that if Obama had had a son, that son would have looked like Trayvon Martin (the Florida teenager fatally shot by George Zimmerman in 2012). Adams noted that his son was also named Jordan and that Neely was “black like me,” facts of dubious relevance to the case. “No family should have to suffer a loss like this,” Adams added. “And too many black and brown families bear the brunt of a system long overdue for reform.

…because Barack Obama unforgivable linking of Trayvon Martin to his own family has worked out so well for American race relations…

Penny’s critics were certain that Neely posed no threat. “It became very clear that he was not going to cause harm to these other people,” New York Governor Kathy Hochul said. How Hochul had gained such psychological expertise from the safety of her chauffeured SUV was unclear. Neely was just another subway “passenger.” “Passengers are not supposed to die on the floor of our subways,” Neely’s family said, speaking through their lawyers. …Saying that subway passengers are not supposed to die is like saying that pedestrians are not supposed to die crossing the street, after one of them has run into oncoming traffic in the dark. Context is all.

The NYC mayor, the state’s governor…Ethics Alarms hereby issues a travel advisory for sane and ethical people considering travel to New York…

“The most astonishing aspect of the left’s narrative is not the tired racism conceit. The most astonishing claim is that it was Penny who lacked compassion and not the engineers of a status quo that left Neely free to decompose on the streets. We are supposed to believe that a system that has hundreds of contacts with a mentally ill vagrant and that allows him to continue his destructive lifestyle is caring.

There is a lot more: it is an important and a brilliantly argued piece. Whoever runs as a Republican in 2024 should practice explaining Mac Donald’s points on the campaign trail. My favorite passage, I think:

Contrary to the anti-white narrative, white on black homicides are almost nonexistent. Blacks commit 87 percent of all non-lethal interracial violence between blacks and whites and whites and blacks; blacks are roughly thirty-five times more likely to commit violent offenses against whites than whites are to commit violent offenses against blacks.

Existing while black is more dangerous than existing while white, but not because of white supremacy. In the first eighteen months of the pandemic, black juveniles were shot at 100 times the rate of white juveniles. (That shooting spike began only after the George Floyd race riots.) Had any of those black juvenile gun victims been shot or killed by whites, we would have heard about it. Instead, the rule for deciphering crime reporting is as follows: if the race of a crime suspect is not provided, the suspect is black. That rule applies when the victim is black and even more so when the victim is white. 

If a crime suspect is white, however, that fact will usually be reported and it will always be the lead in any story in the rare instance when the victim is black. 

Obviously, the author is a racist, and so am I, for praising and circulating her work.

__________________

Pointer: Other Bill

4 thoughts on “Ethics Quote Of The Month: Heather Mac Donald

  1. This is yet another example of the terrible place where America seems to be headed. This event is sadly reminiscent of the Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown incidents, and really, is of a piece with them. They are all part of the continuing, inexorable slide to 1970’s style racial conflict lovingly guided by the Leftist media and hurried along by comprehensively unethical politicians interested only in the benefits to their political careers.

    Despite all this, I am hopeful that at trial, the scales will fall from the eyes of the jury and they will see that without people who will risk personal calamity, either physical or legal, to protect the lives and safety of strangers, this society is bound to descend into chaos and madness. People like Penny remind us that bravery and fortitude are positive ethical values for a reason.

    Once again, you prove why this blog, as poorly-trafficked as it may be, is important. It reminds those of us who do read it to remember that even when ethics don’t seem to matter, they do — we just have to remember it. This helps us remember, especially when passions are running high.

  2. The “Unstoppable Force” of the Left is it’s drive to perfect society by micromanaging every decision of the individual by the state, using whatever force is necessary. Its “Immovable Object” is its horror at the use of state force against “marginalized” individuals who refuse to abide by even the most basic standards of civilized behavior. Pretty soon, honest people start wondering why they can’t have a gas-powered lawnmower, when the police don’t stop vagrant from assaulting them in the street and defecating on the sidewalk.

  3. The essay also includes a tremendous and apparently definitive history of the demise of American insane asylums and the release of the mentally ill onto the streets. She’s also recently done a great podcast with Glenn Loury. She’s ferocious.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.