Republished by VDARE.com on September 25, 2003
Beasts In The Park
(Central Park Jogger attack)
The Times
(London)
April 29 1989
By Peter Brimelow
NEW YORK—Spring in America goes off
like a bomb. Well into April, Manhattan's many parks are
brown and sere from winter's crushing grip. Then the
temperature begins to seesaw wildly, into the 70s and
back down to freezing. The trees imported by
public-spirited natives to line the canyon-like streets
suddenly bud and burst into blossom so heavy that you
wonder how their boughs support it.
Every prospect pleases, in the
words of Heber's great missionary hymn. And only man is
vile. Some men; children, really, if not animals.
At about 10pm on Wednesday, April
19, a 28-year-old woman was jogging in Central Park when
she was attacked by a roving gang of teenagers. She was
beaten with stones and a lead pipe, raped repeatedly and
left, naked, bleeding profusely and unconscious, in a
pool of water where she was discovered four hours later.
She is still in a coma. She will probably have permanent
brain damage, if she lives.
New York is obsessed with this
atrocious crime. The youths apparently responsible have
been
arrested, largely because they continued to attack
other passers-by until the police caught up with them.
They range in age from 13 to 17. Interviews with their
families and friends fill the newspapers. Pundits
pontificate. Politicians utter pieties and appeal for
calm.
There are hundreds of murders and
thousands of rapes in New York every year. Some voices
can be heard asking why this one has attracted so much
attention. The favoured explanation is racial: the
victim is white, the perpetrators all black or Hispanic
(Puerto Ricans or Mexicans.)
Another theory suggests class: the
victim is an investment banker who, like the rest of the
city's elite, including journalists, might normally have
hoped to be insulated from the welfare underworld of her
assailants.
Both these claims are deeply
perverse. It is a simple fact that most violent crime in
New York is committed by blacks and Hispanics: they
constitute more than 90 per cent of the prison
population. There is no shortage of white victims of
every social status, if anyone
cared to look.
All New Yorkers are terrified of
crime. But they are also
deeply inhibited about discussing it openly, for
fear of the possible racial implications. So something
like the Central Park rape can always trigger an erratic
but intense response.
A dangerous consequence of this
inhibition is public ignorance. For example, it is now
being reported that
wolf-pack attacks by teenagers--they call it
'wilding'--have quietly become rather common in New
York. This particular gang had been active in the area
for some time; another even recently attacked
Bloomingdale's, the famous department store in the heart
of the shopping district. And a city employee provided
this enlightening justification of the regular official
claims that Central Park is safe: 'You could go
through there nine times out of ten and nothing would
happen ..'
Which are odds that last Wednesday
night's rape victim, only three years in Manhattan,
might have liked to know.
A tragedy as profound as the
collapse of public order in America's cities ultimately
defies commentary. The police manifestly lack the powers
to deal with the problem. The politicians, equally
clearly, are not going to hand them over. Powerful
taboos surround the subject. Columnists who write about
it risk being labelled cranks. It's far more acceptable
to dwell on the threat to world civilization posed by
Colonel Oliver North.
Perhaps a specific point offers a
more suitable focus. 'Throughout the day', the
New York Times reported from Harlem on Monday,
'blacks debated what they said were the larger issues
the incident brings to light--needs for better housing,
education and job opportunities.'
In fact, most of the youths already
live in subsidized housing located on some of the most
expensive land on earth. And their relatives and
friends, no doubt hoping to establish their good
character, soon began insisting that they were
comparatively well-situated, to the point where a later
story carried the credulous headline 'Park Suspects:
Children of Discipline'.
Readers of Tom Wolfe's
extraordinary
Bonfire of the Vanities,
which really says all there is to say
about New York, will remember that in these
circumstances a child who has not actually murdered a
teacher is called an 'honour student'. But nevertheless,
the New York Times felt able to hand-wring
editorially: 'How could apparently well-adjusted
youngsters turn into so savage a wolf pack? The question
reverberates.'
The answer reverberates too. It had
already been provided in the taped confession of one of
the youths involved in the attack. Asked by police why
he had whipped the woman about the head with a lead
pipe. Yusuf Salaam, who is 15, replied:
'Because it was fun.'
There are males who think it is fun
to rape women and batter them to death. This is a
reality that cannot be reasoned away. It can only be
crushed.
The author is a senior editor of
Forbes magazine in New York.
[Originally
published in England, spelling and grammar vary slightly
from American style.]