Page 1 of 1

The True Black Tragedy

Posted: Wed May 20, 2015 1:58 pm
by bobevenson
The True Black Tragedy
By Walter Williams
Published May 20, 2015

Hustlers and people with little understanding want us to believe that today's black problems are the continuing result of a legacy of slavery, poverty and racial discrimination. The fact is that most of the social pathology seen in poor black neighborhoods is entirely new in black history. Let's look at some of it.

Today the overwhelming majority of black children are raised in single female-headed families. As early as the 1880s, three-quarters of black families were two-parent. In 1925 New York City, 85 percent of black families were two-parent. One study of 19th-century slave families found that in up to three-fourths of the families, all the children had the same mother and father.

Today's black illegitimacy rate of nearly 75 percent is also entirely new. In 1940, black illegitimacy stood at 14 percent. It had risen to 25 percent by 1965, when Daniel Patrick Moynihan wrote "The Negro Family: The Case for National Action" and was widely condemned as a racist. By 1980, the black illegitimacy rate had more than doubled, to 56 percent, and it has been growing since. Both during slavery and as late as 1920, a teenage girl raising a child without a man present was rare among blacks.

Much of today's pathology seen among many blacks is an outgrowth of the welfare state that has made self-destructive behavior less costly for the individual. Having children without the benefit of marriage is less burdensome if the mother receives housing subsidies, welfare payments and food stamps. Plus, the social stigma associated with unwed motherhood has vanished. Female-headed households, whether black or white, are a ticket for dependency and all of its associated problems. Ignored in all discussions is the fact that the poverty rate among black married couples has been in single digits since 1994.

Black youth unemployment in some cities is over 50 percent. But high black youth unemployment is also new. In 1948, the unemployment rate for black teens was slightly less than that of their white counterparts — 9.4 percent compared with 10.2. During that same period, black youths were either just as active in the labor force or more so than white youths. Since the 1960s, both the labor force participation rate and the employment rate of black youths have fallen to what they are today. Why? Are employers more racially discriminatory today than yesteryear? Were black youths of yesteryear more skilled than whites of yesteryear? The answer to both questions is a big fat no.

The minimum wage law and other labor regulations have cut off the bottom rungs of the economic ladder. Put yourself in the place of an employer, and ask: If I must pay $7.25 an hour — plus mandated fringes, such as Social Security and workers' compensation — would it pay me to hire a worker who is so unfortunate as to possess skills that enable him to produce only $5 worth of value per hour? Most employers view that as a losing economic proposition. Thus, the minimum wage law discriminates against the employment of low-skilled workers, who are most often youths — particularly black youths.

The little bit of money a teenager can earn through after-school, weekend and summer employment is not nearly so important as the other things he gains from early work experiences. He acquires skills and develops good work habits, such as being prompt, following orders and respecting supervisors. In addition, there are the self-respect and pride that a youngster gains from being financially semi-independent. All of these gains from early work experiences are important for any teen but are even more important for black teens. If black teens are going to learn anything that will make them a more valuable employee in the future, they aren't going to learn it from their rotten schools, their dysfunctional families or their crime-ridden neighborhoods. They must learn it on the job.

The bulk of today's problems for many blacks are a result of politicians and civil rights organizations using government in the name of helping blacks when in fact they are serving the purposes of powerful interest groups.

Re: The True Black Tragedy

Posted: Sun Jun 28, 2015 5:51 am
by Gary Childress
Interesting article. A few questions, if you happen to know the answers to them (as I have not read any of Walter Williams' work): the last sentence says:
The bulk of today's problems for many blacks are a result of politicians and civil rights organizations using government in the name of helping blacks when in fact they are serving the purposes of powerful interest groups.
What are the powerful interest groups whose purposes are being served by politicians and civil rights organizations using government? And what exactly are the intentions or purposes of these powerful groups? Why do they want minimum wage laws? What is the perceived gain in the enactment of minimum wage laws for these powerful interest groups?

Thanks.

Re: The True Black Tragedy

Posted: Sun Jun 28, 2015 4:00 pm
by spike
Generally those powerful interest groups are those that don't like or trust Blacks. They don't wants to see Blacks advance.

Re: The True Black Tragedy

Posted: Sun Jun 28, 2015 10:25 pm
by Obvious Leo
I'm not convinced that it's necessary to look for a conspiracy where no conspiracy is necessary to account for such a trend. There was a world-wide trend towards laissez-faire capitalism following WWII and this has a natural tendency to widen income inequality. Wealth in an unregulated economy trickles UP and never down and with such income inequality comes inequality of opportunity. The ancient Greeks discovered this under Solon and thus abandoned it, the Romans discovered it under the later empire and it was primarily the social unrest caused by it which finally brought the Roman Empire down. Every major civilisation in history has ultimately failed because of the personal greed of those in power and the US is on exactly the same trajectory. The fact that black people seem to be disproportionately disadvantaged by this trend in the present day is simply an accident of US history because in other countries much the same thing is happening to whoever is unlucky enough to be trapped at the bottom of the economic heap.

Re: The True Black Tragedy

Posted: Mon Jun 29, 2015 1:32 pm
by bobevenson
Gary Childress wrote:Interesting article. A few questions, if you happen to know the answers to them (as I have not read any of Walter Williams' work): the last sentence says:
The bulk of today's problems for many blacks are a result of politicians and civil rights organizations using government in the name of helping blacks when in fact they are serving the purposes of powerful interest groups.
What are the powerful interest groups whose purposes are being served by politicians and civil rights organizations using government? And what exactly are the intentions or purposes of these powerful groups? Why do they want minimum wage laws? What is the perceived gain in the enactment of minimum wage laws for these powerful interest groups?

Thanks.
The biggest interest group would be teachers unions who are against free-market educational choices that would put most current teachers out of a job. Minimum wage laws are promoted by Democratic politicians who are looking for votes from the poor. Unfortunately, these laws make the poor who aren't worth a higher minimum wage even poorer when they can't get a job. You can read Walter Williams' columns at http://www.jewishworldreview.com/cols/williams1.asp.

Re: The True Black Tragedy

Posted: Mon Jun 29, 2015 9:00 pm
by Obvious Leo
"Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it"....George Santayana

Bob. Your uber-reactionary economic Darwinism flies in the face of history. It was the steady implementation of fair labour laws from the late 19th through to the mid 20th centuries which gave rise to the middle class and an exponential rise in living standards throughout those countries in the world who embraced such ideas. The erosion of such worker protections in recent decades has seen a contraction of this same middle class and an accompanying fall in the economic growth which is driven by the consistent consumer demand such a system generates. Whether you support the idea of a consumption driven economy or not, and I am one who doesn't, this is cold, hard economic fact founded on empirical evidence, an avalanche of data, and simple common sense. Obviously you are entitled to your own opinions but you are not entitled to your own facts and no amount of historical revisionism can contradict known facts. Income inequality stifles economic growth and every economist in the world knows it.

Re: The True Black Tragedy

Posted: Mon Jun 29, 2015 9:25 pm
by bobevenson
Obvious Leo wrote:...and simple common sense.
That is something, my friend, that you severely lack. You are saying that when something becomes more expensive, people will buy more of it, or regarding minimum wage, when labor becomes more expensive, companies will buy more of it. Good luck with that kind of thinking.

Re: The True Black Tragedy

Posted: Mon Jun 29, 2015 9:54 pm
by Obvious Leo
bobevenson wrote:
Obvious Leo wrote:...and simple common sense.
That is something, my friend, that you severely lack. You are saying that when something becomes more expensive, people will buy more of it, or regarding minimum wage, when labor becomes more expensive, companies will buy more of it. Good luck with that kind of thinking.
Economics is clearly not your long suit, Bob, so I suggest you confine yourself to pontificating on matters which you know even less about. By and large nobody gives a fuck about what you have to say about anything but at least there are other topics which offer a more fertile field of comedic opportunity. It's not easy to squeeze a laugh out of watching hundreds of millions of people throughout the world sliding into poverty when it was once the goal of a civilised society to prevent such things.

Re: The True Black Tragedy

Posted: Mon Jun 29, 2015 10:26 pm
by bobevenson
Obvious Leo wrote:
bobevenson wrote:
Obvious Leo wrote:...and simple common sense.
That is something, my friend, that you severely lack. You are saying that when something becomes more expensive, people will buy more of it, or regarding minimum wage, when labor becomes more expensive, companies will buy more of it. Good luck with that kind of thinking.
Economics is clearly not your long suit, Bob, so I suggest you confine yourself to pontificating on matters which you know even less about. By and large nobody gives a fuck about what you have to say about anything but at least there are other topics which offer a more fertile field of comedic opportunity. It's not easy to squeeze a laugh out of watching hundreds of millions of people throughout the world sliding into poverty when it was once the goal of a civilised society to prevent such things.
I'll let you slide since I know you're just an ignorant and oppressed European, but I must point out that I am a divinely inspired prophet of all things spiritual, political and economic.

Re: The True Black Tragedy

Posted: Mon Jun 29, 2015 10:46 pm
by Obvious Leo
bobevenson wrote: I'll let you slide since I know you're just an ignorant and oppressed European,
That's very gracious of you, mate, and it's certainly refreshing to see that your knowledge of geography is on a par with your understanding of economics.

Re: The True Black Tragedy

Posted: Mon Jun 29, 2015 11:09 pm
by bobevenson
Obvious Leo wrote:
bobevenson wrote: I'll let you slide since I know you're just an ignorant and oppressed European,
That's very gracious of you, mate, and it's certainly refreshing to see that your knowledge of geography is on a par with your understanding of economics.
I never said I was a divinely inspired prophet of all things geographical.