In Compact Magazine I recently argued that, by several measures, the “Great Awokening” seems to be winding down. Starting in late 2021, and continuing throughout 2022, there appeared to be a moderation trend across many social indicators. I was curious whether this pattern could be observed in academic research as well. I was also eager to replicate Rozado’s general findings in alternative data sets.Analyzing trends in different academic databases (described below) over the last 23 years, I found roughly the same patterns of behavior that Rozado observed. There was a significant uptick in research focused on various forms of bias and discrimination starting in 2011 and persisting through 2020. Rozado’s findings were therefore not an artifact of the specific data set he used but replicated across a range of scholarly databases.However, the additional two years of data I was able to analyze were also quite revelatory. After 2020, there were declines across the board in published research focused on identity-based bias and discrimination. Academic scholarship seems to have passed peak “woke.”
It would not be difficult to guess why 2020 would have been the point at which people began to rethink their commitment to this course of inquiry, and its wisdom. That was the year that riots on these issues erupted around the country, the police went into hiding in large parts of the nation, and crime began to surge -- as it continues to do. Over almost the same period, rape is up 38%(!!); aggravated assault, 29%(!) murder, 26%(!); violent crime overall, 12%.
This coincides, by the way, with a marked decline in property crime. People aren't stealing more; they're stealing less. They are raping, assaulting, and killing more.
It may seem ironic that this correlates with an intense period of interest in justice, and opposing traditional prejudices. The correlation would not surprise a Traditional Conservative of the 19th Century, of course; he might have pointed out that the whole point of social controls, which are often found oppressive, is to corral and shape the parts of society that are otherwise inclined to violence.
I think it offends contemporary conservatives to suggest that policing is or ought to be oppressive, let alone that its function is to oppress rather than to gently guide, serve, protect. Yet I observe that it does so: if the police bother to show up at all, the best you can hope for is that they will leave again without taking any actions that are harmful to people on the scene. They may arrest, taser, shoot, beat; they may initiate a process that leads to chains, fines, or imprisonment. Your life is never going to improve by meeting a police officer, not as such things are done these days; if you're as lucky as possible, they'll just go away again and leave you alone.
[Contrast with the Fire and Medical services, which often help people they encounter. I have met many people who were heartily grateful to see rescue or paramedic personnel.]
One can guess how academics, inclined to thought and -- increasingly -- trained by their education towards sensitivity of feelings, would be deeply moved by a sober assessment of how awful policing is. Even more so, our prison system, which is massive and undisciplined, full of sexual assault and rape that it barely addresses which much of society seems to regard as an additional part of the intended punishment. Full, too, of racist gangs that further the worst sort of the very impulse that 'social justice' thinks it intends to counter, not always noticing that they usually end up feeding the ideas of racial solidarity and resentment rather than cooling those things.
No, it's the Gods of the Copybook Headings again, which a famous 19th century Traditional Conservative warned of in his poem. It may not seem right; it may not seem kind. It may in fact not be in any sense kind or merciful. Societies do it anyway because, well, the alternative is that 'the Gods of the Copybook Headings/ with terror and slaughter return!'
Perhaps some day we might find a better way; but this was not the one. Yet as the article notes in closing, the end of the fire only means living among its ruins; it won't put anything back the way it was, if indeed it were right to do so.
We need to completely rethink the way Policing is conducted in this country. The rise of the "warrior cop" and a warrior ethos in police departments across the country has done nothing but create an us vs them mentality that has destroyed community policing. It doesn't matter what neighborhood you come from, one must always be cautious when encountering the police now because what once may have been a short encounter over a minor infraction, a parking or speeding ticket, can become unexpectedly confrontational if your officer turns out be one of the many operator wannabes with a chip on his shoulder. Combine that with a lowering of standards to fill out the thinning ranks in many departments and you get what we saw in Nashville, TN with Tyre Nichols.
ReplyDeleteYes, you're right. Did you see this story out of Alabama?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.cbs42.com/regional/after-release-of-video-lawsuit-claims-alabama-man-froze-to-death-in-police-custody-was-likely-placed-in-jail-freezer/
The state of law enforcement in this country is appalling. That part is reasonable and correct. I don't get mad at anyone for recognizing that.
Yet, at the same time, what to do about all these rapes and murders? That's a problem too.
It may be that we can address both concerns better; but it may be that we can't, and to some degree we have to pick.
The problem with policing and the Great Awokening are related. Police officers in cities (I don't know much about small town / rural officers), after all, are expected to get at least an associate's degree, typically in criminal justice, which is a branch of sociology, which has been a far left discipline for decades now.
ReplyDeleteThe university is at the heart of a lot of our problems.
I doubt the stats on property crimes. Decrease in prosecutions, due to both re-definitions of "felony" and due to prosecutorial discretion, lead to decreases in reporting. Why bother calling the cops and filling out paperwork when nobody is ever arrested, or IF arrested, released without conviction? The loss of time on top of the loss of property is just that: loss. Fewer incur it.
ReplyDelete"Fire and Medical services, which often help people they encounter"
ReplyDeleteI call BS on this.....
The Local Fire department went people giving local folks a Death Jabb where we live
My multiple boosted handicapped sister was one of them and months later she is dead.
This was not "help" by any definition of the word..... It was WAR.
Greg
I don't know where you live, Greg, but firefighters aren't licensed to give injections.
ReplyDeleteJ. Melcher,
ReplyDeleteAs I was just saying at James' place, crime clearance rates are terrible for property crime anyway. (14.6%, according to this: https://www.statista.com/statistics/194213/crime-clearance-rate-by-type-in-the-us/).
You still call the police in many cases, not because you expect an arrest, let alone a prosecution or a conviction. You do it because you need the police report for your insurance company. (And producing such reports is one of the few genuinely helpful things that the police often do; it'll be a lot easier to get your insurance to pony up if you have one.)
Each year I see the animals, freaks, perverts, and criminally insane foisting their beliefs on norms. People no longer protest, They accept stolen elections, corruption, lawlessness, rciam, NS THE LAW OD THE JUNGLE. OUR CITIES DEMONSTRATE THAT CIVILIZATION IS COLLAPSING WHILE OUR FILMS, MUSIC, AND AIRWAYS SERVE UP FILTH AND UTTER TRASH.
ReplyDeleteTell me Gin things are changing for the better.