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Gregory Kane: Don't ignore hate crimes against whites

By: Gregory Kane
Examiner Staff Writer
July 17, 2009

Marty Marshall must be wondering what he's got to do to get a little love from a U.S. senator.

This is a tale of two stories. Both are about race. It's a tale of how we perceive and define hate crimes, and of how the media cover matters of race.

On June 27, only two days after U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder told members of Congress how hate crimes "victimize entire communities," Marshall and his family were victimized in a hate crime themselves. It might be at this point that you're wondering why you've never heard of this story.

It's because Marshall and his family are white, of course, and their victimizers are black. Marshall and his family live in Akron, Ohio. They were walking home from a fireworks display with a friend when they were attacked by a group of black teens. Marshall spent five days in the hospital recovering from his injuries - a concussion and bruises to his head and eye, according to news reports - and his daughter suffered a cut on her lip.

Marshall, his wife, daughter and other victims told police that the attackers shouted things like "This is a black world" and "This is our world" during the attack. Akron police have not called the attack a hate crime, but Akron Mayor Don Plusquellic sent a letter to the FBI asking the agency to determine if any civil-rights violations or hate crimes were committed.

A few hundred miles to the east, in the Philadelphia suburb of Huntington Valley, over 60 children - most of them black - were asked to leave the Valley Swim Club. According to news reports, some of the children say white club members made racist remarks about them.

The children attend the Creative Steps Day Camp in Philadelphia. According to Aletha Wright, the camp's director, testy white parents removed their children from the pool after the campers arrived. Wright said in news report that she heard one woman say she would see to it that the campers didn't return.

Wright said Creative Steps paid over $1900 to the club for the campers to swim on Mondays. But all were asked to leave the pool and the money refunded.

Club representatives said there was more misunderstanding than racism going on. They said they had no idea the number of campers would be as high as 65 and that the children were asked to leave the pool for safety reasons, not racism. Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen "Turncoat" Specter felt the incident was serious enough to claim that the day camp's accusations were "extremely disturbing," according to news reports. He promised to "look into" the matter.

There is no word, as of yet, about whether any U.S. senator has weighed in on the plight of Marshall and his family.

A quick quiz, one you will easily pass: which of these two stories has been repeated all this week on one Baltimore television station? Yes, the day camp story has been covered multiple times, even with clips of pitiful, victimized black children bemoaning their racist treatment repeated several times.

No, I'm not trying to minimize the impact a racist act might have on a child. I'm not even sure I buy the defense that Valley Swim Club reps are presenting. Philadelphia and its surrounding suburbs have never impressed me as oases of racial tolerance.

It was in a Philadelphia suburb that, several years ago, one white hospital patient demanded that no black nurse attend her, and hospital administrators were stupid enough to comply with the demand.

But let's have a little perspective here: the kids in the Creative Steps Day Camp may have been hurt emotionally, but Marshall and his family got BEAT DOWN. And it happened for no other reason than the color of their skin.

In the days before Americans let left-wing loonies hijacked the English language, that would have been called racism. But these days we have black leaders like the Rev. Jesse Jackson telling blacks that they can't be racist. With leaders spouting such nonsense, is it any wonder a group of black teens would attack whites and shout things like "This is our world" and "This is a black world"?

Here is a question for the Jesse Jacksons of America: If the attack on Marty Marshall and his family wasn't racism or a hate crime, then what, exactly, was it?

 

Examiner columnist Gregory Kane is a journalist who lives in Baltimore.




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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

TPatt

Jul 17, 2009

Excellent arricle, Mr. Kane. Double standards should NEVEr exist, for ANY reason. Not in hate-crime laws, and certainly not in reporting (on) them. FWIW, I admit to only agreeing with about 50% of Mr. Kane's daily op pieces. In the off chance Mr. Kane actually reads these comments, I challenge you to display similiar ire when your own industry chooses its' normal practice of raisiing a hue & cry across the nation seemingly only when an "Amber" alert is issued for an apparently caucasian child. And yet, remains suspiciously silent about "Amber" alerts for non-caucasians (of ANY color). Surely your righteous indignation is able to recognize hypocracy of any stripe or color (or, lack thereof).

I look forward to agreeing or disagreeing with many more of Mr. Kane's opinion articles for many, many years to come. Keep up the good work.

 

Greg

Jul 17, 2009

Oh please. This is white on black and black on white crime all the time. committed.

I think 60 children - most of them black - being asked to leave the Valley Swim Club is a little more newsworthy. But thanks for defending your massa, boy.

 

FireInsideTheMan

Jul 17, 2009

I agree with you. The media bias and double-standard with news reporting is troubling to say the least. The same argument could be used as a backdrop for Obama and his racist preacher, Reverend Jeremiah Wright, Farrakhan, Sharpton, etc.

A few weeks ago, there was a story about a black Muslim man who murdered an Army recruiter, which was told and quickly died in the news, but Dr. Tiller, the abortion doctor, was worthy enough for President Obama to make a statment about his death. Why was one more important than the other?

The ongoing drama about the black kids who were turned away from the pool is NOT newsworthy in my opinion. Thanks for shedding some light on REAL newsworthy items Mr. Kane.

 

Greg

Jul 17, 2009

What's all this talk about double standards and reverse racism coming from all of a sudden? Oh, a black president and a latino supreme court nominee. Just think, if not for racism there while driving you don't get a DWB.

Driving while Black.

 

Jul 17, 2009

What's all this talk about double standards and reverse racism coming from all of a sudden? Oh, a black president and a latino supreme court nominee. Just think, if not for racism there would be not reverse racism. Mr Kane, I hope while driving you don't get a DWB.

Driving while Black

 

Grace O'Malley

Jul 17, 2009

It's not racism when white people are attacked, it's payback, isn't that right Greg? After all as the narrative runs, white people have been racist monsters towards all people of color so whatever any person does that is not white is excused. If you are white and dispute this than you are clearly a racist, and if you object to that it makes you even more of a racist. And for people like Greg any objection to what is clearly racist actions is only being brought up because we now have a black president, obviously the person objecting is a racist. No matter what, white people are racists and those who are not white may not be labeled the same. Despite the evidence in front of your nose.

 

Jul 17, 2009

I am review his other articles all about race. What's with this guy?

 

D R

Jul 17, 2009

What a ridiculous comparison.

How about yet another case in Pennsylvania, where two white teens are getting less than two years in jail for "misdemeanor simple assault" after (literally) beating a Latino man's brains out?

That would have been a more appropriate comparison.

 

Hardly About Holder

Jul 18, 2009

I made this observation in Kane's column last week. I know that he's too busy "pushing back" to engage the larger issue, but here we go again... Bill O'Reilly, in a C-Span Morning Journal interview (2000 or 2001?) stated that he supported hate crimes legislation. He cited the film "Mississippi Burning" as an example of the need for such laws. In short, it is SUPPOSED to punish offenses with a socially oppressive context (crimes designed to "keep a group in its place"). In practice, it may become a club against crimes where one of the victim's social identities is perceived to be a factor. It doesn't always work: Nightline's Ted Koppel did a story about a black, gay man who was killed in West Virginia(?). It COULD have been a hate crime, but it may simply have been 2nd-degree murder. It's not always easy to judge.

 

R.C.G.

Jul 18, 2009

As long as white people continue to be intimidated and continue to harbor guilt for something they are not guilty of, as long politicans don't fear losing the "white vote" the double standard will conintue.

 

Nquest

Jul 18, 2009

I got a title for a counter piece to Kane's:

"Don't Ignore How The FBI Stats Show Hate Crimes Against Whites" -- i.e. quit acting like hate crimes against Whites are non-existent and haven't been prosecuted as such. The facts don't match the common (mis)perception.

 

Nquest

Jul 18, 2009

Also, Kane needs to pay attention. He does this bs call-out trying to ask the ever-ignorant question "where is Jesse?" when Akron papers have published how Rev. Al Sharpton has condemn the attack and insisted on those responsible being prosecuted. There is no excuse for Kane's lack of honest journalism.

Neither Jesse Jackson or Al Sharpton showed up in Philadelphia. So what's the other than hoping people's misinformed negative perceptions on the hate crimes law and views on Jackson would be a good thing in terms of receiving favorable reviews from an ignorant public?

 

Greg

Jul 20, 2009

After reading all Mr. Kane's articles, I am convinced you are the champion of reverse discrimination but never the champion of discrimination.

 

Greg

Jul 20, 2009

Bad news.

For the first time since crack cocaine sparked a war on drugs 20 years ago, the number of black Americans in state prisons for drug offenses has fallen sharply, while the number of white prisoners convicted for drug crimes has increased, according to a report released today.

You better get busy fighting for white rights Mr. Kane.

 

its me whity

Oct 1, 2009

this is all rediculous everyone is racist only it has been ok for n*g*ers to be but not white people . they should have no rights here only in africa

 


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