When the price of fear is death
A teenage boy rings the wrong doorbell and is shot in the face. A 20-year-old woman is fatally shot when she and her friends pull into the wrong driveway. Two cheerleaders are shot when one accidentally gets into the wrong car. And a 6-year-old is shot when kids chase a basketball into a neighbor’s yard.
These tragic events seem incomprehensible. But we got a
glimpse of an underlying reason for at least one of them, the wrong-doorbell
shooting of 16-year-old Ralph Yarl. According to his grandson, the 84-year-old
shooter watched a steady diet of Fox News and OAN. He was immersed in a “24-hour news cycle of fear and paranoia.”
Sadly, far-right politicians and media figures have
habitually stoked fear and manufactured moral panics as a political strategy to
amp up their base. And it’s having an effect: For decades, Gallup polls
have consistently found that Americans believe crime is going up,
whether it is or not.
The cost of this paranoia-propaganda machine? Real human
lives — and poor policy choices that continue to make America an unnecessarily
dangerous place to live.
Fear boosts TV ratings for Fox News and clicks for
right-wing websites. It elects “tough on crime” politicians, sells guns, and
contributes to the proliferation of “stand your ground” and permissive
concealed-carry laws. Violent media scares people into answering their
doorbells with guns drawn.
None of these things enhances safety.
Contrary to what the gun lobby says, more guns do not keep people and communities safer. Nearly 30 studies rounded up by Scientific American have linked more guns to more crime — not less. Another recent study shows murder rates are much higher in “tough on crime” red states than “soft on crime” blue states. That’s been true every year since 2000.
Evidence keeps piling up that dire warnings and more guns
don’t make Americans safer. What compounds the disaster is that this rhetoric
continues to be weaponized against reforms that actually could save lives.
That’s one reason we’ve been unable to move quickly on
police and criminal justice reform — even as civil rights advocates call for changes like
deploying alternative first responders to reduce the risk of nonviolent 911
calls, like welfare checks or mental health crises, from turning deadly.
The same fear that makes people believe they need to arm
themselves also makes them believe that cities need hugely inflated police
budgets. There’s scaremongering aimed at reform-minded district attorneys,
despite evidence that progressive reforms don’t increase crime in general or violent crime in particular. The same attacks are aimed
at mayors and legislators who want to make changes to policing.
I know — I experienced this first-hand.
When I was mayor of Ithaca, New York, we got much tougher
about screening police applicants. Our city council approved a complete
overhaul of our police department to prioritize unarmed responses. And the
city halted no-knock warrants for suspected drug crimes.
I was routinely called “anti-police” by the far-right
wing. But we forged ahead with our forward-thinking approach to public safety
and crime remained low — often dramatically lower than in other cities our
size.
The recent rash of shootings are horrific at an
individual level. At the social level, a critical lesson here is that a climate
of fear — and those who benefit politically or financially from it — gives us
bad laws, bad politics, and bad behavior that endanger us all.
It’s time for that to stop. It’s time to turn away from
the fearmongers and toward solutions that work.
Svante Myrick is the president of People for the
American Way and a former mayor of
Ithaca, New York. This op-ed was distributed by OtherWords.org.