Public safety
The Social Order
Most Americans agree that racism in any form is abhorrent. But in recent weeks, far too many who call themselves “antiracists” have inflamed racial tensions with antiwhite bigotry that’s every bit as disgusting as what they claim to oppose. When will the antiracists start rooting out the bigots in their own ranks?
When Robert Long, a 21-year-old Georgia man, killed eight people, six of them Asian, at three spas on March 16, prominent figures on the left reflexively branded it an anti-Asian hate crime. In a piece for The Root titled, “Whiteness is a Pandemic,” Damon Young wrote after the Georgia killings, “Whiteness is a public health crisis. . . . It shortens life expectancies, it pollutes air . . . it devastates forests, it melts ice caps, it sparks (and funds) wars . . . and it kills people.”
ESR | April 26, 2021 | Floyd verdict: Systemic racism not guilty
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Sheriff Conway refuses body cameras while more U.S. police forces embrace them
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A Newark, N.J. police officer displays how a body cam is worn during a news conference unveiling the department s new cameras in 2017. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)AP
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Syracuse, N.Y. The New York State Police this month started to equip troopers with body cameras.
Sheriff’s deputies in Erie, Monroe and Albany counties three of the biggest Upstate counties wear body cameras. One department has had them for six years.
In Onondaga County, at least 10 of the county’s 15 police departments including the Syracuse Police Department use the cameras.