The Inverted World

The Truth about Race and Crime

By Ian Jobling • 5/5/08

Heather Mac Donald has just published a wonderful piece debunking liberal myths about race and crime in City Journal. Her article serves as a good compliment to The Color of Crime, which I wrote while I was working for New Century Foundation and which covers much of the same ground. The gist of Mac Donald’s article is that blacks experience higher rates of incarceration not because of police or judicial bias, but because they commit crimes at far higher rates than non-blacks do. The most powerful evidence comes from surveys in which crime victims are asked about the race of those who robbed or assaulted them. These surveys allow one to measure the percentage of criminals who are black. Generally speaking, the percentage of those arrested for a crime who are black is about the same as the percentage of criminals who are black, indicating that police are not racially biased in arrests.

Mac Donald also takes aim at the myth that harsh sentencing for crack offenders, who are almost all black, is responsible for racial disparities in incarceration rates. In fact, crack offenders make up less than one percent of prison populations, and blacks are almost as likely to be incarcerated for other crimes as they are for drug offenses.

Liberals would have you believe that American law enforcement is draconian, but as Mac Donald says, “Absent recidivism or a violent crime, the criminal-justice system will do everything it can to keep you out of the state or federal slammer.” In fact, very few first time property crime offenders go to prison, even if they steal a car.

Below I’ve copied a few highlights from the article, but the whole thing is well worth a read. For more on race and crime, see The Improvident Races and The Reality of Racial Differences.