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<text id=93HT0802>
<link 93XP0457>
<title>
1987: The Ghetto:From Bad To Worse
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1987 Highlights
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
August 24, 1987
NATION
The Ghetto: From Bad to Worse
</hdr>
<body>
<p>The wounds of the 1967 riots still fester
</p>
<p> A raid on an after-hours "blind pig" bar in Detroit, a scuffle
between a Newark cab-driver and the police--these were the
flash points 20 years ago as the summer of 1967 erupted into the
Fire This Time. Ghetto despair gave way to grotesque
destruction: 43 dead in Detroit, 26 killed in Newark, injuries
and arrests in the thousands. By September more than 100 cities
had been scarred by rioting, an alphabetical roster of shame
that stretched from Atlanta, Boston and Cincinnati to Tampa and
Toledo. National Guardsmen patrolled the streets, and a federal
commission probed the causes.
</p>
<p> Out of the ashes came pious promises from politicians and the
rhetoric of renewed resolve. "The only genuine long-range
solution for what has happened lies in an attack--mounted at
every level--upon the conditions that breed despair and
violence," proclaimed President Lyndon Johnson. No one
seriously thought the inner city could be transformed overnight.
But few were cynical enough to envision what actually happened:
an entire generation would pass as life in the black ghettos
of a rich nation went from bad to almost unimaginably worse.
</p>
<p> "You tell me what went wrong," asks Jonas Walker, 33, at the end
of another long summer's day of hanging out on a street corner
in Liberty City, a ghetto north of downtown Miami. "We got
civil rights, we got welfare," he says. "But look around here."
For emphasis, he kicks at a pile of empty beer cans littering
the sidewalk. A high school dropout, Walker gave up his last
job, bagging groceries, two years ago. "When I was growing up
in Mississippi, we were poor all right, but we didn't have the
madness," Walker recalls. "Now we're just stuck here in this
poor-ass ghetto, watching Oprah Winfrey on TV and listening to
the damn gunshots at night."
</p>
<p> What went wrong for the 4 million black Americans still trapped
in festering inner-city ghettos? Why do one-third of all black
families remain mired in poverty? Why is the jobless rate for
black teenagers 40%? Why are 60% of all black children born out
of wedlock? And why has the American ghetto become a
self-perpetuating nightmare of fatherless children, welfare
dependency, crime, gangs, drugs and despair?
</p>
<p> Theories abound, but answers remain elusive. Perhaps the most
promising approach grows out of the work of Black Sociologist
William Julius Wilson of the University of Chicago, who
popularized the concept of the underclass in his 1978 book The
Declining Significance of Race. Wilson and his philosophical
allies reject the simplistic single-factor theories of cause and
effect, which range from the permissiveness of welfare to the
pervasiveness of racism. Instead, they stress the ever widening
social and economic gap between ghetto residents and the rest
of American society, both white and black.
</p>
<p> It is hard to remember that until the 1960s ghettos from Harlem
to the South Side of Chicago were beacons of hope for blacks
fleeing from the rigid segregation of the Jim Crow South.
Jobs--dirty, low-paying, but regular--were available in
thriving urban industries to anyone with a mind to work and a
back strong enough for heavy lifting. Although pernicious,
segregation at least compelled a sense of community, with black
professionals and businessmen living among those who were far
less successful. "These figures served the black community well
as visible, concrete symbols of success and moral value, as
living examples of the result of hard work, perseverance,
decency and propriety," writes Elijah Anderson, a black
professor of sociology at the University of Pennsylvania.
</p>
<p> All that changed with the successes of the civil rights
movement. The breakdown of rigid patterns of segregated housing
offered middle-class blacks the opportunity to move beyond the
ghetto walls. "The most upwardly mobile are the first to
leave," explains Walter Williams, professor economics at George
Mason University. "Then the next best, the church members and
civic leaders, leave. They are replaced by those who care less.
There is cumulative decay."
</p>
<p> Where once the ghetto provided a mix of black social classes,
now residents are bound together under the yoke of poverty and
impoverished aspirations. In a forth-coming book, The Truly
Disadvantaged, Wilson argues that those who have been left
behind in the ghetto have inherited not "a culture of poverty
but social isolation." Inner-city residents can go weeks
without encountering anyone, black or white, who is a
middle-class achiever.
</p>
<p> Take Carla Smith, 25, a welfare mother who lives with three of
her four children in Passyunk Homes, a public housing project
in South Philadelphia. She and her children rarely leave the
four-block project except to walk to the nearby grocery and
discount-clothing stores. "I'm young, but I might as well not
be," says Smith. "I don't do nothing. I don't go nowhere. My
partying days are over. I just stay here with my kids all day
long."
</p>
<p> Much of the recent debate over poverty has stressed the need to
provide jobs and training for welfare recipients like Carla
Smith. But by making welfare the crux of the problem, both
liberals and conservatives have ignored the single most serious
cause of the misery of the ghetto: the shockingly high jobless
rate among young black men. Unskilled and ill-educated, these
young men are the true victims of America's dramatic transition
away from a manufacturing base. Even when there is
decent-paying work available, Wilson contends that social
isolation excludes the black underclass from the "job-network
system" that permeates other neighborhoods. One statistic tells
it all: in 1985, 43% of all black male high school dropouts in
their early 20s reported earning no money whatsoever. As
recently as 1973, that figure was just 12%.
</p>
<p> Of course, some of these ostensibly unemployed young black men
do earn money illegally, often from selling drugs. But the
explosive growth of the ghetto drug culture further erodes the
work ethic. In a recent paper, Anderson laments the growing
cleavage between what he calls "old heads and young boys." Old
heads were the traditional neighborhood mentors of ghetto youth.
Their message, Anderson writes, "was about manners and the
value of hard work, involving how to get a job, how to keep a
job, how to dress for a job interview, how to deal with a
prospective employer." But with work scarce and cocaine
permeating the ghetto, young blacks now tend to dismiss old
heads as old fogies preaching a message as irrelevant as
antidrug lectures.
</p>
<p> A lack of jobs for young black men translates into a lack of
ability for them to take responsibility for the children they
father. This, Wilson argues, helps explain the staggering
growth of inner-city illegitimacy. A recent study by the
Children's Defense Fund found that 90% of all babies of black
teenage mothers are born out of wedlock. As Harriette McAdoo,
professor of social work at Howard University, puts it, "Men are
unable to maintain themselves in the labor market, and they are
unable to maintain their families."
</p>
<p> What can be done to break this iron triangle of social
isolation, black joblessness and single-parent families? Even
20 years after the ghettos of Detroit and Newark erupted into
the fires of long-suppressed rage, Americans cling to the
sanguine faith that some magic formula can end this cycle of
poverty and social pathology. More money for social programs,
a welfare system with stronger incentives to succeed, the
teaching of values in the schools: these are the familiar
answers of policymakers. But compared with the gravity of the
problems of the black underclass, almost all the standard
remedies amount to little more than changing the bandages on a
festering wound.
</p>
<p> Twenty years of failed programs, from community development to
public housing, point to a depressing conclusion: little will
be done to make the ghetto an acceptable place to live and raise
children. This by no means suggests abandoning those trapped
in the inner city. Rather, the emphasis of both government and
private philanthropy must be on helping the black underclass
escape the social isolation of these inner-city wastelands.
What successes there have been come not through cosmetically
improving the ghettos but by providing residents with
opportunities through jobs and education to rise out of them.
Saving people, not inner-city neighborhoods, may be the only
way America can redeem the promises that were made against the
charred urban landscape of that terrible summer of 1967.
</p>
<p>-- By Walter Shapiro. Reported by Jack E. White/Chicago, with
other bureaus</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>