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<text id=93HT1087>
<title>
68 Election: The Fear Campaign
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1968 Election
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
October 4, 1968
COVER STORY
The Fear Campaign
</hdr>
<body>
<p> The presidential campaign of 1968 is dominated by a
pervasive and obsessive issue. Its label is law and order. Its
symptoms are fear and frustration and anger.
</p>
<p> Everyone is for law and order, or at least for his own
version of it. Few Americans can define precisely what they
mean by the term, but the belief that law and order is being
destroyed represents a trauma unmatched in intensity since the
alarums generated by Joe McCarthy in the Korean era. The issue
has virtually anesthetized the controversy over Vietnam. It has
distorted debate over pressing urban problems. It has perverted
the presidential election, the closest thing in this secular
republic to a sacred collective act.
</p>
<p> For millions of voters who are understandably and
legitimately dismayed by random crime, burning ghettoes,
disrupted universities and violent demonstrations in downtown
streets, law and order is a rallying cry that evokes quieter
days. To some, it is also a short-hand message promising
repression of the black community. To the Negro, already the
most frequent victim of violence, it is a bleak warning that
worse times may be coming.
</p>
<p> The law-and-order issue has elevated George Wallace from
a sectional maverick to a national force, making the two-party
system seem suddenly vulnerable. It has lured Richard Nixon and
Spiro Agnew to the edge of demagogy, as they watch the national
atmosphere darken and Wallace's popularity grow. For reasons of
his own, Hubert Humphrey has played less heavily on the fear of
lawlessness, and he finds himself losing ground as a result.
</p>
<p>The Mood of Crisis
</p>
<p> So roiled is the country's mood that Wallace describes his
election as necessary not merely to contain dissent and
disturbance but also to protect dissenters and disturbers from
repressions worse than any that he would impose on them. His
implication is clear: only his victory can placate the New
Right sufficiently to prevent vigilante action. This artful
threat of ever more taut confrontation carries with it the
prospect of still more violence, which in turn could lead to
curtailment of traditional civil liberties. Some hard-core
rebels of the farthest left would welcome exactly that. They
reason that the resulting disorder could only weaken the system
that they seek to overturn.
</p>
<p> In this, they face the united opposition of the great mass
between the extremes. Every citizen has a valid right to demand
that his government provide security for his person and his
property. This is perhaps the public's first civil right. No
responsible element quarrels with it. It is ironic that law and
order, at best the glory of any society and at least an
unobjectionable cliche, should have turned into a controversy.
Partly it has happened because many vocal protesters put forth
the old but troubling idea that, in certain circumstances, law
and order must be defied for the sake of a higher justice.
</p>
<p> Every pollster's report, every sounding by reporters,
attests to the momentum of the law-and-order issue. The surveys
fuel the rhetoric from the right. Eighty-one percent of the
public believe that law enforcement has broken down. Even more
believe that a "strong" President can do something about it. By
large margins, the public wants looters gunned down on the
streets. By varying majorities, people blame Negroes, the
Mafia, Communists, rebellious youth, the courts. Opinion Analyst
Samuel Lubell travels the country and concludes: "To most
voters, crime and lawlessness and the Negro are part of the same
issue. The vehemence and profanity with which white voters voice
their racial views have risen over the last two months." A New
York-based writer visits Baltimore and Washington, and finds
that "crime--Negro crime--is almost the only topic of
conversation." The Aldine Printing Co. in Los Angeles, the
world's largest manufacturer of bumper stickers, reports that
its bestseller is SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL POLICE, the old Birch
slogan.
</p>
<p> In communities that have experienced serious disorders and
high crime incidence and where racial tension is a constant
fact of life, there is a desperate urge to do something, almost
anything. Firearms sales are at an all-time high. In Newark, a
white organization, the North Ward Citizens Committee, has been
openly arming for "self-defense." Elsewhere, store owners are
organizing self-protection groups. In Kansas City, 25 merchants
in a racially mixed neighborhood are threatening to close their
shops en masse.
</p>
<p> "Block clubs" have been organized in some white areas
adjoining Chicago's South Side ghetto. Suspicious of
interlopers, the clubs keep track of autos passing through the
streets. They also follow up on arrests and prosecution of
offenders. Joe Lenoci, 35, a factory production controller who
heads one block club, says that he is not a racist or a fanatic.
He just wants "the law changed so that police are not so
handicapped." Lenoci is uncertain what new powers he would give
the police, and he cannot name the Supreme Court decisions he
objects to.
</p>
<p>Vicarious Troubles
</p>
<p> There is hardly a single big city in which the individual
feels completely safe on the streets at night. The fear of
violence permeates the entire nation, wafted by television and
newspaper headlines into areas that only vicariously experience
serious trouble. In western Nevada, Ormsby County Sheriff
Robert Humphrey warns: "What I'm afraid of is that the public
will demand that we take too much authority. That is the real
danger. But the alternative might be some kind of vigilantes."
</p>
<p> Utah is a peaceful state by any measure. Negroes make up
three-fifths of 1% of Utah's population. Yet a Bear Lake resort
owner declares that "the politicians ought to move the Negroes
back to the South, where they will be happy." A Salt Lake City
Mormon bishop says of youthful protesters: "They have been
infected by drugs, and the drugs were supplied by Mexicans,
Negroes or Chinese."
</p>
<p> State and local politics reflect the impact no less than
national politics. New Hampshire is tranquil, but talk about
law and order is rampant. Democratic Governor John King, now
running for the Senate, discerns a fine grey line between reason
and dissent: "We have reached the point where we had better draw
that line and say, `You shall not pass.'" John Sears,
Republican sheriff of Suffolk County (Boston) has been
appointing Negro deputies, attempting to work with ghetto
groups, and telling his men that they need not carry weapons at
all times. His innovations have loosed a cascade of criticism
from voters that, he admits "will probably cost me the
election."
</p>
<p> In Warren, Mich., a blue-collar town, Mayor Ted Bates has
been pleading with his constituents to "unload your guns"--literally.
Warren residents, predominantly of Eastern European
and Italian descent, have been apprehensive ever since last
year's uprising in Detroit. Yet Warren has had a decreasing
crime rate, and Bates observes: "We have no problems with
hippies, yippies or zippies." George Wallace draws strong
support in Warren. Among Negroes in the surrounding area, the
word is out that to get a flat tire or an empty fuel tank in
Warren or neighboring Dearborn is to run a serious risk of
physical assault. In upper-income Grosse Pointe, a matron
laments about the Detroit area: "This place is becoming a
jungle." She is considering moving to California. In suburban
Los Angeles, Morris Boswell, 52, a bulldozer operator, says that
Wallace will be elected. Then, he says, "the punks, the queers,
the demonstrators and the hippies--we're going to put them on
a barge and ship 'em off to China. Or better yet, sink it."
</p>
<p> In Winnetka, a prosperous suburb of Chicago, Mrs. John A.
F. Wendt reads the Chicago Tribune, has a son working in Vietnam
for the State Department, and views the home front with horror:
"This great country, with the great people who are in it, to
have these things happen, you get the feeling it was all
planned, all stirred up. I definitely think this Negro rioting
is tied into this Communist thing."
</p>
<p> In cooler terms, Professor Philip Hauser of the University
of Chicago analyzes what he calls the "social-morphological
revolution," the changing forms within society. Its four
elements, according to Hauser: the population explosion, the
population implosion that has made for densely populated
central cities, the mixing of diverse population groups, and
the accelerated tempo of technological and social change.
</p>
<p> Few laymen can separate things so neatly in their own
minds. The elements of turmoil blend into an ill-defined whole.
But the three main tributaries that converge to make the
law-and-order issue so powerful are: 1) the revolt of youth,
whether against the war, the draft or the social system as a
whole; 2) Negro militance and ghetto rioting; and 3) the
individual's intense personal fear of criminal attack.
</p>
<p>The Young Radicals
</p>
<p> The disorders of recent years have deeply offended the
middle-class American's traditional values. Mrs. Wendt speaks
for many millions when she talks about "this great country." For
the majority, the U.S. has been and continues to be great in
its bounty of personal freedom and material goods. And for the
majority in recent years, there has been every reason to
believe that good times were here to stay. Thus there is genuine
outrage when protesters screaming "Liberty!" and "Justice!"
defile an American flag that for most Americans has always
symbolized liberty and justice. To most who have fought for that
standard, the spectacle of youngsters waving Viet Cong flags
comes as near-blasphemy.
</p>
<p> Nor are the most visible young dissenters the recognizable
types of 30 years ago--the trade unionists or the ideologues
who peddled assorted versions of Marxism. They had specific
programs and demands, many of which could be accommodated in
relatively rational terms, and eventually were. With today's
breed of kid revolutionaries, who would close a campus for
reasons incomprehensible to most older Americans, the
authorities cannot even find a bargaining table, let alone a
frame of reference in which to negotiate.
</p>
<p> A working-class father who may have sacrificed for years
in order to send his son to college cannot remotely comprehend
why middle-class youths cry that "the system" is rotten. To him,
they are all spoiled brats, profane, obnoxious, unwashed,
promiscuous, to whom everything has been offered and from whom
nothing has been demanded. To the more affluent, youthful
rebellion represents a rejection of principles that have stood
the test for generations. The fact that student discontent is
an international phenomenon and has been more violent elsewhere--Japan,
France and currently Mexico, for instance--is cold
comfort.
</p>
<p> The U.S. was born in revolution but it was a revolution of
Whigs against the Crown rather than one of Jacobin against the
establishment. Tom Paine did not remain a national hero in the
young Republic, and what is thought of as democracy today was
some time in coming after independence. The radical has always
offended most Americans, even if many of his ideas were
eventually accepted.
</p>
<p>The Black Militants
</p>
<p> Disconcerting though the hippies and yippies may be, their
contribution to the present malaise is minor compared with
Negro militance and ghetto riots. From the late 1940s to the
mid-1960s, most Americans believed that justice was being done
to the Negroes, that perhaps the American dilemma was soluble
after all. Through presidential orders, civil rights acts and
court decision, the Negro was being propelled upward in legal
status. Through generally rising prosperity and later the
antipoverty program, the Negro appeared to be making economic
progress as well. There were more black faces over white
collars, more Negroes going to college, more owning their homes,
more being admitted to clubs and fraternities and the ranks of
government.
</p>
<p> If to the blacks the more still seemed to be very few, it
was reasonable to assume that evolution would take care of
that. If the white man's income was still rising faster than
the black's, Negroes were counseled to have patience. (In 1947,
the gap between white and black median family income was $2,174;
19 years later, on the basis of constant dollars, the difference
had grown to $3,036.) When brutal opposition to Negro progress
persisted in the persons of the Bull Connors, and black
children were dynamited to death in church, most Americans were
shocked that such things could still happen. But they trusted
Martin Luther King to keep his folks nonviolent. When blacks
sang We Shall Overcome, the last word of the refrain was
"someday."
</p>
<p> Yet, for all the symbols of progress, the economic and
social pathology of urban ghettos worsened. "Some day" became
"Freedom Now." Malcolm X and Stokely Carmichael decided that
the Negro should no longer obey The Man's timetable or believe
in his good will. They echoed Isaiah: "What mean ye that ye beat
my people to pieces and grind the faces of the poor?"
</p>
<p> One by one, the ghettos exploded. These spasms of violence
were accompanied by ever more urgent demands upon the white
community from such moderate Negro leaders as King, Whitney
Young, Roy Wilkins and A. Philip Randolph, who needed concrete
accomplishments with which to counter the militants. All at
once, Northern liberals discovered that integration could mean
demonstrations in front of their school, protest marches on
their main streets. All at once, Negroes were not just a
faceless social cause, but a community of individuals, some of
whom could be as intractable, nasty, destructive--and racist--as
some whites had been all along. And through these
discoveries ran the nagging realization that the more the
Negroes got the more they demanded. That this is a universal
trait was beside the point.
</p>
<p> Violence, Rap Brown observed, "is as American as cherry
pie." History that most whites would rather forget supports
him. Quite aside from the Ku Klux Klan's brand of oppression in
the South, Northern whites rampaged against Negroes in riots in
New York City; Springfield, Ohio; Greensburg, Ind.,
Springfield, Ill.; East St. Louis, Ill.; and Detroit long before
Negro upheavals came into vogue. The U.S. Civil Rights
Commission counted 2,595 lynchings of Negroes in Southern states
between 1882 and 1959. Not one resulted in a white man's
conviction. Dennis Clark, writing in the Jesuit magazine
America, makes the point that 100 years ago "the Irish were the
riot makers of America par excellence."
</p>
<p> But violence in those days was absorbed in the onward rush
of American life and the abiding faith in progress. Violence
today is different, compressed in vast, complex, overcrowded
cities; and blacks are not immigrants nor do they share the
immigrants' optimism. Actually there are signs at present that
black riots are abating. Despite the chain reaction of violence
in April, after Martin Luther King's assassination, the Justice
Department counted 25 "serious to major" disturbances from June
through August, compared with 46 during the same three-month
period last year. The number of deaths went down from 87 to 19.
The figures are hardly cause for rejoicing or complacency, but
at least the trend is hopeful.
</p>
<p> Still, TV has shown some of America's greatest cities
under siege. It has shown Negroes carrying out loot from
burned-out stores, sometimes while policemen and troops looked
the other way. This sight, perhaps more than any other,
contributes to the belief that Negroes are basically indolent
and immoral, that law enforcement in the U.S. has broken down,
that the black man is getting preferential treatment. That
conclusion is directly contrary to the hallowed Anglo-Saxon
tradition of property rights. The fact that mass arrests are not
always feasible in chaotic conditions is ignored. The fact that
indiscriminate shooting in a few of the riots, particularly
Newark and Detroit, killed innocent citizens is forgotten, and
the fact that police gunfire can prolong and worsen the initial
disturbance is often overlooked.
</p>
<p>Personal Crime
</p>
<p> What concerns most people even more directly than student
rebels and black riots is the fear of crime against the
individual, of "the prowlers and muggers and marauders," in
Nixon's words. No one questions that crime is growing. The
issue is just how much, and whether the election-year emphasis
on it is exaggerated. The primary fever gauge is the FBI's
Uniform Crime Reports. The last full-year figures, for 1967,
show an absolute 16.5% increase over the previous year in the
offenses covered. The crime rate, taking increasing population
into account, was up 15.3%. For murder, the increase has been
8.9%; for burglary, 14.6%. But one symptom of how haphazardly
the U.S. has dealt with lawlessness is that, despite these
seemingly precise figures, there is no certain knowledge of just
how badly off the country is. Statistics have been kept only
since 1930, and their basis--reports of known offenses
submitted to the FBI by local authorities--is seriously
flawed. In some categories, accurate comparisons between eras
and areas are impossible because methods of collecting data have
changed and local police departments vary in efficiency and
candor.
</p>
<p> There are other quirks as well. For decades, the FBI has
used a $50 minimum in defining larcenies that make up an
important part of its crime index. Obviously, the shrinking
value of the dollar changes the meaning of those figures; partly
as a result, larceny has been the fastest-growing category on
the crime index recently. Another example: for as long as anyone
has kept track, youths form the mid-teens to early 20s have
committed the largest number of offenses in all categories.
During the '60s, the post-World War II baby crop came of
criminal age. The fact that there are proportionately more
Negroes than whites in the age group 15 to 24 explains at least
in small part the higher arrest rate among Negroes.
</p>
<p> Negroes do, in fact, account for more violent crimes in
the cities than do whites: the poor usually do. Although Negroes
make up 11% of the U.S. population, black arrests for murder
last year numbered 4,883, compared with 3,200 for whites. The
overwhelming majority of victims of violent crime are set upon
by members of their own race. That is why Negroes suffer far
more from lawlessness of almost every sort than do whites. It
explains why 2,000 residents of Watts recently petitioned their
council representatives for better police protection. James
Jones, Negro owner of a Washington steak house, is not alone in
lamenting: "There are a lot of black fools in this world. If
they are the chief violators of the law, then they are the ones
who ought to be punished."
</p>
<p> The Negro's exposure to black criminals makes him all the
more indignant over the racial connotations of law-and-order
rhetoric. William V. Patrick, head of New Detroit, a peace-
keeping committee formed after the riot, protests: "It's a
horrible phrase, a euphemism for racial repression. First you
had slavery. Then you had Jim Crow laws. Then it was called
`separate but equal.' Now it is called `law and order.'"
</p>
<p> Even on the basis of the FBI figures, the notion that a
virus of violence has suddenly infected a peaceful society is
simply not true. During the 1950s, when reporting of offenses
was less comprehensive than in the computerized '60s, the FBI
reported a 66% increase in crime, taking population growth into
consideration. The comparable figure for the '60s so far is
71%. While Nixon and Wallace charge that Supreme Court
decisions bearing on eliciting confessions and the suspect's
right to counsel have hindered law enforcement, studies
conducted by the Los Angeles district attorney's office, the
Yale Law Review and the Georgetown University Law Center show
that this is not so.
</p>
<p>What the Candidates Say
</p>
<p> For the moment, much of the campaign talk is only adding
to public confusion. Nixon reiterates that there can be no
order without justice, that progress and peace go hand in hand.
He goes on from there to attack the Democratic Administration
for "grossly exaggerating" the relationship between poverty and
crime. Nixon insists that doubling the conviction rate would
accomplish more than quadrupling the antipoverty effort.
Despite pressure from Republican liberals like Senator Edward
Brooke, he is far less specific about social justice than he is
about law and order.
</p>
<p> Essentially, Nixon is trying to steer between the crass
appeals to animosity of Wallace and the orthodox liberal
approach of Humphrey. Eschewing concrete proposals, Wallace aims
at his listeners' gut feeling that crime must be quashed by any
means available. Nixon attempts to sound both alarmed and
controlled at the same time, but the element of alarm seems to
be winning out. He cites the FBI figures without qualification:
"If the present rate of new crime continues, the number of rapes
and robberies and assaults and thefts in the U.S. today will
double by the end of 1972." He talks of the U.S. as the country
with the "strongest tradition of law and order, now racked by
unprecedented lawlessness."
</p>
<p> Nixon belabors the Supreme Court for "hamstringing the
peace forces in our society and strengthening the criminal
forces." The court has borne the imprint of a Republican Chief
Justice appointed by Dwight Eisenhower. Nixon has nonetheless
succeeded in putting Humphrey on the defensive. Humphrey
supports the Supreme Court. He lauds the Kerner commission
report, which Nixon accuses of blaming everyone except the
rioters and which Wallace terms "asinine and ludicrous." To
underscore the truism that neither party has a monopoly on
crime, Humphrey points out that Wallace's Alabama leads the
nation in the number of murders, and that states with Republican
Governors also have high crime rates ("if that means anything").
Humphrey likes to point out that he is running for President,
not sheriff.
</p>
<p> In the position papers issued so far, both Humphrey and
Nixon propose large-scale federal assistance to local law-
enforcement, judicial and correction agencies. Both emphasize
the need for a major attack on organized crime and an enlarged
role for the Justice Department. However, Humphrey's proposals
are considerably more detailed. He recommends, for instance,
the establishment of "regional crime institutes" to do research
and provide training and technical services for local
law-enforcement agencies. And it is Humphrey who envisions the
more prominent role for the Federal Government. To this, the
Vice President adds strong and constant stress on the need for
a wholehearted attack on the social and economic problems that
he insists are at the root of lawlessness.
</p>
<p> Humphrey is in trouble on the issue partly because his
stand is not responsive to many whites' fears of the Negro; but
more importantly because even well-meaning whites have become
deeply skeptical about the liberal proposition that social and
economic improvements necessarily diminish crime.
</p>
<p>What to Do
</p>
<p> When Wallace says that force is the only way to ensure law
and order he is far from alone. Last week the Democratic
National Committee received results of four regional polls on
the issue, each asking whether respondents believed that the
police should shoot to kill looters. The majorities answering
yes ranged from 63% to 71%--and included many Negroes.
</p>
<p> A legitimate concern for both white and black is the low
estate of the nation's crime-fighting apparatus. Only 22.4% of
all reported offenses even resulted in arrests last year, and
that percentage is falling. The nation's police are in dire
need of all manner of help, and perhaps require a total
redefinition of their role. A study by the President's crime
commission last year included a unique survey of 10,000 families
that indicated many serious crimes--in some categories as many
as 50%--are never reported at all.
</p>
<p> Law breakers who are caught get little benefit from the
experience in terms of rehabilitation. Accurate figures do
exist on recidivism, and they are appalling. Fully 60% of those
arrested have at least one prior offense on their record. For
those under 20, the figure is 70%. Generally speaking, the more
serious the offense, the greater the chance that the accused is
a repeater. It is no new theory that the entire criminal-law
and corrections apparatus is in need of major overhaul. The same
case was made more than 30 years ago by the Wickersham
Commission, and has periodically been reconfirmed by other
expert groups.
</p>
<p> Of jails there are plenty, yet their major function is to
provide custody and punishment, not rehabilitation. There are
roughly 1.3 million people in jail or on probation or parole.
There are only 25,000 social workers, teachers, psychiatrists
and psychologists, parole and probation officers employed to
attempt to salvage them. In one recent poll, the public
indicated full awareness that the nation's corrections system
is a failure--and came out 2 to 1 against paying higher taxes
to reform it.
</p>
<p> Poverty's precise role in the etiology of crime is not
easily assessed. Dr. Leon Radzinowicz, a leading British
criminologist, pointed out last week that England and Wales
have had a constantly increasing crime rate for the past 25
years, despite historic social reforms and improved economic
conditions. At the same time, it is an established fact that
most criminals come from slums and have limited education, and
that the incidence of crime in low-income, congested areas and
among broken families is severalfold that found elsewhere.
</p>
<p>The Kerner Recommendations
</p>
<p> At the tactical level, the Kerner commission report
recommended a number of obvious steps to curb riots, such as
developing greater rapport between police and the ghettos, and
avoiding overreaction to very minor incidents.
</p>
<p> The main thrust of the Kerner report, however, was aimed
at basic causes and cures. Its central thesis was that the
black's adversity is attributable to white racism. That
conception, while historically supportable, has only served to
exacerbate the law and order fever. Nicholas Katzenbach,
recalling his experiences in the Justice Department, puts it
this way: "In many places, we have had law and order without
justice, operating extraconstitutionally. Often it is really
nothing more than socially condoned violence." It is doubtful
that the majority of whites will agree with a point of view that
amounts to Walt Kelly's Pogoism: "We have met the enemy and he
is us."
</p>
<p> Nor is it likely, given the nation's mood, that the
commission's long-range proposals for social and economic
programs at the federal level will soon be enacted on anything
near the scale recommended. The report has provoked intense
interest and prompted reforms in some areas; in many, it has
been largely ignored. Mayor John Reading of Oakland, Calif.,
even accuses the Kerner commission of being partly responsible
for the militants' takeover of Oakland's black leadership.
"Permissiveness will do us in," says Reading, "and the Kerner
answer was permissiveness." To this, New York Mayor John
Lindsay, who was vice chairman of the Kerner commission, replies
that if repression becomes society's reaction to disorder, "we
might then have to choose between the random terror of the
criminal and the official terror of the state. We might have to
concede, openly and candidly, that The Great Experiment in
self-government died, the victim of violence, before its 200th
birthday."
</p>
<p> In the hope that the U.S. will hold a birthday party
instead of a wake in the '70s, the Kerner commission offers some
cogent proposals. The nation's welfare system must be reformed
and upgraded to provide basic sustenance where needed and to
discourage the breakup of families. The commission urges
creation of 2,000,000 jobs within three years, with remedial
training where necessary. That may be an impossible goal, but
it would get at the largest single source of criminal raw
material--the out-of-school, out-of-work kids.
Prekindergarten, primary and secondary education in the slums
is another vast target, but it is universally acknowledged that
public education does not do much for ghetto children. One
commission proposal that deserves serious consideration is a
twelve-month school year for the culturally undernourished.
</p>
<p>Challenge King George
</p>
<p> It is largely true, as politicians never tire of
remarking, that respect for law and authority--whether in the
form of the cop or the university or the President--has
diminished markedly in the last generation. However, a society
that expects to keep challenge within reasonable bounds must
retain a sense of perspective. Demands that the letter of every
law be enforced to the full are risible. Myriad statutes range
from Internal Revenue Service rulings to Coast Guard safety
regulations for pleasure boats, and hundreds of such laws are
widely flouted by the most respectable citizens. It is seldom
that a responsible businessman engages in fraud or embezzlement,
but when he does it is apparent to the poor that his
transgression, however grandiose, rarely draws a penalty
comparable in economic terms to that meted out to the petty
thief. To which the responsible businessman is apt to reply that
he spends a great deal of time and effort satisfying government
laws and regulations, while the common criminal goes lightly
punished--or so it sometimes seems to the embittered affluent
citizen.
</p>
<p> No one can argue that income tax evasion--or winking at
gambling, prostitution or even pot--is comparable to major,
violent crime. Yet such common transgressions symbolize an
important fact: some laws are simply petty, unrealistic,
unenforceable or unjust. The discrepancies affect the most
trivial as well as the most important matters. If no one had
had the courage to challenge state and local segregation
ordinances in the South, would the cause of justice have been
served? And what if no one had challenged King George's laws and
magistrates in the 1770s? When a society's leadership lets too
many oppressive or unworkable laws accumulate, or takes them
too literally, it lessens genuine respect for laws that are just
and necessary. But to break laws in order ultimately to change
the Law is a near-desperate step permissible only when every
possible hope of peaceful change has been exhausted; very few
Americans would argue that, for all the country's ills, that
step is justified today.
</p>
<p> In the end, the decisions in a democratic society must be
made by the majority, and any violent challenge to its will
must be dealt with firmly. The tyranny of a minority is far
more obnoxious than the tyranny of a majority. And at present,
the majority clearly feels that law and order must somehow be
reasserted. But it would be tragic if in the process the nation
were to allow its legitimate fears to be exploited, its
understandable concern to be exaggerated. The balancing of law
and order against freedom is at the very heart of
civilization's work. That work must be done by the leaders of
the U.S. with a measure of magnanimity, a major effort at
clarity--and a great deal of coolness. It will take an immense
interlocking effort of more efficient and enlightened law
enforcement, social reform and moral leadership. What is at
stake is more than just the present election; it is, in many
ways, the quality of American society for years to come.
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