Another Politically Incorrect Race Rant Redux

In May 2023 I sent newsletter subscribers an email titled Another Politically Incorrect Race Rant (sign up now if you want to receive these gems). Below is the excerpt that applies to this week’s news that Daniel Penny was acquitted of negligent homicide in the killing of Jordan Neely.

The most interesting case since George Floyd came in New York this month, where white ex-Marine Daniel Penny killed black panhandler Jordan Neely. This became a hot-button issue in part given the onslaught of videos on social media showing tense situations on trains, often black people intimidating white people. Neely got on the train and started shouting and threatening passengers. Penny put him in a chokehold and accidentally killed him.

One of the jurors in the Zimmerman trial said in a television interview, “his heart was in the right place.” I wouldn’t call walking around with a gun having your heart in the right place. I’d say you want to shoot someone. But I would say that (“heart in the right place”) of this ex-Marine who choked out Neely.

The onslaught of videos of tense train situations in which passengers don’t step in have prompted me to ask myself, would I do anything? Would I just keep quiet and mind my business? Or would I stand up for whoever’s getting picked on? It’s usually the weakest passengers. Well, Penny stepped up to be a hero. Probably a little early, and a little excessive, but everybody on the train was relieved that he subdued Neely. He had help from other passengers.

Manslaughter is inflicting death without malice. This ex-Marine accidentally inflicted death. He’s guilty, open-and-shut case. Heart in the right place, sure, but guilty.

This case wouldn’t be the most interesting since George Floyd if that were all. I’m watching to see what a jury of his peers say. Flash back to the 1980s, the peak in American crime rates (by far) … Bernhard Goetz shot four black men on the subway. None of the four died, but one was paralyzed. Goetz was acquitted of attempted murder and assault in a nod to the genius built into the concept of trial by jury. That verdict, which is what Penny will be banking on, is an example of jury nullification, where the jury disregards the letter of the law to deliver what it sees as justice.

Sidenote 1: This goes both ways. I believe jury nullification is what acquitted OJ after Rodney King. And a friend told me his jury anecdote in which a local black man stole a car, led cops on a chase, crashed and fled the scene on foot. My friend says the man was guilty as hell but two or three black jurors wanted to acquit. In wake of Michael Brown (same area), nobody want to argue. The man was acquitted.

Sidenote 2: if you’re a fellow proud boy who geeks out on Anglo-American history, read about Bushel’s Case, in which Quaker William Penn inspired a jury of commoners to acquit him despite English law. This underappreciated, early American who founded the Keystone State and our original capital brought the concepts of religious liberty, trial by jury and habeas corpus to the American DNA (and almost converted Peter the Great).

The Goetz verdict came at a time when New York subway was a dangerous place by all accounts (see this colorful 1982 piece from the NYT Mag). New Yorkers of the 1980s acquitted Goetz in proof that people were fed up with crime. Just six years later they elected their first Republican mayor in almost 30 years, former U.S. attorney Rudy Giuliani, who ran on a “tough on crime” platform.

Like Goetz, Penny will be judged by citizens of his time and place. His trial will test whether New York City is in fact as dangerous as you could be led to believe from social media and right-wing outlets, or if it’s all shrill shrieking from suburban dorks afraid of big cities and public transit even when crime is low.

If Penny is acquitted, and at least some New Yorkers want idealistic white boys from the burbs emboldened to save the day (“his heart was in the right place”), I’d say it’s more durable proof than the election of Eric Adams that New York has a crime problem.

But if NOT acquitted, a conviction would be a resounding endorsement that NYC is still the safest big city in America.

That’s my take. Let’s see what happens.

He was acquitted. I’d say New Yorkers are fed up with crime, even if it doesn’t seem bad to me. I’ve visited New York about twice a year since moving my family to the States, usually alone on business. Once I had my wife, three children and father-in-law in tow.

That visit was the only time I was even remotely bothered on the subway, both were a low-degree nuisance. One day there were two addicts on the train, “out on their feet” as they say in boxing. They were asleep standing up. It reminded me of a video or two I’ve seen of people having their friend record while they wind up and swing on a standing-addict-on-the-nod with the hardest right hand they can muster. The addict wakes and the attacker walks off, no need to hurry. I wouldn’t do something like that, but it occurred to me that these two on the train were sitting ducks.

The other nuisance was a couple of girls and their gay pseudo-trans friend loudly discussing their sexual exploits of the weekend within earshot of most of the car, including my fourth-, second- and first-grade children. It got uncomfortable when one of the girls cited a threesome that didn’t happen because the guy, who wasn’t cut, could rise to the occasion. That was annoying (having to listen to the story, not the failed threesome).

I never saw vagrants trying to scare the urbane white dweebs.

Maybe I’m jaded from living on the St. Louis Metrolink for years. A black New Yorker who’s lived there since the 80s told me he thought the Metrolink was dodgy. He could see that professionals don’t use it. There are uncomfortable moments but they’re not the same. You don’t get vagrants trying to scare passengers because the almost entirely black, working-class passengers wouldn’t be scared. They sure as hell won’t give out any money to somebody being rude.

What you get on the St. Louis Metrolink or you did when I rode in the 2000s, is groups of hoodlums up to mischief. They surround single young women trying to get phone numbers. They break out in freestyle rap songs. They are known to intimidate or assault the private security guards who check tickets.

The scariest part about the Metrolink is that, unlike the New York subway, you’re often alone. It’s quite common to be sharing the platform, outside at night, with a group of hoodlums and there are no witnesses in sight. You could have a 20-minute wait all by yourself, and them of course. And then you could be alone on the train with them.

Comparatively, I’ve never felt unsafe on New York’s subway. But I have limited experience, especially with my wife and children in tow.

New Yorkers are fed up. That’s what this verdict said. And it’s not a total surprise. We’ve seen it in the elections of “tough on crime” candidates in deep-blue places across the country.

The progressive left needs to understand…

By the way, that image at the top is William Penn on the subway. Not bad?

5 comments

  1. The problem with your country is that if anything can be made into a race issue then it will, down to your history of hundreds of years of bringing over millions of slaves from Africa. It’s not like when Dominican ‘eight ball’ slapped the shit out of that woman on the NY subway when she attacked him after insulting him over his jacket – he was crying at the press conference after all charges were dropped because he thought people would point him out as a woman beater, what people did was applaud him and buy him drinks but they were both people of colour so people quickly moved on.

    The victim in this case – Neely – was a victim because he was mentally ill in a country where nobody gives a fuck about them, Penny is neither a hero nor a victim, he was put in that position because the country seems to have given up on the homeless and mentally ill and he felt he had to do it at that moment but I bet a million times since he wished he didn’t – his job is not to police the New York subway and he was very lucky it was the man he killed instead of someone who could have easily have killed him – which there are many people who are capable.

    Why should you and your family be subjected to vile, anti-social behaviour riding the New York subway? You shouldn’t and you’re being let down – you, your family, Penny and millions of other people are being let down by the powers-that-be – Penny getting off (which was the right decision) isn’t going to stop anti-social behaviour any time soon and one day soon, we will be reading about a ‘have a go hero’ being murdered on that subway and the powers-that-be will still continue to give zero fucks.

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    1. I agree with the sentiment that it’s not always a race issue. But with Neely, there is so much going on underneath that screams “race” to us Americans that may not to others. As I indicated, this kind of intimidating an entire train doesn’t happen in St. Louis where there aren’t many white people on the train. The vast majority of intimidation-based panhandling is by black people. And it’s not the vast majority, but in situations like this it feels like it’s usually white people playing the hero. So that ticks a lot of boxes in American biases. Despite having help from black passengers, it turns out to be a blond-haired Marine doing the chokehold.

      I had forgotten about that eightball-jacket incident. Looked it up, that was 2014 (Ferguson era) and she was charged!

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      1. You’re right and that is the open septic wound that will never heal, if it can be made into a race issue then it will be because there are many people who rely on it to keep themselves relevant, the example of eight ball is a good example – if he had been a white WASP type in a suit who cracked that woman across the face that night it would have been a race issue, because eight ball was a black Dominican then it wasn’t, if he had been white he would have got off but the furore would have been more intense. The interesting thing is would Howard have been charged for assault on a white, WASP ‘eight ball’? She would have probably got away with it as getting her bell ringed off a white man would have been punishment enough but the circus would have been massive.

        You’re right about Penny playing the hero ‘I wouldn’t have lived with myself if someone had gotten hurt blahblahblah’ when we all know he sized up Neely, knew he could take him and did so, if it had been some brute who looked like he could have torn he head off – he would have kept his head down and stared at his shoes, I am not criticising that – it is what I would do too but Penny is making the most of his 15 minutes, if he had any sense, he would keep his head down until the headlines disappeared.

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  2. I live in NYC. I take the train (subway) daily. Ot’s a very different experience to live here and take trains late at night and throughout all the boroughs and not just the nice touristed parts of Manhattan.

    Over the past few years that have gotten more out of hand. We in NYC are completely fed up with the vagrants and malandros taking over. Even more fed up with hearing politicians say the trains are safer than ever when it does not feel that way.

    I have in trains when people yelled that they had a gun and planned to shoot somebody. I have been on a train when a homeless guy sucker punched an elderly woman that had minding her own business. I have watched groping happen with impunity.

    the verdict did not surprise me at all. Middle class people trying to make it to work and school and live their lives in peace are done hearing that they are actually the problem and that the bullies and mentally ill need to be applauded and coddle.

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    1. In my new life as a domesticated dork dad, I only take the train in the morning and early evening, and the vast majority between Lower Manhattan and Midtown. Maybe an odd trip to Park Slope or Jersey City (doesn’t count).

      I’ll take your point, thanks!

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