John Leo observes the New York Times “Swerving Around Riots“:
In 1967, Newark erupted in gunfire, looting, and arson, killing 23 people and injuring 700. But 40 years later, the New York Times still is not certain that this event should properly be called a “riot.” In a news article marking the anniversary, the Times reminds us that “frightened white residents” of the 1960s opted for the word “riot,” while “black activists” of the period called it a “rebellion.”
In a bracing slap at readers who unthinkingly might refer to several days of riotous behavior as a “riot,” the Times quotes the president of the New Jersey Historical Society, Linda Epps, who says: “there is not one truth, and your view depends on your race, your age and where you lived.” So what would fair-minded neutral people call it today? No need to wonder. The Times tells us: “Those seeking neutrality have come to embrace the word
Join the conversation as a VIP Member