The liberty principle for this Freedom Friday is the value of knowing the difference between race and culture. America and Americans have welcomed legal immigrants from the beginning of the nation. Most, if not all, immigrants in the early years came from the same nations from which early American Colonists emigrated. Their cultures were similar. Their religions were similar.
Immigrants
today come from every nation in the world, and many of them come with cultures
that are far different from those that Americans value. Example: most Americans
today believe that it is wrong for an adult to marry a child, yet there are
immigrants who believe that it is okay. They come from a different culture. Rebecca Downs discussed culture and race in her article published at The Daily Signal.
Although
major sports wins bring celebration, the festivities are often marred in big
cities by unruly behavior. That was particularly the case in New York,
following the Knicks’ June 13 clinching of the NBA championship. The parade
that followed brought more chaos.
Following
the victory over the San Antonio Spurs – the Knicks’ first title in 53 years –
hooligans took to the streets, vandalizing as they went, including targeting
and torching a school bus. Those in the crowd cheered. Police, meanwhile, could
not visibly be seen.
As
he showed footage of the chaos during Friday’s episode of “The Tony Kinnett
Cast” on the Daily Signal, host Tony Kinnett noted how those burning the school
bus were both white and black. And the bus driver begging the crowd to stop was
black. “The point of the story is that it is not about the race, it is all about
the culture,” Kinnett observed.
The
revelry of the parade was marred by random gunshots fired into the air to “just
cause chaos and panic because that is the celebratory nature that has come out
of some of these events,” as Kinnett mentioned.
Meanwhile,
New York isn’t doing much to stop lawlessness. “There’s no condemnation of this
from the city level. There’s nothing. [Mayor Zohran] Mamdani is busy running
around patting himself on the back and p raising Islamic migrant stuff,”
Kinnett said, also addressing how liberals excuse such behavior as how “it just
happens.”
The
New York Department of Sanitation unveiled commemorative garbage cans to
celebrate the Knicks’ win. (They’re also available online for purchase.) Fans
reacted by stealing them, dumping out trash onto the city sidewalk to do so.
People could be heard cheering in the background.
During
the parade, an individual appeared to be passed out from a drug overdose on the
roof of a platform, as individuals sought to help. Kinnett observed that it
took place with a “cop standing there, doing very little, ‘cause this is just
normal behavior in New York.”
The
passed-out man was revived using Narcan. He then proceeded to try to kiss the
woman who gave him that Narcan.
This
is a stunning juxtaposition with the amount of support the United States is
getting from visitors from around the world who are here for the FIFA World
Cup. These visitors, Kinnett said, “realize that everything they’ve been told
by people like Keir Starmer about the United States, things that they’ve been
told about by, for example, Zohran Mamdani, is a lie and that the United States
is freaking incredible.”
Japanese
guests receive particular attention for how respectful they’ve been, as they
come to games ready with garbage bags to clean up trash afterward. For Kinnett,
culture plays a significant role. “There are cultures that are objectively
better than others because of how they carry themselves.”
A
young Japanese woman picking up trash shared that it is part of their “culture,”
but also a matter of respect, “respect for everything, respect for the players,
supporters, and also for the stadium.” The young woman shared, “We are honored
to be here, so we don’t want to make a mess and then leave it.”
What
cultures do we want in America? Do we want more of the type of person who
trashed a school bus in New York, or the Japanese who picked up their own mess?
Americans must decide what type of cultures they want in America and then act
to build those types of cultures. Whether they are imported, or whether they
are born and reared in America, we are responsible for building the cultures
that we desire. Races can live together if Americans develop the proper
cultures in our nation.