Torching the City of Charm

Posted on April 29, 2015 by Robert Ringer Comments (30)

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As the dependably vile Al Sharpton, criminal par excellence, arrives in Baltimore to stir the still-burning embers scattered about town, it’s time to reflect on the City of Charm.

Baltimore is perhaps the most authentic big-city blue-collar town in America, but it’s also a sophisticated and historic city. It’s where, in 1814, Francis Scott Key penned the lyrics to what was to become America’s national anthem, “The Star-Spangled Banner,” in a poem titled “The Defence of Fort McHenry.” True, it can’t compare to the jungle beat of rap-crap, but, still in all, it’s had a pretty good run and is still well enough thought of to be performed at most sporting events.

I mean, what can you say bad about a city that produced Babe Ruth, who grew up just down the street from Oriole Park at Camden Yards? And it wasn’t just the most famous Yankee of them all who transitioned from Baltimore to New York. One of the best-kept secrets in baseball is that the Yankee franchise itself was originally the Baltimore Orioles.

The Orioles moved to New York in 1903 and changed their name to the New York Highlanders, then changed it again in 1913 when they became the New York Yankees. Who would have guessed at the Yankee dominance that lay ahead?

And speaking of best-kept secrets in sports, most young folks don’t realize that the Johnny Unitis-led Baltimore Colts were America’s Team before the Dallas Cowboys were even born. In fact, yet another best-kept secret is that the Baltimore Colts were originally the Dallas Colts.

Dallas, okay, but there’s something that doesn’t ring true about trying to picture Colts legends like Lenny Moore, Gino Marchetti, Jim Parker, Raymond Berry, and Alan Ameche playing in Indianapolis.

Baltimore is also a mecca for those who appreciate the finer things in life. It showcases the beautiful and vibrant Inner Harbor, fine dining, world-renowned Johns Hopkins Hospital and Medical Complex, fine art galleries, and rustic old mansions that are architectural masterpieces, to touch on just a few of the more impressive aspects of the city. Real Baltimorians — not the crazed criminals who terrorize their own neighborhoods — have good reason to be proud of their city.

So what is it with these rioters? The truth is that rioters riot for one reason and one reason only: They enjoy engaging in criminal activity as a way of venting their pent-up anger rather than putting forth the effort to better their lives. All other reasons for destroying property and maiming or killing other human beings are bogus — period.

Whether it’s an outrageous, bold-faced lie like “Hands up, don’t shoot!” or the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., all excuses for engaging in criminal behavior are just that — excuses. There’s a reason they call them rioters: They simply love to riot. It’s their main purpose in life. Night and day, it’s riots on demand; you furnish the excuse and they’ll furnish the riot. And pretty much any old excuse will do.

This week’s criminal assault on the jewel of the Chesapeake reminded me of the riots of the late sixties, the most memorable one taking place in Los Angeles’s Watts district where thirty-four people died. It also reminded me of just how little has changed since then.

Especially the fact that the yawner cliché “racial grievances” is still being used as an overarching excuse for violence. (Note: Baltimore has a black mayor, a mostly black city council, and about 50 percent of its police force is black. Next subject.)

How well I remember the sixties — vulgarity was in vogue … war was in vogue … weed was in vogue … Marxism was in vogue … and, yes, riots were in vogue. Today, vulgarity is in vogue … war is in vogue … weed is in vogue … Marxism is in vogue … and, yes, riots are still in vogue.

To use a layman’s paraphrase of Charles Dicken’s first paragraph in A Tale of Two Cities: It was the best of times; it was the worst of times; it was, in fact, pretty much like any other time. Which is to say that crises come and go, but only one time in history is the world going to come to an end — and you won’t be around to remember its happening anyway.

But in the sixties, I was so focused on business and having a good time that I didn’t take important events of the day seriously. Of course, I was aware of some of the bigger happenings, like the assassinations of JFK, RFK, and MLK, the Cuban missile crisis, Marilyn Monroe’s mysterious death, the American invasion of the Beatles, U.S. astronauts landing on the moon, and Woodstock, to name but a few of the more memorable ones.

I also knew there was a war in Vietnam, but didn’t much care, because I had studied enough history to know that since time immemorial, old politicians have been sending kids off to war to kill or be killed. Nothing new there, so I just kept on having fun and making money. After all, none other than Muhammed Ali had argued, “I ain’t got no quarrel with them Viet Cong. No Viet Cong ever called me a nigger.” My sentiments exactly.

The point is that while technology has changed the way we live, the fundamentals of life haven’t changed one iota. Which is why I’m more convinced than ever that the only way to maintain control over your life is to take matters into your own hands and refrain from getting distracted by the never-ending repeat of history we witness year in and year out.

Harry Browne said it all in How I Found Freedom in an Unfree World. His abridged message: Don’t try to live in the world as you would like it to be; live in the world that you actually inhabit — the world as it really is and as it will continue to be, regardless of whether or not you or I like it.

The riots will go on and on, guaranteed — but while they do, make sure that your life goes on as well. Learning to view things in a relative light is a talent that is almost certain to add many quality years to your life. You might also try not watching television for a week. You’ll be amazed at how little you miss and how much better you feel about the only life over which you have complete control.

Robert Ringer

+Robert Ringer is an American icon whose unique insights into life have helped millions of readers worldwide. He is also the author of two New York Times #1 bestselling books, both of which have been listed by The New York Times among the 15 best-selling motivational books of all time.

30 responses to “Torching the City of Charm”

  1. danstelter says:

    Thanks Robert, for telling it like it is. Not much of that out there anymore.

  2. nigel cash says:

    mr. ringer i read your every article with great anticipation and thank GOD there are still a few noble and great americans like you and thanks for the fascinating article on baltimore..

    • Phil says:

      I just hope he still exercised regularly and lives a long, long life while sharing his talents with the rest of us!

  3. Omegamensch says:

    Robert, yes—so true — I like your wisdom—life goes on. Live and Let Live. like my friend at our favorite Italian restaurant says, calm down, have a nice glass of wine, and a good meal, listen to some beautiful music, love your wife and family because what you and I do is not going to change the rioting and evil that is in this world.

  4. Fergo44 says:

    Amen!

  5. josephlacey12 says:

    I have been live a mostly stress-free life for more than 7 years, when I turned off the RV, selected a great 'easy-listening FM radio station, and don't read newspapers. Most of my news (when I care) I get from selected conservative-type Internet media.

  6. josephlacey12 says:

    Whoops….typo…. TV (not RV)…

  7. Jeremy D. says:

    Good insight Mr. Ringer.

  8. TheLookOut says:

    Thanks again Robert, for another insightful article. If there was just a modicum of
    common sense, and decency amongst our so called leaders, riots would be a
    very distant memory. Instead rioters/criminals get rewarded by the POTUS
    by excusing their behavior. The MSM has blood, and carnage all over their hands
    for shilling for this P#@/&#.

  9. Steve says:

    People with no life purpose, who don't know how to assume personal responsibility, subscribe to victim thinking, and participate in "herd"behavior, will look for someone to blame for their problems, and project their issues onto the outside world. Then there are the so-called "liberal" parasites who feed off of this negativity. Apparently the police have adopted a zero tolerance policy. Maybe that's the only way some people can learn. People have to change. Rap music glorifies thug behavior and crime culture. Time for that to end.

  10. Bob says:

    You forgot to include the "rioting" that is set off because a sports team lost (or won). Really? That is a reason to create chaos, overturn cars, etc… You are dead on. Some are simply looking for an excuse and there will always be one available and sadly, most don't need much provocation. Sad.

  11. James says:

    I think that riots will happen as long as people feel they have no control. It's a psychological problem that creates mayhem and chaos in certain segments of our society. And when you're pointing the finger (any finger) at someone else, you're not accepting any responsibility for your attitudes and actions. Accepting responsibility enables you to gain self-control and a sense of control over your environment. Burning and looting will accomplish nothing except jail time for those who are found guilty. Thanks for the article.

  12. Robert Bonter says:

    The Baltimore Colts, who joined the NFL in 1953, were the Dallas TEXANS in 1952, and were the New York Yanks, playing in Yankee Stadium, in 1951. The Dallas Texans won one of 12 games on their schedule, beating Papa George Halas and the Chicago Bears in game 10 of that season.

  13. Jim Hallett says:

    It is sad when any city is torched by the immoral actions of a few (egged on by race-baiting morons like Rev. Al), but it does reflect the total lack of respect people are taught NOT to have for personal property. Since MD is a "progressive' cesspool (in fact, the WHOLE state of Maryland), it is not surprising that many justify this nonsense. When I lived in NoVa on 2 different occasions, I visited Baltimore often and loved the crabcakes, Fells Pt., Camden Yards, the great architecture, and the Federal Hill area, so hate to see any of that jeopardized by irresponsible criminals, who feel they have a gripe. Govt. is criminal, so obviously, the police force employed by them, is also subject to rampant criminality. Only with a free market and individual responsibility can we ever evolve into anything dreamed of by our Founders. Thanks for the article, and also for mentioning my favorite book of all time – Harry Browne's "How I Found Freedom in an Unfree World". That being said, there are other places where one can experience more freedom than here in the USA.

  14. Robert Bonter says:

    Glad you mentioned Lenny Moore who remains, statistically, the greatest all-purpose (running and receiving) back in NFL history, but you would never know that, given the media's failure to appreciate Lenny's exalted place in NFL history.

  15. gabriel76 says:

    Great insights, Robert!!! Appreciate, too, that you penned them. Facts do not speak for themselves. And you represent them judiciously.

    For some, violence is frightening. For others, it is seductive. The retelling of a violent act, a freeway crash, a bridge collapsing, a neighborhood mob trashing its own backyard is the stuff that dramas are made of and the stuff that media seizes on. The worst thing about violence–whether on the receiving end or the giving end of it–is that it ultimately threatens your productive life. The rioters are not producers except of destruction and mayhem. That's easy. It's so much easier to destroy than it is to build or create value. No comparison. The rioters rejoice for the injustice of Freddie Gray's death validates their own dissatisfaction from an unproductive life. (Though from what I understand, Gray himself was productive on the black markets. http://www.targetliberty.com/2015/04/the-blasphem… Marxists and Social Justice organizations spoon-feed the ghettos a narrative to explain their dissatisfaction. Yet few can read. Few can write. Few can communicate effectively in business. So their dissatisfaction is easily riled by Social Justice rhetoric. Whoop it up, burn property, and steal toilet paper from the local CVS. These kids have no historical perspective on what people did before all of the convenience, 24/7 stores. because education today is consumed by politics. Many businesses in the 1960s used to be closed on Sundays. Life is better today. More opportunities exist today than ever before and yet dissatisfaction seems higher than it ever has been.

  16. gabriel76 says:

    Great insights, Robert!!! Appreciate, too, that you penned them. Facts do not speak for themselves. And you represent them judiciously.

    For some, violence is frightening. For others, it is seductive. The retelling of a violent act, a freeway crash, a bridge collapsing, a neighborhood mob trashing its own backyard is the stuff that dramas are made of and the stuff that media seizes on. The worst thing about violence–whether on the receiving end or the giving end of it–is that it ultimately threatens your productive life. The rioters are not producers except of destruction and mayhem. That's easy. It's so much easier to destroy than it is to build or create value. No comparison. The rioters rejoice for the injustice of Freddie Gray's death validates their own dissatisfaction from an unproductive life. (Though from what I understand, Gray himself was productive on the black markets. http://www.targetliberty.com/2015/04/the-blasphem… Marxists and Social Justice organizations spoon-feed the ghettos a narrative to explain their dissatisfaction. Yet few can read. Few can write. Few can communicate effectively in business. So their dissatisfaction is easily riled by Social Justice rhetoric. Whoop it up, burn property, and steal toilet paper from the local CVS. These kids have no historical perspective on what people did before all of the convenience, 24/7 stores. because education today is consumed by politics. Many businesses in the 1960s used to be closed on Sundays. Life is better today. More opportunities exist today than ever before and yet dissatisfaction seems higher than it ever has been.

  17. Bob M. says:

    Or, as was written more than a couple of thousand years ago: "What has been will be again, what has been done will be done again; there is nothing new under the sun. Is there anything of which one can say, "Look! This is something new"? It was here already, long ago; it was here before our time. There is no remembrance of men of old, and even those who are yet to come will not be remembered by those who follow." Ecclesiastes 1: 9-11.

  18. Will says:

    In your opening sentence did you mean the despicable vile Al Sharpton. It fits.

  19. theczech says:

    A few years ago I attended an investment presentation held at a Destination property in Phoenix. I met a most delightful couple from Baltimore. They own and operate one of these fine establishments of which you write. When I asked them about their restaurant, I remember their pride and joy in Baltimore, and as they described it to me I longed to visit. Their enthusiasm for their fine restaurant and beloved Baltimore was infectious.

    Every urban center has serious sociological problems and the veneer of civility is very thin indeed. Thomas Jefferson talked about the approaching urbanization of America and reminded us that if it continued we would soon look, and behave like Europe where people were piled on top of each other.

  20. Serge says:

    The ones who start the riots feel they have a purpose, but it really doesn't bring justice to those who have been victimized. Is our justice system that bad? After the riots start, the kleptomaniacs and pyromaniacs receive their fulfillment of it all not even knowing what caused the riots or could really care less. Too bad people need to find such a poor excuse to steal and destroy.

  21. Richard Lee Van says:

    I wonder if "The Block" in Baltimore is as it was back in the 1970s. Great music back then, the "old black blues" and Belly Dance! I drove to and from Baltimore at night back then and had no problem. And, yes, thanks for bringing up Harry Brown(e)s? HOW I FOUND FREEDOM IN AN UNFREE WORLD. I think I'll dig it up again and reread it.

  22. RealitySeeker says:

    …"life goes on"…….

    ….. and on and on……. until it doesn't. Until the riot turns into a revolution and then the revolutionary war reaches your street, then your doorstep and then your house gets burned to the ground as you and your family get turned into a fricasseed, blackened turtle-roast.

    Some things never change, including those people who misjudge where and when the riot turns into a war and the war turns into a world war.

    Like today, many people were "having fun and doing business" in the sixties. Meanwhile, the hegemonic psychopaths brought America close to nuclear extinction. So close that guys like Murray Rothbard "supported" voting for Johnson over Goldwater in '64. The reason why a libertarian's libertarian would support voting for LBJ was because some of Goldwater's hegemons wanted to launch a nuclear first strike against the USSR. The bottom line was Murray thought some of Goldwater's people were "crazy". And he was right. They were. I know he was right because some of my family were right there on the inside edge.

    You can view Rothbard's justifications here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nW40TzWcnOA

    Thank god for the dirty hippies, rioters, pacifists, conscientious objectors, and traitors like Muhammed Ali and anybody else who stuck their middle finger up to the establishment.

    Ironically, back in the sixties, the riots, looting, protesting and all the other internal strife ended up slowing down the Military Industrial Complex. But the Washington Doomsday Machine is once again revering itself up to launch another world war…..

    …. yes, some things don't change. So go on having fun, " eating, drinking, marrying, " and conducting business as usual. Wallow in ignorance. Define yourself as somnolent. "Support the troops"— and the militarized police.

    And above all, make sure that you you remain foolish enough to vote for a warmongering NeoCon and not somebody like Rand Paul.

    Yes, support the troops, bankers, Neocons, Wallstreet and the dirty cops. Be a good little Republican.

    • boundedfunction says:

      I know I've seen this place before
      Lord can't you hear me screaming
      As a young man long ago
      When I was twenty-one

      ~ lyle lovett, "baltimore" haunting tune
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3EJP99d8GsQ

      after, listen to "you've been so good up to now". same album. yes, indeed.

      • RealitySeeker says:

        "Ob-la-di ob-la-da life goes on bra
        La-la how the life goes on
        Ob-la-di ob-la-da life goes on bra
        La-la how the life goes on" ~~ The Beatles

        Thank god, any god—including Muhammed Ali's god— for good music! But I especially thank god ( any god) for the anti-war music of the 60s and 70s. Those Washington mothers ( aka mother f**kers) and all those clean-cut, jack-booted, murderous thugs who worked for Uncle Sam, along with the Dr. Strange Loves who plotted to wipe out all of humanity, they all didn't know what hit them when an army of long-haired, guitar playing, potty-mouthed rock stars got together and shouted down their "dirty war". Those mothers in Washington were so stunned that they ended the draft…….. Need I say more?

        I have a feeling that "Rap crap" or something like it shall be the next shite-bomb to be hurled at the Washington Doomsday Machine. The mothers on Wall Street and the banking cartel known as the Federal Reserve shall also receive a good shellacking. All I can say is thank god for Nigger Rap so long as the crap hits Washington and it throws Washington off balance and foments enough internal strife to keep the jack boots busy. Ironic, isn't it?—-the ignorant shite-punks fighting the elite shite-banksters and the two cancelling each other out. If things get too bad for Washington— and things shall— Washington will do what it has always done, viz., attempted to divert the public's attention away from the raging ghetto army. How? By starting another war, of course. But that shall only make matters worse. This time will, indeed, be different. So get ready, because sometime within the next decade there is going to be a replay of the 60s, only worse.

        The gutless wonders who complain about the system, yet do nothing, are no better ( and perhaps less better) than the little, looting punks who take to the streets. Really, at times, the lessor of two evils is the looting punks. That's how bad it is in amerika. Never mind, because in the end the gutless, ingenious, do-nothing public shall get covered in shite— perhaps radioactive shite. Pay back is a bitch.

        Finally, when all is said and done, looking out for #1 is sometimes best accomplished by looking out for #2, 3, 4 and so on and so forth. Which is why taking a moment to support and look out for Rand Paul is like taking a moment to look out for myself. Looking out for number one also means becoming proficient at looking at the horizon to see what might or might not be coming, e.g. a street war between Washington and the potty mouths. More on that, later.

        • RealitySeeker says:

          "Glory, Glory, Hallelujah" ~ JJ Grey & Mofro

          Time to thank god because six, dirty pigs have finally been charged with murder, manslaughter, and a dozen other crimes. I guess the establishment finally had to act, because hundreds of thousands of people finally said, "Enough! The lies and cover-ups and the falsifying of evidence just wasn't enough this time around. The worm is turning on the Blue Shirts, and there's not a dirty cop in amerika right now that isn't taking notice. This reminds me of the days when Serpico turned the NYPD on its head.

          The nickle ride is a crime committed by the Blue Shirts on a daily basis. But the word has finally spread. Now it's time for the dirty pigs to experience some amerikan justice. I wonder how it'll feel to be on the other end of the nightstick? If they're found guilty, I hope its real painful on so many levels. Freddie Grey may have been a street punk, but that doesn't excuse the lawless thugs who beat him to death.

          Until then, I'll sit back and listen to some good' ol music:
          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7cYRs2SReps

  23. Scuffy Rubric says:

    These riots are part of a microcosm of planned events in order to create chaos and the destruction of the traditional American way of life. The party on the left hates America and all it stands for, thus it needs to have traditions removed and replaced with the proper leftist propaganda.

    It would be best to not watch the tv and only use it for movies of substance. The best and most productive year of my life was when I was isolated from all outside interventions and spent my time "doing my thing" and living totally in present moments with no regard for the past or the future. I remember I was the happiest and healthiest and had the most fun with no negative influences whatsoever. It was bliss.

    If you are free and have the time, go on a 30 day fast from everything you usually do that is wasted time and that has nothing to do with your goals. Robert has always been a big advocate of discipline and cutting out any unnecessary activity that does not further your goals. Once you quiet your mind and stop the ego's incessant whining you will feel a positive change that can be exhilarating. Go for it…

  24. 3rd Generation says:

    Ringer, you (and the great unwashed posters commenting here) owe an apology to your readers for omitting perhaps the Greatest author of his time – a True Baltimorian – H. L. Mencken, widely known as the "Sage of Baltimore' in your introductory paragraphs.__

    I wonder what Mr. Mencken would have written on this weeks' events in his beloved Baltimore. Maybe just a simple epitaph in the style of his classic on William Jennings Bryant.

    You are forgiven for now, but hopefully you read (unlike the rubes posting here) your comments. This one, is also known as a 'idea for a future column' in case you too, like most "americans" are growing denser by-the-day.

    For the rest of you, in case you forgot already: "H.L. Mencken" – look it up.

  25. Richard Lee Van says:

    Yes! We NEED an army of H.L. Menckens now! How I loved reading him back then!

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