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Tuesday, July 28, 2009

What Was That 'Stupidly' All About?

by Victor Davis Hanson
NRO’s The Corner


The Gates incident seems to have had little to do with race but a lot to do with the natural human misunderstandings that happen every day in police scenes — and its final twist has everything to do with insider privilege and aristocratic disdain.

Regarding the latter, here are the apparent facts: Both an African-American and a Hispanic officer were soon at the scene and seem to confirm the arresting white officer’s narrative, as do disinterested witnesses in the neighborhood (Cambridge, Mass., not being known as a hotbed of racist activity); a picture tells a thousand words, as one seems to show a handcuffed Gates screaming among a calm group of multiracial police; anyone who has had law enforcement come to his residence investigating a possible break-in knows that the one thing you do not do is begin insulting armed policemen who are tense and not sure exactly what is going down as they arrive; soon the machinery of Harvard University, the African-American mayor and governor, and ultimately the president all weigh in on behalf of Professor Gates in a way not true of most “I say/he says” disputes.

And when the president says the police acted “stupidly” he speaks without the facts of the case and is more right that he thinks: If someone were to call a policeman in Cambridge to investigate a possible entry by two African-American looking suspects into the home of the country’s leading emblem of racial theory and grievance, the officer would be entering a cultural minefield from which he might not escape unscathed: come too late to Professor Gates’s home: racist; come not at all to Professor Gates’s home: racist; come to Professor Gates’s home: racist.

When the healer President Obama casually characterizes law enforcement as acting “stupidly” and then blithely says we all know that African-Americans and Latinos are stopped disproportionately — without the corollary that we all know that African-American and Latino males also commit and are convicted of crimes in numbers higher than their general percentages of the population and therefore can naturally also become more likely suspects — then we simply regress on questions of race, though in frustration rather than due to the “cowardice” cited by the attorney general.

It is tragic that the officer did not say, “Sorry for bothering you, Professor Gates. Of course I recognize you and regret that I had to bother you while you were legitimately breaking into your own home. This won’t happen again.” (And of course, Professor Gates might have said, “No problem; I’m relieved you’re looking out for my house while I’m gone.”) But as the Romans said, sumus homines, non dei.

Bottom line: Professor Gates probably overreacted, insulted a police officer who was trying to ensure that his home was not being broken into as was first reported, wrongly alleged racism on the part of the officer, and got arrested for his disorderly conduct amid witnesses and fellow police officers who confirm the arresting officer’s narrative — and then assumed — quite rightly as it turns out — that his Harvard connections, personal friendship with the president, governor, and mayor would allow him latitudes not open to others.

Meanwhile, that the rest of the country is supposed to cringe and feel sorry that we are still a racist nation — as an African-American president, governor, and mayor all weigh in on the plight of an endowed African-American professor — seems odd. Sorry, but somehow I think most would tend to disagree.

And if the public comes away with any lasting impression, it will be that an impromptu Obama, for all the post-racial rhetoric, still sees controversies in prisms that reflect stereotyped us/them racialism rather than looking at each incident empirically.

There were no winners in this comic tragedy — but one clear loser: last week, the president of the United States.

Source

13 comments:

  1. Wrong...the officer acted stupidly.

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  2. Any red blooded american would have over reacted had it been them in Professor Gates's shoes. I wasn't there don't know what happened no more than the people that wrote the story but he very well may have overreacted, but if he did not assualt the officer I can't see why he would have been arrested. You can't arrest someone for giving you an ear full. If that's the case than every news outlet had better watch out. The dropped the case because they had nothing to stand on. Was this a case of racism...I don't think so but more so a cop who's patience had reached it's peak. As far as Obama..well he should have shut his mouth..not saying he was wrong but knowing that he had a relationship with the man he should have never spoke on it until all the facts were before him...a lesson learned. This case is an example of how we all claim that race isn't an issue in this Country, and as soon as something like this arises then its white against black.....its got to stop if we are ever going to excel as one nation. Thats my opinion though!

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  3. The truth that the public is now seeing , is comming out. He is
    a radical racist. How long can we let this dictator hold office?
    I hope , not long. This country is at risk , the president is trying to destroy the very foundation it was built on. I see no other alternative but to get rid of this cancer. If we let it go too long ,
    like cancer , it will be too late.

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  4. What are you saying 12:53? You would be wise to pick your words more carefully. We make change with our vote in a democracy.

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  5. It is always stupid for a federal official to make comment on a local issue. That is what Obama should have said.

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  6. In my opinion racism is being kept alive. Everyone wants it to go away but they keep harping on it so it can't. This morning on cbs they had a black couple that are going out of their way to shop at only stores that are owned and operated by black people. What? Then you have other benefits available for only the black race? You can not have a scholarship for only white people so why can you have a scholarship for only blacks? Keep doing things like this and color is always going to matter. Of course this is only my opinion.

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  7. Obama (and other stealth racists) saw the Cambridge situation as a golden opportunity to smear whites, but it has completely backfired because the officer did his duty promptly and properly and without any racial bias.

    Even Jesse Jackson and Oprah new better than to try to portray this as racial profiling.

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  8. I think the story has highlighted the aggressive behavior of police. They think they can bark out commands and we must jump to attention. This professor barked right back at him!
    I think our President is terrible. However, I loved the way he chastised the cop. Great. Then, he took it back. Crap.

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  9. Any officer, when confronted with a subject who is whooping and hollering, drawing attention while being insulting and uncooperative to an officer has committed the crime of Disorderly Conduct and deserves to be cuffed and hauled downtown to cool off.
    For the officer to have bowed out and surrendered to that behavior in front of the crowd he had gathered would have been unacceptable behavior.

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  10. 3:11-

    You better hope that the cops perform that way if you are in danger. They had no idea it wast that racist black professor at Harvard when they arrived to investigate a possible B&E in progress.

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  11. The word stupidly had nothing to do with race-- black or white. The police acted stupidly because they arrested someone for supposedly "breaking into their own home" after showing ID that they lived there. If a policeman was trying to do that to you, I don't think you would act all sweet and invite him in.

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  12. He was not arrested for burglary!!! Why do you still think thats what he was charged with?

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  13. Police officer DID break one, and maybe two laws. However, Gates is still a racist jerk.

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