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Friday, December 26, 2014

It’s always about Al

Anyone surprised Al Sharpton’s immediate reaction to the execution of two cops was how this will affect Al Sharpton?

As news broke of the shooting of Officers Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos, Sharpton issued a condemnation. But he also worried it might derail “the pursuit of justice” in the Eric Garner and Michael Brown cases. And he played a phone recording of death threats against him filled with racial slurs.

The Rev effectively draws a moral parallel between the deaths of Garner and Brown — both of whom died, regretfully, while resisting arrest — and Officers Liu and Ramos, who were shot point blank while defending New Yorkers from criminals.

Throughout Sharpton’s career, from the Freddy’s Fashion Mart killings to the ambush of these officers, his causes have been attended by violence. Often he condemns such acts. But Sharpton remains stuck in a narrative where New York is 1960s Alabama and our cops are all Bull Connors.

Yet Mayor de Blasio has treated him as though he were the second coming of Martin Luther King, Jr. President Obama has him down to the White House where he is treated as a civil-rights leader.

And when a Sony exec makes some racially insensitive remarks in an ­e-mail, it’s the Rev. Al she ends up apologizing to.

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3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Comparing Al Sharpton to Martin Luther King in any way is a sign of ignorance. MLK stood for peace and he had a love of peace and hope for all mankind. Violence killed MLK.... Sharptons violence killed Martin Luther King. Choose to stand for something better. Walk away from violence!!

Anonymous said...

Why is Comcast employing him?

Anonymous said...

Why does anyone call him Reverend....there's nothing reverend about him!