Saturday, July 25, 2009

The Gates Incident

Richard Thompson Ford writing in Slate:
I know Gates and find it very hard to imagine him engaged in disorderly conduct.  But many police officers demand more than orderly conduct; they demand submission and deference.  Given the difficult and dangerous jobs they do, they usually deserve it.  But it would be naive to imagine that there are no power-hungry bigots wearing the uniform.  Anyone, particularly a black person, needs only to encounter one such rogue officer to find himself in serious jeopardy—at that point a few hours in custody is about the best one can hope for.  Maybe Gates, who is well-acquainted with the history of American racism, raised his voice in anger or fear.  Maybe he even unfairly berated Crowley.  But there's no way that the slight, 58-year-old Harvard scholar, with his cane, posed a threat to public order that justified his arrest.
Let's face it, Gates made the officer mad.  Last time I checked, that is not a crime.
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