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Gates-Crowley Battle Not About Race, but Rather Citizens' Rights


Although race was what caught President Obama's attention, the confrontation between a Black Harvard professor and a White Cambridge police officer is not about race at all.

It is about citizens' rights. When you look past the argument over race, you can see that a homeowner's rights were trampled on by the investigating and then arresting officer.

Last week, Henry Louis Gates, a prominent scholar of African American studies at Harvard University, returned home after spending one week in China. Discovering his front door was jammed, Gates had to break in and pried the door open.

Neighbors, who saw Gates entering his home without a key, called police. Cambridge, Massachusetts Police Sgt. James Crowley, who was dispatched to investigate, confronted Gates. Although Gates had established that he was in fact the owner, that it was his home and that he had lost his keys, Crowley arrested Gates anyway, charging that the homeowner turned suspect had been verbally abusive.

It's hard to get anyone's story straight in this battle because everyone is trying to use the Gates-Crowley incident for their own political benefit, including police, Obama, Democrats and Republicans.

Obama, who knows Gates, was moved when he read the story about Gate's arrest. Here is a man who was arrested on his own property after having proven to police he was the homeowner because words had been exchanged. To President Obama, that sounded like an incident driven by race, because historically, only Black people who are, in principle, stopped in expensive cars are asked "Is this your car?"

Crowley and the Cambridge Police are indignant not because of race but because they are arrogant cops, typical of the arrogance that undermines the police profession.

Police believe that citizens do not have a right to challenge them, even once they have established the facts of their innocence. Individuals, police believe, have no right to yell at them, express anger at them and even call them names.

I disagree with that completely. Gates was on his property. In his home. Regardless of whether the police officer could not confirm it right away, once he did, the police officer was on a man's property in a country where a man's home is his castle and what you do in your home is almost completely your business.

Republican fanatics like Sean Hannity, Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck, among the most racist bigots yelping on talk radio and cable TV, insist that Obama is a Muslim fanatic who is biased towards the terrorists and the proof is he is sticking up for a friend who is Black.

These are the same nut jobs who have mesmerized a significant portion of the American population, brainwashing them with fear mongering, lies, distortions and, yes, racism. Racism against Blacks and racism of sorts against Muslims and presidents who happen to have Muslim middle names.

These are the same fanatics who are trying to argue that Obama does not have a legitimate American birth certificate and therefore should not be president, a contention that is so outrageous and absurd is smacks of Nazism.

These are the same fanatics who shut their eyes when it was proven that their champion, the ineloquent and uneducated President George W. Bush had ducked active duty service during the Vietnam War to hide out in a reserve unit that he often failed to report for duty for because he was working on the campaigns of his politically connected father's friends.

All of this garbage is heaped atop the Gates-Crowley debate and has turned it into a side-show that the neo-cons, extremist Republicans and racists in and out of public office hope will help undermine Obama's social agenda of providing affordable and effective healthcare to all Americans, taxing the rich and forcing them to pay their share to society, and stirring this country away from unjustified foreign wars.

In fairness to Crowley, he avoided making it a political issue, declaring that while he supports Obama, he disagrees with the president.

But the police unions and other branches of the National Rifle Association, which would want to put automatic weapons in the hands of every American citizen, have turned this innocent argument about police conduct into one of racism and failed presidential leadership.

Obama is correct when he says the Cambridge Police "acted stupidly." They did. Crowley should apologize to Gates, even though Gates should have used common sense and curbed his own emotions and accusations that race rather than individual rights was the point of contention.

Crowley should apologize because as a police officer who carries a weapon and is shouldered with the limits of individual authority, he must live to the higher standard of justice and he must adhere to responsibilities that everyday Americans must be assured are rights that are protected.

Whether you came as a police officer knocking on my door with the best of intentions, once it was clear that you were wrong, then you should have apologized and left immediately. And if the confrontation provoked anger from the citizens, the police should be professional enough to recognize that the circumstances sometimes justice a citizens outrage and anger as an expression of their free speech.

But the battle of citizen's rights is not as provocative as one based on racism and race. And because of that, a White police officer who overstepped his bounds after the facts were established, has now been pushed in to a corner where instead of acknowledging wrongdoing and mistaken judgment, he will play the game of politics, race and the battle against a Black president.

The fact is, if Gates had been White, Crowley probably would have walked away once it became clear that the suspect was in his own home. And no one would care.

As for Obama, clearly, he jumped the gun and should have thought twice about elevating an incident to national frenzy. That is one of Obama's big problems.

He loves to talk. Although having an eloquent president who can talk sure beats having a former president who has to make up stupid words and based his foreign policy decisions on a vice president hell-bent on starting a war rather than ending terrorism.

Ray Hanania is an award winning columnist author and Chicago radio talk show host. He can be reached at www.RadioChicagoland.com.

Follow Ray Hanania on Twitter: www.twitter.com/rayhanania

Although race was what caught President Obama's attention, the confrontation between a Black Harvard professor and a White Cambridge police officer is not about race at all. It is about citizens' rig...
Although race was what caught President Obama's attention, the confrontation between a Black Harvard professor and a White Cambridge police officer is not about race at all. It is about citizens' rig...
 
 
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07:31 AM on 08/08/2009
"The fact is, if Gates had been White, Crowley probably would have walked away once it became clear that the suspect was in his own home. And no one would care."

So, you're not saying Crowley's actions weren't racist. You even admit the obvious, that they probably were. BUT, who cares?! The REAL issue is "Citizen's Rights," by which I assume you mean the rights of all citizens, not just those of color; in other words, its only important if its an issue for white people.

And you can't understand why Black folk keep making such a huge deal out of these things. -- Well I'll tell you why. There aren't really that many racist "hate-mongers" in America, but the country is absolutely filled with people such as yourself who always seem to rationalize what a waste it is to spend resources on Blacks that could be "more profitably" spent on whites.

I must say, though, that while its a common argument regarding government aid, education funds, college access, due process, and jobs -- You don't often hear it regarding media attention. I guess as long as we're athletic, comedic, or being incarcerated we can have all the air-time in the world. Its just the waste of airing our "grievances" that everyone objects to.

Its not like racist treatment in any way infringes on "citizens rights."
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emmeaki
12:51 AM on 08/08/2009
I don't believe that race had nothing to do with it. Yes, Crowley was an arrogant SOB who felt that he could play god because he had a gun and a badge, but, let's get real, he wasn't just angry for being yelled at by a man, he was angry at being yelled at by a BLACK man.

Can I get inside Crowley's head and learn his motivation with 100% accuracy? No, but it's not absurd to think that race played a part in this. (I believe wholeheartedly that it did.) I hate it when people make excuses for racists and act like black people are just being paranoid or playing the race card when they speak of such mistreatment. Why are some people acting like racism couldn't have possibly been the motivation for this cop's behavior? Yes, this is definitely a citizens' rights issue, but I believe it is a racial issue as well.
09:55 PM on 07/26/2009
Mr. Hannania. You sound exactly like the person who would editorially castrate the same police department if they had left, after the person in the house had said it was his house, and then was killed or robbed by someone who was still in the house, possibly the other person who was mentioned by the neighbor lady but not present. This sounds like a case of hyper sensitivity by an arrogant, black professor deciding to push an issue at the wrong time. Police should be shown a basic level of cooperation, due to the dangerous nature of their business. It should not take very long for a person to show their ID to an officer acting on a call of a possible burglery, unless there is a problem. Also, having the home owner step outside can separate a victim from a burgler. Pretty standard procedure. The time spent in a shouting match with an officer, when it does not seem reasonable, does place an officer on a heightened state of alert. Mr Hannania, you do a disservice to not only race relations, but police/public relations as well. Congratulations.
05:52 PM on 07/26/2009
All you are doing is perpetuating the African-American community's dependence on a racial crutch to justify their failures, problems and misgivings. This is, in my humble opinion, simply another example of the media's effort to hype things up, stir emotions and controversy (just like Sharpton and Jackson) when there is an interracial situation in an effort to promote their own agenda while taking back what their people are "owed" for the many years of suffering at the hands of the white man. Aside from this, I always find it astonishing how we, as a society, always try to find fault in the manner or way in which law enforcement handles a situation--they did not respond in a reasonable amount of time, they used too much force, they did not try hard enough, etc.--when in fact, and for the most part, these are trained professionals who follow procedures and sets of guidelines. So please, go sell cheap somewhere else and let those selected and trained to protect us do their job..
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Whatashame
03:55 PM on 07/26/2009
It doesn't matter who called the police. Once the officer established that Mr. Gates was the owner he should have left. Even though Mr. Gates became loud and abnoxious, that did not give the officer the right to arrest him. When you are in your own home, you have the right to say whatever you want and speak as loud as you want once you do not disturb your neigbors peace.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
myworld
Sick of Bi-polar politicians and pundits
12:36 PM on 07/26/2009
The world is becoming totally unhinged .Sad.......
08:13 AM on 07/26/2009
Mr. Hanania is correct in trying to steer this away from being just a case about race. Police officers are arrogant, and to do that job maybe they need to be, but they also need to know when to step back and deescalate the situation. Mr. Gates was in his own house, let the guy yell if he wants, we all would be a little angry if we had to break into our own house, probably breaking something in the process. Cops need to know when to swallow their pride and arrogance, unfortunately they have a hard time being yelled at and spoken to in derogatory terms and have to show they are in charge. I disagree with Mr. Hanania when he said “The fact is, if Gates had been White, Crowley probably would have walked away. . . “ That is not fact. Cops do not like being yelled at, and many of them, unfortunately, only know how to deal with it by arresting the person, no matter what the color. To a black person I fully understand this looks like a race case, but to a white person it looks more like a civil rights case that has been turned into a race case by Mr. Gates and President Obama.
03:04 PM on 07/25/2009
Thank you so much for this post! You are one of the ONLY people who has waded through all the other mess of stories to accurately point out what the true merits of this issue is all about - citizen rights. It astonishes me that the same people who cry out about their "liberties" and "freedoms" being taken away are the exact same ones supporting the officer for violating the 1st and 4th Amendment rights of Dr. Gates. Those people, like Hannity and Limbaugh, are truly racist and are making it a race issue.
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Harbinger08
You have the right to remain silent
12:17 PM on 07/25/2009
Finally, someone writes something that is meaningful. Thank you, Mr. Hanania, for getting to the heart of the matter: civil liberties. This is the heart of the issue.
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MalleusMaleficarum
Global nomad.
11:56 AM on 07/25/2009
First of all, I love this article. Ray Hanania encapsulates the Gates-Crowley confrontation superbly, but -- there is absolutely nothing wrong with having an articulate president. Obama spoke truth to police power, and it needed to be said. What he did not need to do was to retract his statement in the way that he did on Thursday -- Now he should follow through with his invitation to the two cultural combatants and invite them to the White House where they should have a discussion about racial profiling and the disproportionate arrest and conviction rates across the racial fault-lines in America. The racial bigotry of our criminal justice community is a global disgrace.
11:39 AM on 07/25/2009
Speaking from experience, I had a similar thing happen to me as Gates did. The police knocked at my door in the middle of the night after receiving a 911 call that showed as originating from my home. I answered the door to see two officers. They asked for ID and then asked me to step outside. They asked me if someone had made a 911 call from the home, which I responded "no". Instead of taking my word for it, they then required that I wake my wife and have her come to the door. They DID NOT allow me to go back in the house alone to get her. She came when I yelled for her, but had she not, they would have followed me into the home. Only after confirming that EVERYTHING was O.K., did they let us go back into our home.

They were not trampling my citizen rights. When asked what this was regarding, they answered to the best of their ability, which was that they had received a 911 call for that address.

The 911 call originated from a nearby 7-11. It was an honest mistake, similar to how the 9-11 call was placed in the Gates situation.

I was thankful for the due diligence of the police. I would hope they would do the same thing, exactly, if a 911 call ever really did come from my home, and god forbid, it was a more dire situation.
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TomZart
09:54 AM on 07/25/2009
AMERICAN POLICEMEN


Misdeeds were put here as a test for mankind
And to many race down the wrong path.
Greed, hate, lust and perversion are Satan’s tools
In his workshops of corruption and wrath.

Rape, robbery, murder and assault
Are committed by the dishonest night and day.
Thank God for those who line up to protect
The principles of justice, honor and fair play.

Where would we be without valiant policemen
Who patrol our neighborhoods and streets?
Risking their life and limb on the line
Arresting thieves, killers, drug dealers, perverts and cheats.

To many officers end up victims of divorce
Products of occupational danger and strain.
Never knowing when they say good by
If it’s their day to be crippled or slain.

It takes a brave soul to become a good cop
Risking everything for little praise and pay.
It’s true that some may abuse their badge
But for the majority we gratefully pray.


By Conservative Poet
Tom Zart
Most Published Poet
On The Web
09:49 AM on 07/25/2009
Let's get past what was OBVIOUSLY a racist policeman and racist police dept. (by not coming down hard on the officer, even to the point of firing) and get to the heart of the matter.

The white supremacy culture uses the local and national police to enforce white supremacy.

This culture is reinforced through white citizens coming to the aid of OBVIOUSLY racist police when they kill, maim, suppress and oppress African Americans in their ever expanding view of law and order.

This is a black and white issue.

Open and shut, good and bad, light and dark or in a word, Manichaean.

There is no middle.
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Ray Hanania
Censored Award Winning Journalist
09:12 AM on 07/25/2009
I understand there are a lot of people who hate people of color, especially Black people, who want to deny Black people the right to stand up and defend themselves.

But while Race is the media topic and run my fanatics like Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck (The Trinity of Hatred), the fact is Crowley was wrong in allowing the homeowner and king of his own castle to provoke him into taking action and placing an innocent man into custody.

But, I know if this were gun control and the NRA, some might be arguing that we have the right to have AK-47s and Kalashnikovs.

By the way, did anyone notice that the car sales dealer in, was it Ohio, who was giving away automatic weapon to buyers who bought "American Cars" was giving away an AK-47 WHICH IS NOT AN AMERICAN-MADE WEAPON.

Isn't that hypocrisy. Of course, the dealer's brother is screaming rightwing wild man (and colleague, friend and rival) Mancow Muller : )

Ray Hanania
www.RadioChicagoland.com
07:58 AM on 07/25/2009
Let's remember we have constitutional protection from unlawful search and seizure. Crowley being in the man's house after he proved it was his house is plain and simple a misuse of police powers and definetly shows judgement that is so poor it can accurately be characterized as 'stupid'.

Maybe his union buddies should spend some more time and money learning about citizen's rights and not simply defending the blue.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
UtahLady
10:33 AM on 07/25/2009
Exactly right
11:19 AM on 07/25/2009
Thank You
Everyone seems to be missing the point here. Some are defending the cop just on a basis that he should have gone into to investigate. Obviously he should have but his job was done once he asserted that Gates lived there, and lets not forget that he didn't arrest him for disobeying the requests of a public officer.
I just don't see why he couldn't have just left, Gates would have stopped yelling and he wouldn't have to have dealt with booking him, arresting him, or even writing a report.