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Sophia A. Nelson

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Bud Lights & Civil Rights Tonight at the White House: What Will America Learn

Posted: 07/30/09 10:47 AM ET

This afternoon all eyes will be on the president of the United States and the South Lawn of the White House.

No, the president of France is not coming to visit, nor the chancellor of Germany. There is no grand state dinner being prepared for hundreds of guests to greet Queen Elizabeth the II. This evening's guests are two regular citizens: one Sgt. James Crowley and one Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. The host: President Barack H. Obama.

Hmmmm? I have to pinch myself is this for real?

We are in the midst of an economic crisis -- growing unemployment -- high taxes -- two wars in the Middle East -- a failed heath care system (albeit still the best in the world) -- and on and on. I am thinking that my president simply has better things to do with his time, then host two men who could just "not get along" up in Cambridge Mass last week. I know the president seemingly stepped in it last week when asked at the presser what he thought about the Gates arrest, but he modified his remarks last Friday and that should have been it -- over -- finito.

I have been very vocal in my op-eds for NPR, TheRoot.com, and on my media appearances on CNN and MSNBC last weekend about how I feel this incident took place and how it is playing across America. I still believe that based on the police report and now the 9-11 tapes that have been released that race was a subtext of why Henry Louis Gates was arrested at his home after having to break into his own home, and showing proper ID to the officer as requested.

For me this is a civil liberties issue that cannot and should not be glossed over by a cold brewsky at the White House. I don't want the police entering my home without my express permission, ever. Unless, of course they are responding to an alarm that has gone off at 3am (which happened to me last summer), or if they are responding to a medical emergency. A man's home is his castle. We can all agree that Professor Gates responded in the wrong way when he talked about the officer's "Mama" and started shouting about being a "black man." But, has anyone ever asked why Gates responded in this way? Gates has said that he "feared for his safety as a black man." We have to allow him to feel how he feels and keep that in context.

Likewise, officer Crowley says he was doing his job and simply wanted to go home to his wife and kids. That is a good thing. However, the officer notes in his own report that he believed Gates to be "lawfully in the home" but was "taken aback" by Gates conduct and attitude toward him. It seems to me that both men playing on their worst racial fears, feared one another. The officer saw an unruly, angry black man and Gates saw a racist cop who entered his home uninvited. Both points of view must be validated as being reasonable based on the stereotypes we all have about black men and cops in America. That is where the true discussion should begin.

It is my hope that the president truly has a dialogue with both men that gets them talking about how our unconscious biases and prejudices cloud our day to day judgments and responses. It is my hope that they don't just share a "Beer" and sweep this whole mess under the carpet. We will have to wait and see but I for one am very curious to see how this all plays out. Stay tuned America, as we learn more about the Bud Lights & Civil Rights that will be discussed at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue this evening.

 
 
 

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This afternoon all eyes will be on the president of the United States and the South Lawn of the White House. No, the president of France is not coming to visit, nor the chancellor of Germany. There ...
This afternoon all eyes will be on the president of the United States and the South Lawn of the White House. No, the president of France is not coming to visit, nor the chancellor of Germany. There ...
 
 
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05:15 AM on 07/31/2009
America learn tonight nothing has changed!
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
BoyInBOYCOTT
03:01 PM on 07/30/2009
When a Black lesbian is invited in for a beer, maybe we can talk seriously about EVERY Civil Rights.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BocaMom
02:23 PM on 07/30/2009
The whole beer summit stinks! What a waste of time. I wish they would invite the Blue Dog Democrats and Republicans over for a beer and settle the Health Bill instead!
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
JimR
01:51 PM on 07/30/2009
It is far from clear that this was about race. Officer Crowley has not history of racial bias, though Gates does ("As always, whitey sits in judgment..."). The sad thing is that racial profiling and racial prejudice are real problems in this country. But all the attention is being put on this overblown incident.
01:42 PM on 07/30/2009
Prof. Gates position in the World is based on being a black man, and on writing and speaking about the sins of whites against people of color.

Officer Crowley spends a lot of time in situtions similar to that with Prof. Gates. I was referred to the TV program "COPS'. At first I laughed; then I just became astonished; and then depressesed.

Most of the people with whom I associate support equal opportunity for all, and equal responsibility for individual behavior.

Prof. Gates is supposed to be a leader of black people. I think he needs to begin to accept his responsibility for his actions that led up to his arrest. Does he really want all blacks to assert their ''rights' towards police officers as he did? Officer Crowley needs to reassess his reaction and somehow be able to accept the kinds of behaviors he encounters from people such as Prof. Gates as part of his job; and not as a personal attack.

President Obama needs to be the President of all of us, irrespective of race, etc. I'm most disappointed in President Obama's behavior. It makes me very uneasy.
04:39 PM on 07/30/2009
Crowley made an illegal arrest. Do you get that?

It was wrong that is why the charges were dropped. Further he falsified a police report to justify his actions. Do you get that?

Crowley's actions were illegal. You don't want to talk about that do you. You'd rather pontificate about what Gates did wrong in his own house.

By the way if the President's behavior - that is pointing out the obvious makes you uneasy perhaps you should ask yourself why that is.

We are citizens in this country and will no longer be quiet about police mistreatment.
10:58 PM on 07/30/2009
Astonishing the blinders people so easily put on, ss.