By William Tucker on 7.24.09 @ 6:08AM
If only Henry Louis Gates had been a little more circumspect.
A couple of years ago around 11 o'clock at night, I got on a New
York City subway with a bicycle. I wasn't sure whether it was
legal but I asked the tollbooth clerk and he waved me through.
When I got on the car, however, a black transit cop came up to me
and said, "You're not supposed to have a bicycle on the subway."
I responded, "I asked the tollbooth clerk and he said it was
alright."
The cop stiffened. "Will you please not say, 'What?'" he barked
at me.
"I didn't say 'What'" -- the words were almost out of my mouth
when I grabbed them. It was easy to see where this was going. The
cop would say something even more irrelevant, to which I would
make an even more rational response. We would exchange volleys,
me showing off my superior logical and verbal abilities, always
with a note of condescension ini my voice, until he got mad
enough to arrest me. I would probably spend the night in jail.
So I swallowed my pride and said, "Okay." That was enough. He
left me alone and I got off at the next stop. I found out later
that bikes are allowed on the subway, but what difference did it
make? The important thing was he had the gun and the legal
authority and he was going to win the argument. I didn't feel
like staying up all night just to prove a point. It was a small
surrender but one I would easily make again.
Now I realize I'm not as important Henry Louis Gates, Jr. I don't
have his Harvard professorship or international reputation or his
long history of pain and suffering. Yet somehow I wish he had
been a little more circumspect in taking stock of the situation
in Cambridge the other day before dragging the nation into
another of these morose racial melodramas.
Gates and his cab driver were putting their shoulders against his
front door on a Thursday afternoon in a residential neighborhood
after finding it damaged in -- wouldn't you know it -- a previous
burglary. A woman in the street saw them and called the police.
An officer responded almost immediately. Is there anything
unusual about this? Would we want the police or the woman to act
in any other way? If nothing else, Gates should feel fortunate
that he lives in a neighborhood where people look after such
things. In many another urban neighborhood, somebody could be
prying a door open in mid-afternoon and no one would pay the
slightest attention. Even if they did, the police might take half
an hour to arrive.
Gates could have perceived the whole thing for what it was -- an
obvious misunderstanding. He could have produced his
identification, proved to the officer that he lived in the house
and explained his unusual behavior, perhaps showing a little
deference to the law in the process. Instead, he decided to treat
the whole things as an intolerable insult, refusing to step
outside and insinuating that the police were only at his door
"Because I'm a black man in America." His rant attracted such a
crowd that the officer was finally forced to put him in handcuffs
for disorderly conduct. This is what police officers must do.
They cannot simply walk away from a disruptive situation. Their
business is to maintain public order. That the charges were later
dropped only proves the point. An arrest in this circumstance is
only meant to pacify the situation, not inflict some kind of
permanent punishment.
So is this all a matter of "racial profiling"? If it is, then
we'd better find the woman who made the report and arrest her
because surely she is the guilty party. Once a police officer
arrives on the scene, his sole responsibility is to find out what
is happening. Gates treated all this as irrelevant. He was too
important to be the subject of a police enquiry. "Do you know who
you're dealing with?" he announced. (All this is eerily
reminiscent of that other Boston Brahmin, John Kerry, who when
caught cutting into theater lines or otherwise exercising his
prerogatives would always respond, "Do you know who I am?") In
any case, it was obviously his preconceived notions that turned a
routine investigation into an incendiary confontation.
What if Gates had actually been an intruder? Is the policeman
supposed to walk away without determining what is going on? If an
unknown person inside a house announces the investigating officer
is a racist, does that settle the matter? If Gates the homeowner
had lost valuable property in the incident, would he be satisfied
if the police told him, "We caught the guy in the act but he said
we were being racist so we had to let him get away"? Would Gates
accept this as an excuse, or -- since he was now the
disadvantaged party -- would he discover yet another insidious
form of "racism"?
Gates has chosen to drag the whole country into a racial
melodrama just to prove a point. Maybe that isn't so bad. Maybe
we can forget about health care for a while. (On the other hand,
maybe the liberal press will tell us we have to adopt Obama's
health-care program in order to assuage our guilt over the ordeal
of Henry Louis Gates.) Boston is a very class-conscious town,
with Harvard professors at the top and Irish cops very near the
bottom. It won't be surprising to see the entire academic
establishment set its weight upon the police force, once again
turning them into scapegoats with all the implications for crime
and disorder that occurred in the 1960s.
In any case, there's a much better example of how Gates could
have responded. In The Autobiography of Malcolm X,
Malcolm X tells of another encounter with the Cambridge police.
In this case he was actually out with a carload of thieves
burglarizing homes in a residential neighborhood. While cruising
the streets they spotted a cop car making its rounds. Knowing
they were about to be "profiled," Malcolm X had an inspiration.
He jumped out of the car and flagged down the cops, pretending to
be lost and asking for directions. The cops bought it and the
whole gang got away.
Would that Henry Louis Gates had the same kind of street smarts
instead of his more predictable academic arrogance. He might have
saved himself spending a few hours in handcuffs and the whole
country a grueling ordeal. If nothing else, however, Gates is an
egotist, so maybe that's what he wanted in the first place.
topics:
Law, Crime, Racism