July 24, 2009

  • Neither? Both? What do YOU think? And does your answer correlate with your skin color?

    Slate Magazine
    jurisprudence

    The Depressing Cycle of Racial Accusation

    The arrest of Henry Louis Gates Jr. is about neither racial profiling nor playing the race card.

    By Richard Thompson Ford


    As many of us learned early this week, Henry Louis Gates
    Jr., the eminent Harvard scholar of African-American culture, was
    arrested a week ago outside his own home in Cambridge, Mass. Gates had
    returned home after an overseas trip and found his front door was
    jammed. He forced it open with the help of his driver. One of his
    neighbors saw the men forcing the door and called the police to report
    a burglary. When the police arrived and demanded that Gates come
    outside (or "asked" depending on which account of events you believe),
    Gates refused and a confrontation ensued, which ended in Gates being
    placed under arrest for disorderly conduct.

    Reactions were swift
    and predictable: For liberal civil rights activists, Gates was a victim
    of racial profiling. For law-and-order conservatives, Gates is a
    pampered black elitist who played the race card against a hardworking
    cop who was just trying to do his job (and said
    today that he won't apologize, as Gates has asked). Neither of these
    reactions offers much insight into Gates' arrest or how we can prevent
    similar episodes in the future. Instead, both play into the
    all-too-familiar pattern of every racial scandal in recent memory: a
    depressing cycle of racial accusation, denial, and recrimination, in
    which the arguments all have been made many times before, and everyone
    knows which side they're on before even hearing the facts.

    Last
    night even the president weighed in, saying police acted "stupidly" by
    arresting Gates. Strong words, but Obama in his typically diplomatic
    style was careful to say he couldn't tell what role race played in the
    incident. The president got it right: There's no plausible
    justification for the arrest. It was worse than stupid—it was abusive.
    And that raises the suspicion that it was racially motivated. But
    there's really no evidence that the police officer involved was a
    racist rather than a bully with a badge or a decent cop who made a bad
    call in the heat of the moment.

    Let's take the charge of racial
    profiling first. Strictly speaking, there was no profiling here: Sgt.
    James Crowley did not assume that professor Gates was a burglar because
    he fit some generic stereotype of a black criminal; he was responding
    to a 911 call. But racial profiling has become a sort of catchall term:
    If the police consider race in any way, it's profiling. The claim here
    is that once the police arrived, they treated Gates differently than
    they would have treated a white person in the same situation. It's
    clear that Sgt. Crowley, who arrived at Gates' home last Thursday,
    treated Gates as a suspect: He demanded that Gates step outside, and
    when Gates said he lived there, the officer demanded identification.

    Was
    this racist? The witness who called 911 said that two black men were
    breaking into the house, so it wasn't outrageous for Crowley to suspect
    that the black man he saw inside the house had just broken in. If there
    was racial profiling, it began with the neighbor who described the
    burglary suspects in terms of race (or the 911 operator who probably
    prompted her to do so). But that's a normal part of a suspect
    description: Like sex, height, and weight, race is a convenient way to
    identify a person. Asking police to ignore race in a description of a
    specific suspect takes colorblindness way too far.

    And even
    racial profiling in the sense of using race as a part of a generic
    composite of a typical criminal isn't necessarily racist. It's a tragic
    fact that blacks as a group commit a disproportionate number of certain
    types of crime. The trouble is that racial profiling—even if it's based
    on accurate generalizations—imposes a disproportionate share of the
    costs of law enforcement on innocent blacks, like professor Gates.
    Let's face it: It's hard to imagine that police would have presumed
    that a middle-aged white man who walks with a cane was a burglar.

    The
    problem wasn't that Crowley considered Gates' race in assessing whether
    he might be a burglar. It's what Crowley did after learning that Gates
    was the lawful occupant of the house. And this is where the idea that
    Crowley was a cop just trying to do his job and Gates a spoiled black
    Brahmin playing the race card doesn't wash. The details are contested
    (and of course, the details are everything). According to the police report,
    Sgt. Crowley "asked" Gates to step outside and he refused. The report
    states that after Gates produced his identification, Crowley left and
    that Gates followed Crowley outside to berate him for racism. But Gates says he asked for Crowley's name and badge number, as is his right under Massachusetts law,
    and Crowley refused to provide them. Then Gates followed the officer
    outside and at some point said (or yelled) "Is this how you treat a
    black man in America"? Everyone agrees that this is when Crowley
    arrested Gates for "disorderly conduct."

    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.

    I
    don't know whether Crowley arrested Gates because he was angry that an
    uppity black man dared to question him or whether this was just a tense
    misunderstanding that escalated out of control. What's clear is that
    neither the overused notion of racial profiling nor the trope of a
    black malcontent playing the race card gives us any real purchase on
    this controversy. Gates has said he hopes to use the incident as a
    teaching moment. But if we are really to learn anything from it, we'll
    have to look deeper. We need to ask why so many police officers of all
    races suspect the worst of racial minorities. (I wonder what the black
    Cambridge police officer pictured in the photo
    along with Gates after his arrest would say about all of this if he
    could speak candidly.) Decades of blatant and pervasive racial
    discrimination, poor urban planning, and failed labor policy have left
    blacks disproportionately jobless and trapped in poor ghettos across
    the United States. Faced with few opportunities and few positive role
    models, a disturbing number of people in those neighborhoods turn to
    gangs and crime for money, protection, and esteem.

    Rather than
    improve those neighborhoods and help the people who live in them join
    the prosperous mainstream, we as a society have given police the dirty
    job of quarantining them. Frankly, we should expect that a
    disproportionate number of power-hungry bigots would find such a
    mandate attractive. And an otherwise decent and fair-minded officer,
    faced with the day-to-day task of controlling society's most isolated,
    desperate, and angry population, might develop some ugly racial
    generalizations and carry them even to plush and leafy neighborhoods
    such as those surrounding Harvard Yard. Yet when the inevitable racial
    scandal surfaces we, like Capt. Renault in Casablanca, are shocked, shocked to find racial bias in law enforcement and quick to blame individual police officers, rather than ourselves.

    The
    baseless arrest of one of the nation's most esteemed scholars is wrong
    and unfortunate, whether racism or simple abuse of authority is to
    blame. Professor Gates was publicly humiliated and spent several hours
    confined in a jail cell for, at most, asserting himself against a
    mistaken policeman. He deserves the apology he has asked for and
    apparently won't receive. But the larger problem of racial disparity in
    law enforcement is not caused by individual misconduct, and it will not
    be solved by apologies extracted under pressure or the threat of
    litigation. It's a symptom of the way we have chosen to deal with
    poverty and racial isolation in this very wealthy and supposedly
    egalitarian society. And it makes all police scapegoats for the failed
    and callous social policies that we have all chosen or acquiesced to.

    Richard Thompson Ford teaches at Stanford Law School and is author of The Race Card: How Bluffing About Bias Makes Race Relations Worse, now available in paperback.

    Article URL: http://www.slate.com/id/2223472/


Comments (10)

  • Ok, I had to comment but what I am about to say may shock and even make me a traitor to my race. Let's start with the obvious.

    The neighbor- she/he doesn't know their neighbors? I think if anyone is racist out of this. . . it is THE NEIGHBOR WHO CALLED 911!! Seriously, no one even thought about that and I am glad you brought that to attention.

    The police. They probably were irritated that his man, who they assumed broke into the house d/t the racist neighbor, was  spewing lies. They probably didn't care that the man looked middle aged and probably approproiately dressed. . . as if he lived there. He got a call about it, he responded to it. He should just apologize because he treated him unfaily, not because he was black. Because he does not want to d/t race really could make him seem like a racist. I bet he is a hot-headed cop who is like a pit bull.

    Black people- we get opportunities and some of us take them and some of us don't. The ones who want to benefit from programs will and the ones that do not won't. Many will try to stop some and but basically,we get in our own way. I am currently in school to be a doctor and there are very few of us here. Wanna talk about things that may seem racist? We are not invited to study groups with many whites. We do not get worked on in labs. My friend is in venipuncture where we draw each other's blood and no one wants to draw her blood out of the whites because "she is too dark." You know what, such is life. I have learned to get over it and move on. What bothers me is that because of many Blacks ignorant nature that everyone has decided to walk on eggshells with these select people if you know what I mean. I have two brothers that do nothing with themselves. You would never think that they were educated in wonderful schools and had parents that made over $120k a year. But one brother has no job and lives with his girlfriend in Iowa and complains about her, who works and goes to school. My other brother blames the world for his faults. . . that he can not keep a place to stay and he did a horrid job raising his kids and they hate him. I have cousins that can not stay our of jail even though all these people have been offered opportunities, they either messed it up because they were "being hood" or they never took them and yet complain that they can not get a break. What kind of mess is that? Sorry, there are some black people I can not excuse but there are some that despite their disposition are really working at excelling. I have another cousin that grew up dirt poor but she is going to be a nurse in another year. I even have ignorant cousins hate Oprah. Oprah! Why? They believe that she does nothing for black people. She does but she helps out people who ask for help and it is within decent means. Sorry, let me get off my soap box. I just believe that my people can do better it is just that there is too much outside forces within themselves that keep them back.

  •  Well, I myself am indeed biased in my opinion, and yes, probably due in part of my race and upbringing/experience. However, I've been on the receiving end of the uniformed swine's racism, and so my opinion is formed from experience and not theory. Connie Chung didn't ever need to inform me that our rights get tossed out the window the minute we encounter these pigs. The way I see it, the only good cop is a dead one. And though that may be perceived as ignorant, extreme or sick...that's how I feel. Truly.

     This is well written, as always and you bring up some good points, John. I do however have to disagree that blacks and hispanics commit more crime than the average white man or woman. It goes back to the racism thing...we get profiled more often and it's only logical to see that the numbers will reflect that fact. If white people...or anyone for that matter... were focused on more, the numbers would be a lot different.  

     Now, I can't offer a solution or believe that things will ever change. You say that these officers deal with the worst of humanity and do a difficult task, or are forced to do "dirty work"...that may be but the way I see it, they signed up for the job. They received training for that job and if they can't handle things maybe they out to try the Post Office. What gets me is the pretense. They hide behind the garb of righteousness and moral purity, when in fact, THEY are the worst of that humanity has to offer. I'd rather they just say, "We do what we like because we can." Or, "For our own safety, we treat EVERYONE like criminals." And you know what? I'd be okay with that. It's the fucking hypocrisy that I can't swallow.

     As far as this particular case goes, I don't know why an apology is out of the question? Would a lawsuit (that's sure to come) be better?

    Shit...I could go on and on...but I think I'll stop here. Great post, John. You got my attention from start to finish!

  • @Jade_Orchid - Thank you for your detailed comment, Jade.  It sheds further light on some of the complexities of what we call "race".

    It's never been clear to me whether the person who called 911 was a neighbor, or just a passing motorist or pedestrian.  I can't imagine that it was a next-door neighbor.  But the reality is that these days in America, we often don't know our neighbors.  I wish it were otherwise.

    Incidentally, many congratulations on your recent wedding.  The last time I read your blog, the entry was "Last Words of a Single Girl".  Now I'm seeing bachelorette party photos and whatnot.  May you and your husband have all success possible in creating a loving a secure family.

  • @Xcholo4u - And a great reply, Miguel.  I can't disagree with anything you have to say, even though I haven't had the experiences you've had.

  • @Xcholo4u - Incidentally, I didn't write the piece I posted.  (I COULD have, though.  Hahaha!)  A law professor at Stanford wrote it.  I don't know if he's black or white.

    And yes, I think an apology from the police is certainly warranted.  Unfortunately, in our litigious society an apology is taken as an admission of guilt, and so lawyers advise their clients NOT to apologize or admit wrongdoing.   It's a damned shame we've come to that.

  • hahaha,,, well,, you may know by now,, i dont like police anyway,,,  whether they are in the right or in the wrong,,,

    been there,, done that tho,, im sure i wouldnt have been friendly at first,, given the 911 call,,,  i guess i would have told the suspect i apologized for the hassle once it was determined who he was,,,  his dress tho would have been probably a determining factor as to what i may say when i first got there,,,

    i probably wouldnt have arrested him in the end,,,  in texas anyway,, a peace officer cant be legally offended,, so on what would you base a disorderly conduct charge??  someone has to be offended...

    i may have told him he was an idiot,,, and probably then left,,,

    maybe it was a joke,,,, by a neighbor,,, hahahaha,,, some people just cant take a joke....

    oh,, my answer corrilates with my experience,,, skin color is not a priority of mine,,, if shes hot,,, shes hot,,,

  • @mejicojohn - Weren't you a cop in one of your previous lives, John? 

  • Ugh, I wrote a couple paragraphs but I hit a back button by mistake and it's all gone now...  basically we should get on with it.  Everyone involved was caught in the most confrontational circumstance, so what do you expect?  We can blame the neighbor for not knowing that such an eminent professor lives right across the street, but maybe he travels a lot and isn't acquainted with the neighbors.  It's sad, but we should acknowledge it for what it is and really get on with it, because there are worse things happening to black people because of racism.

  • well,, i was a deputy sheriff,, which is kinda the same thing,,,  

  • Thanks for posting this, John.  I think the author makes a fantastic point--"racial profiling" and "playing the race card" have become shorthand for a much larger, much more complex issue that Americans in general refuse to acknowledge.  In spite of all the research to prove the contrary, many Americans cling to the delusion that we are all blank slates, that we are all free agents who ultimately choose our destiny in a free, rational way, unimpeded by social, cultural, and economic contexts.  Bull.  In reality, public policy is crafted by a specific group of people for specific interests.  People who are born into a world where they are not represented have little motivation to become invested in it. No, we are not all at the mercy of destiny; however, issues of race and class are systemic problems, and systemic problems will not be resolved by individual solutions.

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