Friday, July 24, 2009

Black professor and Obama vs. white cop; whose side are you on?

Me? Based on all the reported facts--unreservedly for the white cop. The behavior of first, the professor, with his outrageous race-baiting tantrum unleashed totally without justification at the responding officer, and then President Obama making (by his own admission, ignorant) judgemental comments worthy of a gutter level, race-baiting ACORN rabble-rowser...both cases inspire utter disgust.

As any reasonable person could surmise, the cop had to sort out exactly what was going on given the report of two men appearing to be breaking into a home. As the cop stated in interview, among the possible scenarios were: 2 intruders somewhere in the home, even if the man he encountered were the homeowner; the man was one of 2 burglers trying to bluff his way out of it; the man was under duress by a hostage-taking type burgler, to get the cop to leave, etc (use your imagination). Any reasonable, cop-respecting homeowner wanting to shorten the inconvenience of the cop's visit, would have slowly acquired photo ID with home address, or photo ID with utility bill with address.

Gates is on the record stating he provided a university ID--does anyone know (reporters might have made that simple inquiry of the university before calling the race-hustlers) if, in fact the ID has both a photo, and the professor's address? Most employment IDs don't have home addresses for obvious reasons.

So, the O-bots and knee-jerk race apologists are left with no refutation to the reasonableness, the appropriateness of the officer attempting to determine exactly who was yelling at him before leaving some unidentified man, with an as yet undetermined second man, in possession of a home they were reported to have broken into.

Nope, instead we have Obama stupidly, and ignorantly, shooting off his mouth to condemn a white cop because he's a white cop and O's friend is a black professor. That's a racist reaction.

Here's Victor Davis Hanson's take:

"If someone were to call a policeman in Cambridge to investigate a possible entry by two African-American looking suspects into the home of the country’s leading emblem of racial theory and grievance, the officer would be entering a cultural minefield from which he might not escape unscathed: come too late to Professor Gates’s home: racist; come not at all to Professor Gates’s home: racist; come to Professor Gates’s home: racist

http://corner.nationalreview.com/post/?q=ZTIyN2UzN2FkNWEzMGExYjc3NzRiMDc1ODgxYmYyMWI=

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