(NAME-MCE) What Do You Call a Black Man with a Ph.D.?
Anselmo Villanueva
anselmo.villanueva at gmail.com
Tue Jul 28 08:38:51 CDT 2009
What Do You Call a Black Man with a Ph.D.?
The Skip Gates arrest shows how little some features of the national racial
landscape have changed over time.
Lawrence Bobo July 21, 2009
http://www.theroot.com/views/what-do-you-call-black-man-phd
Ain’t nothing post-racial about the United States of America.
I say this because my best friend, a well-known, middle-aged, affluent,
black man, was arrested on his own front
porch<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/21/AR2009072101771.html?hpid=artslot>after
showing his identification to a white police officer who was
responding to a burglary call. Though the officer quickly determined that my
friend was the rightful resident of the house and knew by then that there
was no burglary in progress, he decided to place my friend in handcuffs, put
him in the back of a police cruiser and have him fingerprinted and fully
“processed,” at our local police station.
This did not happen at night. It happened in the middle of the day. It did
not happen to a previously unknown urban black male. It happened to
internationally known, 58-year-old Henry Louis “Skip” Gates Jr. I am writing
about this event because it is an outrage, because I want others to know
that it is an outrage, and because, even now, I have not fully processed the
meaning of it.
Here’s what I understand to have happened: The officer in my friend’s case
was really motivated by a simmering cauldron of anger that my friend had not
immediately complied with his initial command to step out of the house. In
hindsight, that was the right thing to do since I think my friend could have
been physically injured by this police officer (if not worse) had he, in
fact, stepped out of his home before showing his ID. Black Americans recall
all too well that Amadou Diallo reached for his identification in a public
space when confronted by police and, 42 gun shots later, became the textbook
case of deadly race-infected police bias.
Skip is one of the most readily recognized black men in America and the most
broadly influential black scholar of this generation. And yes, in the
liberal, politically correct cocoon of “the people’s Republic of Cambridge,”
a famous, wealthy and important black man was arrested on his front porch.
The ultimate charge? “Disorderly conduct.” Whatever that means.
Even before the charge were dropped Tuesday, I knew in my bones that this
officer was wrong. I knew in my bones that this situation was about the
level of deference from a black male that a white cop expects. I say this
even though I did not see the events themselves unfold. What I do know with
certainty is that the officer, even by his own written report, understood
that he was dealing with a lawful resident of the house when he made the
arrest. That same report makes it clear that at the time of the arrest, the
officer was no longer concerned about the report of a “burglary in progress”
involving “two black males.” No, by this point we’re talking about something
else entirely.
Maybe this “situation” had something to do with Harvard University and
social class. It is possible that one element of what happened here involved
a policeman with working-class roots who faced an opportunity to “level the
playing field” with a famous and successful Harvard professor. But even if
class mattered, it did so mostly because of how, in this situation, it was
bound up with race.
Imagine the scenario. An influential man, in his own home, is ordered to
step outside by a policeman. Naturally and without disrespect he asks “Why?”
or perhaps “Who are you?” The officer says words to the effect, “I’m
responding to a burglary report. Step outside now!”
To which, our confident man, in his own home, says, “No. This is my house. I
live here. I work for the university, and the university manages this
property.” The response prompts the officer to demand identification.
“Fine,” our resident says, and he pulls out two forms of identification from
his wallet.
The officer now knows with high certainty that he is dealing with the
legitimate resident of the home. Does he ask, “Is everything alright, sir?
We had a report of a burglary.” No, he does not. Does he say, “I’m sorry,
sir, if I frightened you before. We had a report of a burglary, and all they
said was ‘two black men at this address.’ You can understand my concern when
I first got to the house?”
No, he didn’t do that either. He also could have disengaged by walking away.
But no, he didn’t do that either.
This officer continued to insist that my friend step outside. By now, it is
clear to my friend that the officer has, well, “an attitude problem.” So, as
I suspect would happen with any influential, successful person, in their own
home, who has provided authoritative identification to a policeman would do
in this situation: My friend says, “I want your name and badge number.” The
cop says nothing sensible in response but continues to wait at the door.
The request for the officer’s name and badge number is pressed again. No
response. Social scientists have plenty of hard data showing that African
Americans, across the social-class spectrum, are deeply distrustful of the
police. The best research suggests that this perception has substantial
roots in direct personal encounters with police that individuals felt were
discriminatory or motivated by racism. But this perception of bias also
rests on a shared collective knowledge of a history of discriminatory
treatment of blacks by police and of social policies with built-in forms of
racial bias (i.e., stiffer sentences for use of crack versus powder
cocaine).
In the age of Obama, however, with all the talk of post-racial comity, you
might have thought what happened to Skip Gates was an impossibility. Even
the deepest race cynic—picture comedian Dave Chappelle as “Conspiracy
Brother” from the movie Undercover
Brother<http://www.vidivodo.com/12471/undercover-brother-conspiracy-brothers-rant>—couldn’t
predict such an event. But, I will say that when I moved into the same
affluent area as Gates, I wondered whether someone might mistakenly report
me, a black man, for breaking into my own house in a largely white
neighborhood and what I would have to do to prove that the house actually
belonged to me if the police showed up at the door.
I remember joking with my wife that maybe I should keep a copy of the
mortgage papers and deed in the front foyer, just in case. I do now. And it
is no longer a joke.
There is no way to completely erase and undo what has been done. And there
is, indeed, a larger lesson here about the problem of racial bias and misuse
of discretion by police that still, all too often, works against blacks,
especially poor blacks. If Skip Gates can be arrested on his front porch and
end up in handcuffs in a police cruiser then, sadly, there, but for the
grace of God, goes every other black man in America. That is one sad
statement, and it should also be enough to end all this post-racial hogwash.
Maybe events will prove my cynicism and anger unwarranted. Perhaps the
officer involved will be fully held to account for his actions. Perhaps
Gates will hear the apology he so richly deserves to hear. Perhaps a review
of training, policy and practice by police in my fair city and many others
will take place and move us closer to a day of bias-free policing. If you’re
inclined to believe all that will happen, then I’ve got a shiny, new,
post-racial narrative I’d be happy to sell.
Lawrence Bobo is the W.E.B. Du Bois Professor of the Social Sciences at
Harvard University.
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