Barack Obama’s legacy here started early. Not quite in office for six months Obama showed his hand with his characterization that “The police acted stupidly” in reference to the arrest of Henry Louis Gates a professor at Harvard who, locked out of his house, broke in. A neighbor, not recognizing Gates, called 911. The police arrived and things didn’t go well and Gates was arrested.
When asked about race and the incident a week later, Obama
responded: "I don't know,
not having been there and not seeing all the facts, what role race played in
that. But I think it's fair to say, number one, any of us would be pretty
angry; number two, that the Cambridge police acted stupidly in arresting
somebody when there was already proof that they were in their own home, and,
number three, what I think we know separate and apart from this incident is
that there's a long history in this country of African Americans and Latinos
being stopped by law enforcement disproportionately."
Without the facts Obama stated the police acted stupidly and
implied that racism might have played a role. Nothing however about Gates’
reported “loud
and tumultuous behavior” just racism and police misbehavior.
But this was just the beginning. After George Zimmerman was acquitted in the
killing of Trayvon Martin, Obama
said: “You know, when Trayvon
Martin was first shot, I said that this could have been my son...Another way of
saying that is Trayvon Martin could have been me, 35 years ago. And when you
think about why, in the African-American community at least, there’s a lot of
pain around what happened here, I think it’s important to recognize that the
African-American community is looking at this issue through a set of
experiences and a history that doesn’t go away.”
Again. All race, no
facts.
About the killing of Michael Brown Obama
said: “In too many communities around the country, a gulf of mistrust
exists between local residents and law enforcement… Too many young men of color
feel targeted by law enforcement — guilty of walking while black or driving
while black, judged by stereotypes that fuel fear and resentment and
hopelessness.”
About the jury not indicting the NYPD officer involved in the killing of Eric
Garner Obama
said: “that we are going to take specific steps to improve the training
and the work with state and local governments when it comes to policing in
communities of color; that we are going to be scrupulous in investigating cases
where we are concerned about the impartiality and accountability that’s taking
place.”
In these instances and more Obama made the killing of a black
man by police about race. It’s no surprise that the BLM movement began under
Obama nor that the fiction of “systemic racism” took hold or that the black
victimization ideology became omnipresent.
That’s unfortunate.
Like Rod Serling might have said, imagine if you will if Obama had handled
those differently.
What if he had said about Gates: He should probably have remembered that
the police were simply trying to protect his neighborhood after neighbors
called them. Misunderstandings happen.
Or this about Brown: Michael Brown
was killed after stealing from a store, attacking the proprietor and attacking
a policeman. Had Mr. Brown not done
these things he’d likely be alive.
What if he had responded to the riots in Ferguson, Missouri
after the death of Brown by taking to the airwaves and told black Americans
that the problem in their communities is not racist police, but criminal
activity and fighting with police?
What if he had nationalized national guard troops to restore
peace in Baltimore or Ferguson rather than standing by and later coercing
police forces around the country into “consent
decrees” which invariably
increase crime.
But he didn’t do any of those things. Instead Barack Obama reinforced the notion
that blacks are victims of systemic racism, that they cannot win on an even
playing field and that in any negative outcome racism must be the cause.
It is that victimization that leads us to where we are
today. The Internet is simply bulging
with videos of blacks behaving badly. Flash mobs robbing stores. Punching
random people on the street. Pushing people in front of trains. Running over bicyclists. Attacking bus
drivers. Destroying merchandise in
stores. Rioting on cruise ships. Attacking airline workers. And more. Sure, we have to state the obligatory reality
that other people commit crimes too, but the fact of the matter is, blacks do
so at far higher rates.
Race relations is reaching a boiling point. To put this in
perspective, in 2007 75% of whites and 71% of blacks thought race relations
in America were either good or very good.
By 2021 those numbers were down to 43% and 42% respectively, and no
doubt they’re lower today.
The reality of that dichotomy can be seen in two events from
last month.
In April Karmel Anthony, a 17 year old black high school student knifed
and killed fellow 17 year old Austin Metcalf at a track meet in Frisco,
Texas. The family, claiming self-defense,
has raised
over $600,000 in support, with many of his supporters posting explicitly
anti-white racist comments.
Later that same month Shiloh Hendrix a white woman in
Rochester, New York was captured on video calling a black child a nigger – vile
word for certain, but one frequently used by blacks but arbitrarily off limits
to whites. After claims of death threats
and pleas for security she raised
over $700,000, with many of her supporters posting explicitly anti-black
racist comments.
Combine all of that with the growing phenomena called “Black
fatigue” and cities,
states
and members
of Congress calling for reparations
and you get an idea of where America’s temperature is on the scale of race relations.
And that’s where we are today. Obama had the opportunity to go
down in history as one of America’s greatest presidents. He not only didn’t
take it, but he made it worse.
For longer than I can remember we’ve been told that America
needs to have a Conversation about Race™.
We did, for generations, but it was always about whites abusing or
keeping blacks down. That is, or at least is now, the wrong conversation. The
conversation America needs to have today is pretty much the opposite. Far too
many blacks see the system, the police, whites and society at large as racist,
see themselves as victims and feel like they can do anything without consequences.
That’s a recipe for disaster. Both for blacks and for America. And that’s Barack Obama’s legacy.
There may be a tiny sliver of hope, however. There are a
growing number of black personalities and potential leaders who are pushing
back on that victimization narrative. Guys
like Jason Whitlock, Byron Donalds, Charles Payne, Jason Riley and others are regularly
telling their millions of followers how to succeed in life sans the
victimization narrative, sort of a wider version of what Chris Rock did with
his spectacular video How
not to get your ass kicked by the police!
With Donald Trump at the helm Barack Obama’s legacy has the
potential to be reversed as more Americans of all hues decide that the everything
is racist shibboleth and more broadly the cancer of DEI get the derision they
so badly deserve.
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