Posted on 11/25/2014 1:10:09 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
"This is precisely what presidents of the United States should not do in such circumstances."
President Obamas statement issued in the White House pressroom minutes after the announcement of the Ferguson grand jurys decision not to indict officer Darren Wilson wasnt just a botch. It was a tragic botch.
On the surface, the president sought to strike a measured and balanced tone, and he hit many of the right notes in his brief statementto wit, we are a nation of laws, the decision was the grand jurys to make, there is no excuse for violence, and so on and so forth. But in the course of his remarks, he denied seeking to do what he obviously was doing, which was using those tragic events in Ferguson, Missouri, as a springboard for a broader discussion on lingering problems in American race relations. In doing that, he undermined his own call for calm and negated his suggestion that we should bear in mind that we are a nation built on the rule of law.
There are two fundamental prisms through which to view the heart-rending story in Ferguson. The first is that it was a tragic episode in which an unarmed young black man, Michael Brown, lost his life in an altercation with a police officer and that the matter, like all such matters, had to be parsed and adjudicated through the local criminal-justice system. That meant waiting for all evidence to be gathered and weighed before rushing to judgment. It meant further that we ultimately must place our trust in the justice system, which certainly isnt perfect, but it is all we haveand is likely to be carefully pursued particularly when it is under intense and emotional public scrutiny, as it was in Ferguson. Viewed through this prism, there is no call for conflating this delicate and difficult process with any broader national problems in race relations. In fact, it is inappropriately incendiary to do so.
The other prism presents a different picture, one that sees the Ferguson events as a reflection of a serious national problem of white racism within law enforcement and in the criminal-justice system. Viewed through this prism, Michael Browns death not only should bring an indictment against Darren Wilson, but represented an indictment against elements of American society. The two arent separable, in this view. Michael Brown didnt get a fair break from the police officer during that altercation, and if Wilson wasnt punished through the criminal-justice system, then that represents automatic evidence of something seriously wrong with the criminal-justice system. This is the underlying view of Reverend Al Sharpton and other agitators who use allegations of racism to whip up emotions in what President Obama calls communities of color.
These two views rendered by these two prisms have been clashing in Ferguson since the beginning, and everyone knew that when the grand-jury decision was announced, whatever it might be, that clash was going to become extremely intense. In such circumstances, presidents of the United States have a fearsome obligation to refrain from saying or doing anything that could intensify the emotions involved.
By conflating the events in Ferguson with ongoing problems of racism in America, Obama embraced the second prism and intensified the emotional situation in Ferguson, irrespective of all the disclaimers he carefully inserted into his statement. This is precisely what presidents of the United States should not do in such circumstances.
One crucial question here is whether Michael Browns fate was sealed by an underlying problem in American society or was the result, in significant measure, of his own actions. Another is whether the grand-jury decision was further evidence of racist sentiments lingering in the American body politic or a measured, conclusive examination of the evidence.
If the latter, then there is no reason to use those events as a springboard for a discussion of American racism. If the former, then there is every reason to use the Ferguson events not only as a broader discussion point, but also to question the entire justice system in Ferguson and St. Louis County.
Thats what Obama did. We need to recognize, he said, that this is not just an issue for Ferguson. This is an issue for America. He said the Ferguson events speak to broader challenges that we face as a nation and noted a deep distrust between law enforcement and communities of color.
Obama emphasized that theres never an excuse for violence, particularly when here are a lot of people of goodwill out there who are willing to work on these issues. Then he added:
On the other hand, those who are only interested in focusing on the violence and just want the problem to go away need to recognize that we do have work to do here and we shouldnt try to paper it over. Whenever we do that, the anger may momentarily subside, but over time, it builds up and Americas isnt everything that it could be.
That was the crux of the Obama statement. If you dont recognize problems in race relations and if those problems arent addressed effectively, then black people are going to get angry when events happen such as those in Ferguson, and those angers are going to erupt into violence. Thus did the president seek to put the onus on the country for any violence that erupted in Ferguson. In doing that, he actually placed some of the onus on himself.
If problems of lingering racism exist in America, then those problems should be addressed, and few Americans are better positioned to do so than Obama. But, if the Ferguson events cant be attributed to racism, then they shouldnt be used to spearhead discussions on any broader problemand certainly shouldnt be used in ways that could exacerbate racial tensions in Ferguson.
The president added to all this with his characteristic tendency to patronize people out in the country grappling with difficult situations, whom he seems to presume need his peculiarly sound counsel from a higher plane of wisdom. I also appeal to the law enforcement officials in Ferguson and the region, said the president, to show care and restraint in managing peaceful protests that may occur .As they do their jobs in the coming days, they need to work with the community, not against the community, to distinguish the handful of people who may use the grand-jurys decision as an excuse for violence. Distinguish them from the vast majority who just want their voices heard around legitimate issues in terms of how communities and law enforcement interact.
Two points emerge here: First, since when do law enforcement officials in Ferguson or anywhere else in America need presidential admonitions to refrain from working against their own communities? Second, and more important, you have to wonder where Obama gets his idea that, when riots begin, law enforcement can carefully isolate out the violent ones while benignly countenancing peaceful demonstrations. The lack of realism here is stunning.
Even as the president spoke, the violence in Ferguson was reaching the level of a riot. I really dont have any hesitation in telling you that I didnt see a lot of peaceful protest out there tonight, said St. Louis County police chief Jon Belmar. At least a dozen buildings were set ablaze, and an estimated 150 gunshots were heard by the time the New York Times filed its first story on the violence. The Times quoted Tammy Ruffin, 54, a local resident standing in stinging smoke that swept over her house, as saying, Its horrible, horrible, horrible, horrible. I knew this was going to happen.
It seems she knew something her president didnt fully comprehend. What he also didnt comprehend was that these incendiary situations out in the country call for caution and restraint on the part of presidents. By conflating events in Ferguson with broader matters of race relations, he attached himself, however unwittingly, to unfolding events in Ferguson.
It’s hard to reconcile his statement about being a nation built by laws when he blatantly disregards them himself.
The events in Ferguson are a testament to the total irrelevancy of the current WH resident.................
Then there is reality..... the third prism
The lazy and generally ignorant members of the Ferguson black subculture demand that criminals on the street act unfettered as they perpetrate all sorts of crimes against the people. That cannot stand.
Civil destruction must be punished harshly. The mob must be severely wounded
I like your phraseology.
Fourth prism: those black Americans who would like to live in Africa, where their skin color will be invisible OUGHT to save their welfare pennies and GO THERE.
I've been to sub-Sahara Africa once. Disenchanted black Americans REALLY ought to give Africa a shot.
One he lied about his citizenship...said he was born in Hawaii, when actually he was born in Kenya.
Two he lied to the Black people...”I'll bring change, I'll make life easier for you” when actually he has brought disgrace to America and to the Black people.
Three he has lied so many times about EVERYTHING and ANYTHING that the American people are through with him.
I think the best thing is for WE THE PEOPLE, since we spoke this last election, demand and demand strongly that he and his buddies leave the government. That includes: Biden; Holder; Poloski; Sharpton; and anyone else that WE didn't elect to run our country.
Obama Files Federal Charges Against Darren Wilson Following Grand Jury Decision in Shooting Murder of Michael Brown ?
And yet the writer here seems to imply that not only was Wilson guilty, every white person in America is guilty along with him.
I don't agree. If someone assaults me - punches me hard enough to break a facial bone, or pounds my head into the concrete - and I have access to a weapon, I'm gonna use it.
That's JUSTICE
OMG!!!! What a disgrace!!!
It is simpler than that...black culture, black parenting. Father a drug dealer, in and out of prison, Brown high in pot at twice the legal limit, strong arming store owners minutes before his death stealing from them...and this is the cop’s fault? What can’t they admit they have a problem and quit trying to lay it on whites. 72% born out of wedlock, 93% of blacks killed by blacks.....the evidence is staggering.
National Report is a fake news website which posts fictional articles related to world events.[2][3][4] The website was founded by Allen Montgomery in 2013.[5]
Several fictional stories run by the National Report have been briefly repeated as fact by mainstream news outlets, and in October 2014 the site was criticised for irresponsibly reporting non-existent outbreaks of ebola in the United States, including the purported quarantining of a town in Texas.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Report
See #13.
How is this a failure for him? Isn’t this moving in exactly the direction that he wanted?
“These two views rendered by these two prisms have been clashing in Ferguson since ...”
I don’t see any ‘clash’ in Ferguson. Rather I see ONE side acting out with impunity. When the clash does come it will be unmistakable...
"Burn this b**** down!"
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