Unless you’ve been living in a closet this past week or
landed from a distant planet then you’d be ignorant to news stories of racial
tensions and rioting over an unarmed young Black person, Mike Brown, being shot
and killed by a White police officer in Ferguson, Missouri.
Major news networks were quick to pour gasoline on the event, something
they are very good at, spreading racial tension to the breaking point across
the nation; protests, vandalism and looting broke out as angry mobs of Blacks
did their best to prove that the Rule of Law only applies to other segments of
our society.
This morning we learned that there apparently (*apparently
used instead of allegedly) is more to the story, much more than had previously been released.
Turns out Mike Brown, the young unarmed Black youth who died
at the hands of a White Supremacist cop just looking for someone to kill, was apparently
(*) a prime suspect in a ‘strong arm robbery’.
Mike Brown was listed by name in the original report along with a
physical description which matched what he was wearing when a confrontation
with police happened within half a mile of the robbery.
It is not my purpose to continue the practice of ‘Trial by
Media’, something the main stream media lives for. Letting the courts determine the outcome is
so, what’s the term…old school. So much
of the original energy that causes folks to break things, set fires and
generally act with mob mentality is lost by the time facts are brought into the
discussion. It’s much easier to work the
leftist agenda of transforming America
when there’s a ‘Crisis’, isn’t that part of the rules for radicals?
No, today I wanted to share something which happened back in
the mid 70s when I was a young police officer working in Houston.
My partner and I were assigned to work the 3rd Ward, a mostly
Black community just outside of downtown.
A robbery occurred and the original unit responded and arrived in
remarkable time, putting out a description over the radio of a young Black male
suspect wearing a green football type jersey.
The suspect had not used a weapon but had roughed up the owner of a
small convenience store owned by a Korean family while taking all the cash in
the register and putting it in a brown paper sack. The suspect fled on foot in a northerly
direction.
Well slap my knee; we just happened to observe a young Black
male wearing a green football jersey running down the street in that general
area and he had a brown paper sack clutched in his hand. We approached with caution and placed him
under arrest, cuffing him and placing him in the back of the patrol car. The sack contained some crumpled up bills,
probably the fruits of the crime, as we headed back to the store to get a
positive identification on our suspect.
Here’s where it got a bit odd; the Korean store owner wouldn’t
identify the suspect in our patrol car as being the one who had just robbed
him. All of the sudden the green
football jersey wasn’t the same and the suspect didn’t have the same dark
colored skin. In short, the Korean store
owner didn’t have the courage to finish what had been started and wanted to
avoid retaliation.
My partner and I wrote down the suspects name for our report
and let him go, handing him the brown paper sack full of money we’d taken away
from him. The Korean store manager asked
for the sack of money; but since this wasn’t the fellow who’d robbed him we had
no reason to deprive the ‘rightful owner’ of his property. Creative or sloppy police work; your call…
What has this to do with the mess up in Ferguson?
I’ll leave that to someone who is much smarter; but it has something to
do with a double standard in race relations that has been foisted on our
society for as long as I can remember.
Instead of holding individuals accountable for their actions
we have permitted a goodly portion of one race to hide behind the color of
their skin, their Black hyphenated America. We could place the blame on their parents,
school teachers, ministers or a host of others to include government with all
the entitlement programs intended to bring about Social Justice; but in the end
the blame has to be laid at the feet of the individual.
If we operate under the delusion there are no consequences
for our actions interesting things happen.
Take for instance being stopped by a police officer for a
minor traffic violation; if you have the mindset that nothing you do will
affect the outcome of this fairly common social interaction you’d be sorely
mistaken. My partner and I used to get a
kick out of pulling over the proverbial
‘pretty young thing’ who drove under the impression her looks made her exempt
from traffic laws like stopping at red lights and stop signs.
Upon walking up to the car she’d offer a smile as if it were
the same as a driver’s license. When
we’d start writing the ticket she’d remind us, “You can’t write me a ticket”,
which sometimes was followed by our pen and ticket book being flung at us. When asked to step out of the vehicle we
anticipated, “You can’t arrest me”, which generally led to, “You can’t put
handcuffs on me”…and you wouldn’t believe the language we heard from the back
seat on our way downtown.
Now, if you would, insert the Race Card
and see how much more complicated that situation gets. I’m so grateful to have retired and no longer
subjected to that kind of crap.
But that doesn’t help race relations which have steadily
eroded in certain sectors of our society.
The solution is really very simple, not easy, just simple. Teach your children to respect others, to be
good citizens and follow the law. Avoid
the appearance of doing wrong, dress properly and with dignity in order to
present the best view of yourself when in public.
There would be a negative way of saying the same thing. Don’t go around with your pants hanging down
below your butt and stop hanging around gang-bangers or you’ll end up in prison
or in an early grave. Don’t back talk
your parents or anyone older than you and for heaven’s sake, when a police
officer addresses you have the good sense to be on your best behavior so don’t
act a fool or do anything to provoke a confrontation.
I’ve ramble on a bit and those needing to hear this, well, it
won’t do any good. The ‘suspects
matching the description’ offered here are too far gone; but I’ve been mistaken
before, let’s hope I am this time.
This article has been cross posted to
The Moral Liberal, a publication whose banner reads, “Defending The
Judeo-Christian Ethic, Limited Government, & The American Constitution”.
2 comments:
Yeh, I've heard that rioters chanted, "No box of cigars is worth a human life," or some other such tripe, but it really kind of depends on the cigars and the human involved. You could as easily say, "No cow is worth a human life," but I can recall a cattle rustling trial 25 or so years ago (yes, cattle rustling) in a rural Oklahoma county where the judge, just before handing down sentence, impaled the malefactors with his gaze and declared, "I never knew a cow that deserved to be stolen, but I have known some men who deserved to be shot."
Yeh, I was in the courthouse--and the court room--that day. SRO. The rancher whose cattle had been rustled was justifiably well-like, and the rustlers equally justifiably despised. They could have sold ticket to the trial.
[RIP, Cleve; you were a good judge and a great man]6605
Sadly, those needing to hear this are likely not the people that will read your blog in the first place... ;0
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