Tonight the long-awaited Beer Summit on American Race Relations is being held at the White House. Where you stand on the arrest of Henry Louis Gates kinda depends on where you sit.
Because after all the discussions, arguments, jokes, whatever ... most already have made up their minds about what happened last week when the Cambridge Police were called to the home of the famous Harvard professor.
There are a couple of dominant narratives at work here:
The Police are Racist!
This is the easy one. Yes, law enforcement professionals tend to struggle with race. Anybody who wants to call me anti-police on that point should duck when they do. Google it if you must. Either way, the experience of African Americans -- and a good many others -- with law enforcement is not the same as mine. I accept that.
Many of those people heard the news of Gates' arrest and immediately understood it ... they knew it ... to be a simple case of racial profiling.
911 Call.
Black man.
Arrest.
Tinker to Evers to Chance.
But there's a counter narrative at work, too.
Just Say "Yes, Sir; No, Sir"
Those are the rules, right? This is what we still tell our kids and our irresponsible friends.
Generally it works for me, too.
No kidding.
No matter what your standing in society, it's easy to imagine yourself being popped for speeding or walking a line after three beers at happy hour. Yeah, bloody cops just trying to make quota, right?
But how many of us has ever been accused or even questioned about a brurglary? Or a robbery? Or a missing bike?
Yeah, I imagine it changes things.
The public relations point here is just this: You are not changing anybody's mind on l'affaire Gates.
Just not gonna hap'n.
But you might help them make up their mind.
Let's say 40 percent of Americans already think, nay, KNOW that this was a case of racial profiling or an overzealous cop.
Let's say that another 40 or so percent are positive this was case of a guy copping an attitude and thinking he's above the rules.
Still leaves 20 percent who just. don't. know.
That's where dominant narratives ... and elections ... are won and lost.
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