Saturday, July 25, 2009

NOT IN MY NEIGHBORHOOD

You've left your house for a vacation without your keys or your even your garage door opener. While on vacation, a neighbor, who has agreed to keep an eye on your house, calls you with a heads up regarding a police-aborted break-in. Your relief surprise, shock, and thankfulness are realized, and you complete your vacation.

Upon your return home, you realize your home entry mistake. You and the friend that chauffeured you home have no alternative but to attempt to break into your own home, forgetting the attempt by real criminals a week or so earlier. Just as you make the unorthodox entry, the police are at your front door sternly, but calmly requiring your presence.

Let me stop here. Now, I'm certain most of us would, at this point, run to the front door and accommodate the police officer's instructions to the letter, realizing how this might look, even thanking the officer for his due diligence in protecting your property at his peril.

This, however, is not the case in elitist Boston (Bahsten) where, if you are a Harvard professor doing this exact same thing, your reaction is to demean the officer and accuse him of a counter crime.

Oops, I forgot to mention some tiny details about our Harvard professor: he happens to be black and an acquaintance of the 1/2 black POTUS and accused the officer, who has risked his own actual life TWICE defending the professor's property as a racist for daring to ask for identification of a man breaking into an upper-class home for being broken into the second time in about two weeks.

Then, our new President, who has been showing us more and more as time moves along (as well as his Harvard cronies), what a Harvard education can do for a person, shoots his teleprompter-less mouth off and says that the "police acted stupidly". As the nation's highest ranking law enforcement official, the use of the word "stupidly" is, well, stupid, especially after admitting that he did not know all the facts of the case and merely assumed the officers were at some sort of fault because police officers ALWAYS hassle the black man.

Here's a thought - Why hasn't this Harvard professor slandered the racist neighbor for calling the cops in the first place? Imagine, assuming two men forcably entring a black man's house are there for committing a crime. Or, worse yet, this racist neighbor assumed that the black man could not care for his own property. Why didn't POTUS call the neighbor "stupid" for making these assumptions? The neighborhood crime watch signs should come down immediately as they are racist for these reasons! No snitching!

Three and a half more years of this? God help us all.

According to the U.S. Constitution, I'm still allowed to say (write [type]) this.

2 comments:

Sherri said...

Wow, the person who gave you this idea for this post is genius! Well stated. Signs must be removed.

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