Sunday, July 26, 2009

Gatesgate

I recently talked with my friend, Lori, about the arrest of Henry Louis Gates, Jr., the black Harvard professor, the arrest that President Obama in his prime time press conference called stupid, followed later by a kind of an apology to the Cambridge police and the arresting officer. Obama said he could have "calibrated" his words better, a calibration that I'm sure has his critics hooting.

Anyway, she said that we shouldn't waste our time talking about the incident, and I said I disagreed. I said, not fully believing myself, that it might lead to some useful conversation about race and class. With her permission, here's her email response (with some minor editing):

Ok, here's a real response to Gatesgate (it's only a matter of time, right?).

First, everyone who knows or knows of Skip Gates has said, "serves him right." This guy is typical of BigHouse Academics--coasting on a reputation and the work of grad students. He hasn't had an original thought since the late 20th century and is besotted by his own celebrity. His documentary about Africa was atrocious (reportedly, for I saw only a few minutes.) His public personae is unctuous and unworthy of scholarly attention. Oprah's DNA. Please.

But those are the rewards of life in America--if you become a celebrity in anything you get to leave all the mundane stuff behind. You don't have to teach, really (just come in and "profess"); you go on TV, you become Famous. So most of us are just thinking, "Good. You probably deserve a little jail time, you f______ twit."

But there's a real issue here which is, why do the police feel free to arrest, harass or otherwise not give the benefit of the doubt to someone who is black and male and standing on his own front lawn. If he were drunk, fine. If he had pulled a gun or brandished a weapon, there's a case. But he was YELLING. He called the cop a racist and, after a few weeks in China (where he was, ostensibly, doing some other
celebrity documentary on a subject not of his own expertise) and a long flight he was probably more than a bit cranky. A white guy in the same predicament (a white upper class guy--there aren't any poor white people living in Cambridge) would have been cut a much larger slice of slack. They would have patted him on the head and sent him inside. But to ARREST the guy? Preposterous. And Obamarama was right the first time--STUPID! Do NOT arrest celebrity intellectuals who have a platform over which you have no control. Now we will have the specter of Gates proclaiming his solidarity with all the brothas who are doing time. Now he will have street cred because he spent, what, an hour in the Cambridge lock up. Oh, boy. Is your sphincter twitching? Did you become someone's bitch, Dr. Gates? How horrible for you.

What I dislike most about this is that Black people like Gates (and me--I do not disavow my own privilege) exist between the scylla of race and the Charybdis of class. Not dammed if we do or don't, but rather--what's at work here? Clearly, as the "phantom negro" pointed out [found here], Gates forgot where he was from He's lived most of his life within the protective shell of academic privilege. That doesn't mean he doesn't get funny looks in the grocery store. My father was a well-paid, well-known surgeon for his entire life in Indianapolis but it didn't stop clerks from not wanting to cash his checks or making sure that what he was buying was EXPENSIVE. (He was once buying pistachio nuts for my mother - a pound I think. The girl at the counter said, 'you know those are $3.00 a pound" or whatever they were. And he said, 'Yep. I'll take two." Better to have a sense of humor about this sh__.) Anyway, Gates always wants to seem as if he is "down" as if he is just that poor black kid from West Virginia. But he's not anymore. He hasn't been that for a long time. He has come to expect to be treated with a certain deference that comes with academic status. I think about this all the time--I'm walking up the stairs and a horde of clueless cellphone-humping 18 year olds are standing between me and my job and I think "can I have a little deference here? Anyone? I'm the f______ teacher, you sh__heads. Get out of my way." But, alas, no. The waters do not part. They treat me like the help I am. SO be it.

So, it's complicated. Skip Gates is an asshole and some of us are glad he was publicly humiliated. But his being an asshole doesn't mean he deserves to be treated like a criminal on his lawn. Will this do anything to advance the conversation about "race"? No, because Americans do not WANT to have a conversation about race. Americans do not want to think intelligently about class and discrimination and respect and privilege. The fact that the guy who arrested him was their diversity trainer says a lot. Here is a man who can't see far enough into the near future to think "hmmm... maybe I shouldn't arrest Professor Gates because it might look as if I'm harassing a well-respected Black man and that might echo centuries of racial oppression. Maybe I'll just walk away." THIS is the guy who trains OTHER cops about racial profiling. Good.

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