Dayton Daily News

Had Obama not played race card, Floyd might be alive

- Larry Elder Larry Elder is a bestsellin­g author and nationally syndicated radio talk show host.

George Floyd might be alive had former President Barack Obama not, for eight years, consistent­ly play the anti-cop race card.

Despite receiving more white votes than 2004 Democratic candidate John Kerry, Obama said: “The legacy of slavery, Jim Crow, discrimina­tion in almost every institutio­n of our lives — you know, that casts a long shadow, and that’s still part of our DNA that’s passed on. We’re not cured of it . ... Racism — we are not cured of it.”

Obama’s own presidenti­al victory demonstrat­es that America is not “systemical­ly racist.” In 2007, Gallup found that fewer Americans (5%) said they would not vote for a Black person than said they would not vote for a woman (11%), referring to his nomination rival Hillary Clinton. The same Gallup poll found that 24% and 42% of Americans, respective­ly, would not vote for a Mormon, referring to Mitt Romney, or for a person who would be 72 years old when he became president, referring to Sen. John McCain.

Early in Obama’s first term, an incident in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts, gave him a golden opportunit­y to defuse the lie that the police engage in “systemic racism” against Blacks. The Cambridge police briefly arrested Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates, a Black friend of Obama, in his home. Gates, back from a trip, couldn’t open his front door and reportedly asked his driver to help. A neighbor, observing two people she did not recognize trying to force open the front door of Gates’ home, called 911. The cops arrived and politely asked Gates to exit the home so the police could determine ownership. Instead, Gates mouthed off and was briefly arrested.

Obama said, “The Cambridge police acted stupidly.” But the Cambridge Police Superior Officers Associatio­n and the Cambridge Police commission­er insisted the officer simply followed protocol. Obama’s statement infuriated officers all across the country and set up a template for the Obama administra­tion: Cops systemical­ly engage in unlawful antiBlack racial profiling.

Suppose Obama had not insultingl­y denounced the Cambridge police. Suppose, instead, Obama had said: “I’ve just spoken to my friend, professor Gates. I reminded him that he is a role model and that his behavior with the Cambridge police officer, who was merely doing his job, was unacceptab­le. We need to understand as Americans that officers typically have a difficult job. Yes, there are bad cops, but for the most part, they’re trying to do their best. And contrary to popular perception, the police, in recent years, have killed more unarmed whites than Blacks. It is a lie, not supported by the evidence, that cops are killing Blacks just because they’re Black. This is not your grandfathe­rs’ America. It is our job as civilians to be respectful, polite and by all means comply. Comply; you won’t die.”

Suppose Obama encouraged Blacks to comply with the police and that if one feels mistreated, to get a name or badge number and sort it out later. Eric Garner died after an encounter where New York City cops arrested him for selling cigarettes. Had he not resisted, he would likely still be alive. Jacob Blake was shot several times by the Kenosha, Wisconsin, police when they suspected him of reaching for a knife. Had Blake complied, he would not be in a wheelchair today. Would that have encouraged

Black suspects like George Floyd to respond differentl­y to an encounter with the police?

Mr. Obama, tell the truth. Save lives. It’s not too late.

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