The discussion on health care was much needed. I thought Obama did a good job of clearing up some of the threats to undermining the reform. He did approach trying to clarify peoples
misperception between
deficit and debt. Although I found my own attention wandering as he tried to go through it and realized, as I already had surmised, this is why it is so difficult to correct many
adults narrow vision of "checkbook math". So it will be interesting to see how successful his explanation will be in explaining away conservative fears of spending more money.
I, myself, am not happy with the way things are going on
health care in the Senate, as my earlier satire--below on the Senator Di suggests, I am a proponent of a single payer system. But I wanted to comment, per
Mowdy's review, on the lightest and most poignant moment during
Obama's question and answer period following his speech.
Addressing a reporter's question on his feelings regarding the arrest of
Henry Gates earlier this week Obama first clarified that he might not be as objective as he and
Mr. Gates are friends. But he gave a lot of good background on the topic. Then came "I'd be shot" as he sincerely but somewhat
ambiguously stated trying to describe the situation by placing it in the context of his own life and comparing it to that the
renowned scholar Henry Gates found himself in a few days ago. I am going to look on the
White House website and see if I can snag a video of the whole thing (it is not up yet so I will post the link to where it will be http://www.whitehouse.gov/live/). It is worth posting just for the health care speech of course but the
Gates moment just makes it worth paying attention all the way through.
I thought about writing on the topic of
Mr. Gates arrest earlier but again I would like to keep this about local Greeley stuff. With
Mowdy commenting frequently though I think there is an appropriate relationship between the macro and the micro here since she posted her own experiences with Greeley police just a day or so ago.
All of the text of the exchange between Obama and the reporter asking the question will probably be up in the media before the hour is out. I have posted what I could find at the moment. First here is a part of the original article from the
Washington Post on the original arrest. The event happened in Cambridge, MA.
Addendum (from CNN--of course they put the most sensational headline up instead of the truly important stuff on healthcare):
"I don't know, not having been there and not seeing all the facts, what role race played," Obama said Wednesday night while taking questions after a White House news conference.
Cambridge authorities dropped disorderly conduct charges against Henry Louis Gates Jr. on Tuesday.
Obama defended Gates on Wednesday night, while admitting that he may be "a little biased," because Gates is a friend.
"But I think it's fair to say, No. 1, any of us would be pretty angry; No. 2, that the Cambridge police acted stupidly in arresting somebody when there was already proof that they were in their own home; and, No. 3 ... that there's a long history in this country of African-Americans and Latinos being stopped by law enforcement disproportionately."
From the Washington Post on the original arrest:
"Henry Louis Gates Jr., one of the nation's most prominent African American scholars, was arrested last week at his home near Harvard University after trying to force open the locked front door. According to a report by the police department in Cambridge, Mass., Gates accused police officers at the scene of being racist and said repeatedly, "This is what happens to black men in America." The incident was first reported by the Harvard Crimson.
Gates, the director of the W.E.B. DuBois Institute for African and African American Studies, has been away from his home much of the summer while working on a documentary called "Faces of America," said Charles Ogletree, a Harvard law professor and friend of Gates who is working as his lawyer. Gates returned from China last week and had trouble opening the front door with his key.
Gates, 58, was arrested Thursday by police looking into a possible break-in for disorderly conduct "after exhibiting loud and tumultuous behavior" at his home, according to the police report. Officers said they tried to calm down Gates, who responded, "You don't know who you're messing with," according to the police report.
Ogletree said Gates was ordered to step out of his home. He refused and was followed inside by a police officer. After showing the officer his driver's license, which includes his address, Ogletree said Gates asked: "Why are you doing this? Is it because I'm a black man and you're a white officer? I don't understand why you don't believe this is my house." Ogletree said Gates was then arrested and charged with disorderly conduct and racial harassment."
Obama: Cambridge police acted 'stupidly' in Gates arrest - National Politics Blog - Political Intelligence - Boston.comObama: Cambridge police acted 'stupidly' in Gates arrest
Email|Link|Comments (2) Posted by Foon Rhee, deputy national political editor July 22, 2009 08:59 PM
President Obama addressed he arrest of Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr. at his Cambridge home during his news conference tonight, saying that "anyone would be angry" and "the Cambridge police acted stupidly."
Obama prefaced his reply by saying that "I might be a little biased here" because "Skip Gates" is a friend, and by acknowledging that "I don't know all the facts."
He then recited what has been reported, and joked that if he tried to jimmy the lock at his current residence -- the White House -- "I'd get shot."
But then he went on to say that there's a long history of African-Americans and Latinos being stopped by police disproportionately. "That's just a fact," he said.
America has made progress on race relations, and his election is testimony to that, he said, but the Gates episode suggests there's still more that needs to be done to end discrimination, he said.
