sweatdog wrote:If you think individuals of the branch of the government whos job is to protect and serve doesnt deserve basic human respect when hes doing his job, then you will have problems in your life.
Nobody here has argued that Crowley didn't deserve more respect than what he received from Gates. Nobody has argued that Gates was being civil and respectful and .
I can't speak for anyone else, but I am arguing that there was no cause to arrest Gates.
Gates is the civilian, yet he did not behave in a *civil* manner, i.e. to adhere to the norms of polite social intercourse.
Which, incidentally, is not by itself a crime. And even if it were a crime, failing to be polite is the type of crime where police shouldn't automatically resort to arrest at the first possibility. Making an arrest is an extreme action. Arrests should be reserved for situations where allowing someone to run free would make him a threat to society.
I don't think police need to "hold his hands", but they should be trained to deal with situations like this. We should hold our public servants to a high standard because they are being entrusted with special authorities. Police officers should be able to ignore non-threatening verbal abuse in most circumstances. They should be TRAINED to ignore non-threatening verbal abuse in most circumstances. They should not be arresting people for failing to show proper respect to authorities unless doing so could be dangerous.
I see it this way - kudos to the officers for making an example of a man who thought he could act out of line and get away with it.
Perhaps I am biased, being only half white myself, but I believe officers "making an example of" people like Gates (blacks and non-white Hispanics) at disproportionately high rates is a huge part of why we distrust the police so much in the first place. "Making an example of" Gates is likely to just make black men more distrustful of police, and more likely to abuse police officers.