Morag, do you see Professor Gates name in that statement? We were discussing "asserting one's rights" in general.
However, if Gates is capable of traveling overseas, getting on/off a motorcycle, I am more than sure he has the strength to lift his leg and kick.
Please share the name of the witness who has stated Mr. Gates tone was hoarse and subdued.
Gosh, I assumed that the reference to the racist rogue cop (quote magnolia...I don't understand the logic behind yelling, screaming, kicking, and calling a member of law enforcement "a racist rogue" cop in order to "assert one's rights" ) meant that you were talking about Gates in particular! My bad.
Here's a description of Dr. Gates' cycle- it's not a motorcycle:
http://www.boston.com/news/local/ma...3/friends_say_skip_gates_rides_no_high_horse/
Because Gatess legs are of unequal length and he has had hip replacement surgery, the professor rides a big red-white-and-black tricycle dubbed the Soul Mobile. He greets passersby by ringing a little bell, also a handy warning that hes approaching.
And here's a witness statement about the bronchitis:
The police report says I was engaged in loud and tumultuous behavior. Thats a joke. Because I have a severe bronchial infection which I contracted in China and for which I was treated and have a doctors report from the Peninsula hotel in Beijing. So I couldnt have yelled. I cant yell even today, Im not fully cured.
Whatever may have happened on that Cambridge front porch, it is a fact that Dr. Gates is a smallish, handicapped man. And it is a fact that there has been/is racial profiling, whether it occurred in this case or not (probably not). And it is a fact that the reporting witness has said that her description of the SPs did not include the word black, and therefore Crowley was inaccurate in what he included in his police report.
I doubt that Crowley is a racist. I don't doubt that Gates was hoarsely berating him, even after having showed his ID. And I don't doubt that a policeman hates being dissed- so do I.
But I strongly doubt that anyone present when Dr. Gates was arrested was afraid or overly alarmed by what they were observing. Gates was arrested because he annoyed Crowley. The charges were dropped because they would not have stood up in court.