April 04, 2006
The Party Of Police-Haters
By
Michelle Malkin
There's only one thing more damning than the recent
caterwauling of cop-bashing Rep. Cynthia McKinney and
her
race-mongering mob:
The stone-cold silence of
Beltway Democrats.
While McKinney and her ilk sling wild charges of
racism and conspiracy at the police, national Dems have
yet to utter one clear word
in defense of the men and women who protect their
privileged backsides day in and day out in Washington.
But, hey, don't question their patriotism.
McKinney, who is black, is having the mother of all
Beltway snit fits because, she claims, a white Capitol
Hill police officer
"inappropriately touched" her last week. After asking her several times
to stop when she traipsed around a security checkpoint
without proper identification, according to police
accounts, the officer reportedly touched McKinney's arm
or shoulder. In response, she struck the officer.
You know, Rep. McKinney, as a fellow
"woman of color," I have been pulled aside by
government security agents numerous times for secondary
screening at
airports over the last few years. I've had my bra
straps snapped, my thighs pawed, and my torso wanded.
I've had my cell phone tested for bomb residue, my
laptop inspected, and my handbags manhandled.
My response was not to go postal or do a
Naomi Campbell on the gropers. My response was to
ask why they aren't doing
more security profiling.
McKinney is spitting venom about "double
standards" of justice. But if I had done what
McKinney did to the police officer just doing his job, I
would be marking time in the slammer. Caught in an
imperial act of lawlessness, McKinney is now
conducting her own victim Olympics to deflect blame and
responsibility:
Lawyer James W. Myart Jr. called McKinney "a
victim of the excessive use of force by law enforcement
officials because of how she looks and the color of her
skin. Ms. McKinney is just a victim of being in Congress
while black."
Harry Belafonte and
Danny Glover, admittedly ignorant of what McKinney
did on Capitol Hill, were on hand to add their tribal
"uh-huhs" and "amens" to the blanket
condemnations of white police officers.
On Monday, an entire contingent of black leaders in
Atlanta inveighed against law enforcement officers and
lent McKinney their unconditional political support at a
meeting of the Concerned Black Clergy of Metropolitan
Atlanta in the Community Church of God. (Hello,
church-and-state separatists?) "Racial profiling
is a well-thought-out and planned attack on black
political leaders," fumed state Rep. Roberta
Abdul-Salaam. "It's going from the gold dome down to
the White House. It's happening and it's wrong."
Another instigated the crowd: "We know what time
it is, and that's why the most progressive of us are
standing here. Because we know that if you can come and
get Cynthia today, you'll come and get us tomorrow."
Yet another McKinney supporter rattled his tinfoil and
asserted: "I believe this incident with Cynthia
McKinney is a setup . . . I say the politicizing of this
event was planned and staged! They decided to set this
brave sister up!"
McKinney later appeared on CNN to insinuate that the
entire
Capitol Hill police department had "problems
inside with the treatment of—or the respect for
diversity—let me say." She adamantly refuses to
apologize for her treatment of the officer she hit.
Two Capitol Hill cops died in the line of fire in
1998 defending politicians and government workers from
an
intruding gunman who
waltzed passed a checkpoint in the same manner
McKinney did. The Democrats' refusal to condemn the
McKinney mob's smear campaign against the Capitol Hill
police sinks to a new level of political cowardice. And
stupidity. Republicans have already announced plans to
introduce a bill defending the 1,700-member Capitol Hill
police force—reinforcing the Donkey Party's haplessness
on
public safety and
national security issues.
Contempt for law enforcement is a hallmark of the
party of Ted Kennedy, Al Sharpton, Chuck Schumer, Jesse
Jackson and the Clintons. New Yorkers won't forget the
shameful attack on members of the Albany Police
Department honor guard, who were cursed at and spat on
by participants in the
state Democratic Party convention in 2000. It's all
of a piece. To quote a certain
now-quiet Democrat senator from New York
pandering to her black constituents:
"And you know what
I am talkin' about."
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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