Do politicians ever stop posturing? This is a valid question because as the situation surrounding the protests that began in earnest as a result of the deaths of Eric Garner and Michael Brown continues to fester, some powerful people – including current and former politicians, are seeking to take advantage of the limelight. The President Obama haters have come out in force.
They are throwing the president into the mix right along with New York Mayor Bill de Blasio and the Reverend Al Sharpton and accusing him of having blood on his hands as a result of the recent deaths of two New York Police Department (NYPD) police officers.
According to a story in The Washington Post, former mayor Rudolph Giuliani made the following statement while on ‘Fox and Friends Weekend.’ “We’ve had four months of propaganda, starting with the president, that everybody should hate the police. I don’t care how you want to describe it: That’s what those protests are all about.” The same story said that Patrick Lynch who is the president of the Patrolman’s Benevolent Association said late Saturday “There’s blood on many hands tonight; those that incited violence on the street in the guise of protest, that tried to tear down what New York City police officers did every day.”
This kind of pointed criticism was not leveled only by former mayor Giuliani but also by Representative Peter King, a Republican who currently represents New York, and George Pataki who is a former governor of New York. Based on this story, also in The Washington Post, these men have blamed Reverend Sharpton for being among those who have created the anti-police environment. It also said that “former New York City police commissioner Bernard Kerik said Sharpton and others had ‘blood on their hands.’ The story further said that “conservative commentators posted pictures on Twitter of Sharpton with President Obama to paint the president as a radical on issues of race.”
President Obama is eons away from being a president who is a radical on issues of race. Although the president was not mentioned directly by these men, the fact that they mentioned ‘anti-police’, and ‘blood on their hands’ seems to not-so-subtly seek to tie the president to this situation as being a part of the problem and not the solution.
It seems that these times would be among those when politicians put the partisan posturing aside and come together to work to resolve a grave problem that America is grappling with. But it seems that too many of them have forgotten about why they were elected in the first place; to work together for the greater good of America and the American people! They are not there to become political rock stars, garner the admiration of their constituent fans and gloat about their personal gain and how great they are! They are there to work; and they certainly have not done much of that over the past few years.
Many of the young protesters are saying that Al Sharpton does not speak for them and that is okay. They say that he is too tied to the ‘system’ so cannot be effective; he is inextricably tied to the way that our current leaders – civic and elected – do things. To them, this way of doing things no longer works so they must take a different approach. Again, that is okay. They must find their own path.
That notwithstanding, our elected and non-elected leaders must realize that while these young leaders are seeking their own path, they need guidance; even if it is guidance that they are resisting. They need to be under the auspices of leaders who have been tried and tested in civil and human rights efforts: someone who has the platform and ability to help assure that things remain below the boiling point. Reverend Al Sharpton is among those people who can do this.
All of those politicians who are busy honing their thespian skills, positioning themselves for reelection, constructing the catapults that will propel them back into office and place them in chairmanships on coveted committees and perhaps someday make them President of the United States should wake up right now. They should pull their heads out of the sand and step up and do the job that they were elected to do. They should commit themselves to work for the betterment of America and the American people.
It does not matter whether they like or dislike the president, Al Sharpton or anyone else and disagree with their politics. What matters right now is that we work to clean up this mess that we find ourselves in before it gets completely out of control.
Eulus Dennis