Originally published Sunday, April 6, 2008 at 12:00 AM
Leonard Pitts Jr. / Syndicated columnist
Shame on you, Mr. Mayor
Dear Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick: So it's a black thing? Not a sleaze thing, not a betrayal of the public trust thing, not a breaking...
Dear Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick:
So it's a black thing? Not a sleaze thing, not a betrayal of the public trust thing, not a breaking the law thing? Just a black thing?
This would seem to be the message of the recent rally thrown for you at a black church in Detroit. It was, to judge from media reports, quite the shindig. Standing room only; gospel choirs doing that gospel choir thing; posters in red, black and green; chants of "I can make it through the storm!"
The church's Cardinal Ronald Hewitt seems to have caught the spirit of the event when he declared, "Kwame Kilpatrick just happens to be the symbol of bold, uncompromising black power in this city. We're not giving him to you. He is ours."
And there you were, with your bold, uncompromising self, standing in the pulpit proclaiming, "I will humbly serve you till the day I die." O.J. Simpson and Michael Jackson would be proud.
I'm not comparing your alleged crimes to the murder and child molestation the courts say those two brothers didn't commit. All you did — allegedly — was swear under oath that you weren't intimately involved with your chief of staff, until a series of steamy text messages showed you two were getting busy like bunnies. Oh, and fire three cops who had gotten too close to the truth. Oh, and approve an $8.4 million settlement when lawyers produced said text messages.
But the reason I compare you to Juice and Mike is that, like them, when you got in trouble, you came running to us. The black community, I mean.
Granted, they had farther to run. Before the cuffs went on, Simpson and Jackson couldn't have found black America with a road map. The jock had ensconced himself in chichi Brentwood where he was said to have built a world in which about the only thing black was the busboys at the four-star restaurants. The moonwalker had — one of his top aides told me this once — peeled his skin the color of bones and carved himself a nose that would not be out of place on Tinker Bell, because his African features were abhorrent to him.
Yet, to listen to Jackson's brother Jermaine and Simpson's lawyer Johnnie Cochran, during their respective trials, they were some combination of Emmett Till, Rosa Parks and Kunta Kinte, targeted for the color of their skin, not the content of their criminal files.
"A modern-day lynching," said Jermaine, while Cochran said freeing Simpson would be a blow against racism. And black folks cheered the acquittals of these men like the Freedom Train had come.
It has become standard for high-profile brothers in trouble (thinkR. Kelly, Marion Barry, Mike Tyson) to wrap themselves — or be wrapped — in the flag of racial victimization. The claim that someone has been mistreated on account of race resonates powerfully for black people in a nation where the Jena 6, Genarlow Wilson, Marcus Dixon, Hurricane Katrina and other abominations are both recent memory and ever-present fear. Black folks tend to close ranks first and ask questions later when one of our own is in trouble, because we know the unfairness this country is capable of.
I honor my people for that.
But I'm sick of seeing our generosity cynically abused, our genuine fears manipulated, by brothers who have flat-out misbehaved. How often have we wasted political capital making racial martyrs out of guys like you?
As Public Enemy once said, "Some blacks act devil, too." We ought to remember that and guard our political capital more closely.
Frankly, Mr. Mayor, you remind me of Eliot Spitzer, but without the class. What he did to a prostitute, you're doing to a people.
For that, sir, you should be ashamed.
Miami Herald columnist Leonard Pitts Jr.'s column appears Sunday on editorial pages of The Times. His e-mail address is: lpitts@miamiherald.com
2008, The Miami Herald
NEW - 03:15 PM
Paul Krugman / Syndicated Columnist: Affordable health-care reform is finally within our grasp
Guest columnists: Compensate Pend Oreille County for impacts of Seattle City Light's Boundary Dam
E.J. Dionne / Syndicated columnist: Still-popular President Obama will be tested this summer
NEW - 03:16 PM
Guest columnist: A pay-go option for health-care reform
2009 fireworks time lapse
With strict parking rules enforced at this year's July 4th celebration on Wallingford Ave North, less cars and more spectators filled the streets.
Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
nwjobs

Post a comment

Michelle Goodman blogs about work/life balance.
Tax tips for new independent professionals
Post a comment
nwautos

Choosing a new sports car/coupe? Weigh the impact of your choice on your wallet and on the planet.
Post a comment
nwhomes

Find a new home or condo that fits your lifestyle.
Search New Developments
Builder Directory
- Seattle may allow homeowners to build backyard cottages
- Landmark Smith Tower mostly vacant
- Police: McNair's girlfriend bought gun Thursday
- Mariners Blog | What the Seattle Mariners learned on their road trip
- Property taxes: Appeals shoot up in King, Snohomish Counties
- Climber who died in fall was Duvall woman
- New laws help tenants evicted due to foreclosure
- Palin links resignation to 'higher calling' and blasts media in Facebook posting
- Former NFL MVP McNair killed
- Microsoft warns of serious computer security hole
- Palin links resignation to 'higher calling' and blasts media in Facebook posting
221 - What Mariners learned on this road trip
163 - Tent City on campus: UW stalls decision
118 - Seattle may allow homeowners to build backyard cottages
98 - FBI denounces rumors: Palin not investigated
91 - New laws help tenants evicted due to foreclosure
75 - Bellevue ordinance would fine retailers for not collecting runaway shopping carts
65 - Bicyclist fatally hit by SUV outside Bremerton
64 - 2 wounded in Central District drive-by shooting
63 - Man fatally shot by King County deputy during domestic-violence call
47
- Seattle may allow homeowners to build backyard cottages
- Property taxes: Appeals shoot up in King, Snohomish Counties
- Researchers stunned by inmates' success raising endangered frogs
- Hard times for tourist towns means good deals for travelers
- Landmark Smith Tower mostly vacant
- 250 gather in field near Twisp for fairy congress
- New laws help tenants evicted due to foreclosure
- Microsoft warns of serious computer security hole
- Plasma and LCD beware; OLED screens ready to go mainstream
- Home sales climb in June in King County; median price drops from year ago to $395,000








