Congressional Black Caucus makes wrong call
Star Parker
Where's the CBC concern about the illegal drugs smuggled
into the U.S. from Mexico that cause havoc among black
youths?
When the House voted Thursday to find Attorney General
Eric Holder in criminal contempt of Congress, members of
the Congressional Black Caucus walked out.
Why is the Black Caucus trying to make this about race?
It's about Holder's refusal to turn over Justice
Department documents requested by the House Committee on
Oversight and Government Reform in its investigation of
the "Fast and Furious" operation.
Fast and Furious was a "gun-walking" operation conducted
by the department's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms
and Explosives. ATF would allow known smugglers to
purchase arms from dealers in Arizona, intending to
trace them to their destination with operatives in drug
cartels in Mexico.
Before the vote, the Black Caucus' chairman, Rep.
Emanuel Cleaver, D-Mo., appeared on CNN calling the
House contempt vote "silly and detrimental to one human
being." On MSNBC's "Politics Nation," he told host Rev.
Al Sharpton, "This is partisanship at its most base
level."
Sure, it's an election year. And if you had to stretch
to appreciate the complaint against Holder being made by
Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., chairman of the House
committee doing the investigation, you might buy
Cleaver's claim that this was just Republican political
grandstanding.
But you don't have to stretch to appreciate the case
against Holder.
It seems pretty clear that Fast and Furious was a
botched operation. The ATF lost track of some 2,000
weapons that disappeared into the hands of criminals in
Mexico. In December 2010, weapons traced to this
operation were found on smugglers who murdered U.S.
Border Patrol agent Brian Terry. Others were tied to the
murder of at least 200 Mexican citizens.
The investigation into these ATF activities began with
inquiries by ranking Senate Judiciary Committee member
Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, after Terry's murder.
The Justice Department, in a letter to Grassley,
initially denied the existence of gun-walking
operations. But this picture changed when ATF
whistleblowers brought facts to the contrary to light.
Subsequently, Justice withdrew its letter, saying its
denial of these operations' existence was mistaken.
Inconsistencies in Holder's testimony before the House
committee produced further reasons for suspicion. And
then Holder stonewalled for months, refusing to produce
the documentation the committee requested.
Whether there is a fire here remains to be seen. But
there is plenty of smoke.
Yet Cleaver calls the House vote holding Holder in
contempt "silly?" The Black Caucus chairman should have
the opposite reaction, if only for concern for his own
community. Illegal drugs smuggled into the U.S. from
Mexico cause havoc among black youths. According to the
Center for American Progress, there have been more than
25.4 million drug convictions in the U.S. since 1980,
and one-third of them were of blacks.
To grasp what's really motivating Cleaver, I apply what
I call the "Time to Kill" test.
In the 1996 film by that name, a black man in a
Mississippi town hires a white lawyer to defend him
after he kills two white racists who raped and mutilated
his daughter. When the lawyer makes his closing
argument, he asks members of the jury to close their
eyes. He describes the atrocities done to the girl and
concludes: "Now, imagine she's white." His black
defendant is acquitted.
So close your eyes. Consider the details about Fast and
Furious and then picture that the attorney general is
not Eric Holder but John Ashcroft (who'd served under
President George W. Bush) and that the murdered border
agent, Terry, is black.
Would Cleaver now call this contempt vote "silly?" Would
the Black Caucus walk out?
For the Black Caucus, this is about racial politics.
Fortunately for us, for Issa (who happens to represent
my home district in California), this is about shedding
light on what might be broken in ATF operations.
Star Parker
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