Doubtless
all of you here are well aware of the “beer summit” that took place the
other day. However, I’m not entirely sure if all of you saw a certain
photo that speaks volumes as to the character of
Sergeant Crowley.

You can find the image
at the White House’s official
blog here (I wonder how
long it will be up there,
though?).
The American
Thinker had something interesting to say on the
subject:
I am stunned that the
official White House Blog published this picture and that it is in the
public domain. The body language is most
revealing.
Sergeant Crowley
helps the handicapped Professor Gates down the stairs, while
Barack Obama, heedless of the infirmities of his friend and fellow
victim of self-defined racial profiling, strides ahead on his own. So
who is compassionate? And who is so self-involved and arrogant that he
is oblivious?
And they are right.
Sgt. Crowley had no reason to help Dr. Gates. After all, wasn’t it Gates
who had insulted both him and his family? Furthermore, isn’t Obama
supposed to be the emphatic one here (after all, it’s a trait that only
Democrats are supposed to have because they “feel your pain”!) for
inviting them down in the first place in the hopes of reaching some sort
of understanding that never came to
fruition?
But, in this unusually
candid photo, the truth comes out. Obama keeps on walking paying no heed
to Gates, and it is Crowley, who has been demonized throughout this
entire incident, who is left to help the
man.
I can’t help but think
back upon a certain photo I saw of President Bush and Senator Robert
Byrd.

President Bush had no
reason to even want to help Senator Byrd, who had spent much of his time
in the Senate railing against the Bush administration, particularly on
the war in Iraq, yet he helped the old man
regardless.
Note the difference
between the two Presidents. Furthermore, note how both Bush
and Crowley helped men who didn’t deserve it, at least not from
them.
Character isn’t about
who you are when you know the spotlight is on you, it’s about who you
are when it isn’t, or when you THINK it
isn’t.