Please don't misquote me. I did not say "unsuited to intellectual pursuits" I said "temperamentally unsuited to intellectual pursuits." Of course, it would be ridiculous to say that blacks cannot be educated, but the experience in this country is that, despite receiving the same schooling as other races, they consistently fail to achieve the same or even similar results. In my view, to blame this on poverty when they are in receipt of the same welfare provisions as others is obviously erroneous. If people, regardless of race, can't be bothered or don't want to learn, there is no way they can be forced to.





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), but that's no reason our individual attitudes can't be both accepting and encouraging of the best talents in each person we encounter. I'm with you that the issue of race, society, potential for success, intelligence, status etc. all form a very complex and often vexing web...not surprising when exploring any single person can mean excavating a maze of complexity and society is nothing but a group made up of people.
)--First of all, as I think I posted elsewhere, I agree with you in that I think the Gates incident was not an instance of racial prejudice on the part of the officer and that it was an incident based on misunderstanding and tempers getting out of hand. As I said before, I can also see why this is a grey area and how the police might sometimes be justified in arresting a person for disorderly conduct. If I thought that every single officer on the police force was as honest as Prof. Crowley seems to be, and if I thought every incident was as free of problem as this one, and if I had the sense that the things Prof. Gates was shouting were truly disruptive and uncalled for in any case, then I might be in greater agreement with you on this issue. 
