Racial profiling
Driving in a residential area last month. Heeded a stop sign at an intersection. Had planned to go through the intersection, but made a spur of the moment decision to execute a right turn in order to get to a nearby regional park and go for a run. So: activated my right turn signal, even though there was no car behind me.
So far, so good. Now it happened that there was a black and white car at the stop sign in the opposite lane, preparing to go through the same intersection. The driver of this car was a police officer. It caught his attention that I had hit my turn signal only after coming to a complete stop. Probably figuring there might be some reason I was hoping to avoid his gaze, he followed me when I turned right and parked my car 100 yards ahead. I got out of my car, locked the door, waved at the cop. He waved back at a guy obviously dressed for athletic activity. That guy (me) proceeded afoot to the trailhead and broke into a run that would make for a pretty sad crime scene escape on CSI. The caucasian cop pulled away because — wild projection my part — the caucasian driver, now runner, was no longer the person the cop thought he could be: a fugitive. But for a good 60 seconds he had every reason to "profile" me as such. And he probably ran my license number, just to be sure I didn't have any outstanding tickets, warrants, etc.
There's a four-letter word for what this officer was doing: "duty." You know, that thing he was sworn to do impartially when they gave him a badge. If he keeps running numbers like the one he ran on me, his superiors may decide to give him something else: a promotion.




