Nothing in the video article said anything about the Policeman's Political affiliation, nor the homeowner, nor the CEO of that company.
It did speak about the initial presumptions of the Policeman, but when he learned the truth that dispelled his presumption... the story proceeded to show the nature and determination that exist within black people, and it showed that when the white people in the story, understood the details, they became supportive of the man.
Moral of the Story: "Don't Judge a Person until you walk a mile in their shoes" -
simplified, it means = "take time to listen and invest yourself to understand without bias or bigotry and don't fight the truth that are learned by doing so"
People often make wrong assumptions about people without ever engaging people to understand them. Racism is promoted by stereotype based prejudices, and such prejudices blind many from "listening, learning, understanding, and knowing what is truth".
I visited a cemetery in a small rural town yesterday, where many of my ancestry is buried, as I looked at the dates on the headstones and though about the hardships they endured, I came across one great uncle, who died when I was a pre-teen, he had all the classic symptoms of prostrate cancer, which ravaged him, back then no one had access or money to medical doctors and certainly not to hospitals due to cost. So, they tried to drink away the pain and sleep away the misery, until they succumbed to the cancer. This story can be told millions of times, as can the stories of many of the people in that cemetery who endured a life of devastation body break down labors... who contributed so much to the building of this nation, and they profited nothing to pass on as legacy and used all they earned just to keep a roof (often substandard housing) over the heads of their family, they grew gardens to supplement what they could not buy, and after a days work, they still had to come home and tend their gardens and their livestock.. Through it all, they made it to church on Sundays and they were determined to instill values of respect for God, and honesty with self and community. There were no homeless people in the black community, and people who had mental illness' or physical deformities' were embraced by the whole community and they were made to feel as a stable member of the family and community.
Most white people know so little about the life of black community and its people, or the history of black community and its people. When the world of America became more about "monetary measure to and extreme degree' it caused grave damages on top of the damages already endured within the black community, and the gap grew wider and wider from being able to cross that gap. The military no longer had the Draft, which was a pathway for many, jobs saw union busting, and then massive exportation of industry...and freeways created pass by of many small towns... and by the time society was hung up on shopping malls, big fancy home and everything became more and more about monetary status and monetary supported imagery, it created a wider gulf, and by the time blacks could get into community colleges and state universities,
along came Ronald Reagan, who defunded both community colleges and state universities and caused grave damages to black and this damage also impacted poor whites, who no longer had that avenue of military draft or community or state colleges.
There is much people don't know, but the young today are bringing light to these truths that have been covered over and efforts to bury it by a racism systems structure and its history of having done so.