By Jeffrey Blehar
Friday, May 19, 2023
By now, you may have heard about the story of the newest
New York City “Karen” (the term refers to an officious or panicky white woman
freaking out in public, usually in a supposed expression of racial bias or
generalized “white privilege”). Her name is Sarah Comrie, she is a nurse at NYC
Bellevue Hospital, and on May 13 a video was posted to the internet purporting
to show her having a “freak-out” while trying to take a Citi Bike (New York’s
bike-rental service) claimed by four young black men. The narrative being sold
is that this woman tried to steal a bike that one of the (many) men in the video
had rented and cried “fake white-woman tears” to try and get them in trouble
before backing off. That’s it, that’s the story.
As expected for world-historical crimes documented by
camera, the reaction on social media was immediate, escalatory, and insanely
brutal. Noted spotlight-seeker Benjamin Crump, who is a “civil-rights attorney”
in the same way that Al Sharpton is a “reverend,” saw the video and confidently
tweeted: “A white woman was caught on camera attempting to STEAL a Citi Bike
from a young Black man in NYC. She grossly tried to weaponize her tears to
paint this man as a threat. This is EXACTLY the type of behavior that has
endangered so many Black men in the past!” (I would have linked the tweet, but
he deleted it this morning; you will soon see why.)
A lesser-known grifter went commensurately further for attention:
A suspected white supremacist woman
tried to steal a Citi Bike from a Black kid after he paid for it, and when him
and his friends wouldn’t allow her to steal it, she went thru all the Karen
tactics to try to get the Black youths hemmed up:
*Screaming for help
*Fake crying
*Mayo Babbling
The vilest slur of all came from a clickbait website
called NewsOne (I will not link to it), which made the immediately viral claim
that Comrie was the modern-day equivalent of the white Southern woman whose
false accusations led to the murder of young Emmett Till, one of the most
infamous crimes of the Jim Crow era.
And it was all based on complete nonsense. Oh, well.
As it turns out, Comrie has, and is more than willing to
produce, the receipt for her bike purchase. NBC New York then went and
cross-checked it with the viral video and found that the serial numbers matched
up. She was innocent. It was her bike. I have no idea whether those kids
thought that they had a genuine case or whether they were perpetrating a staged
“racism prank” on her for viral kicks, but they were 100 percent out of line in
every respect.
After all, something about the “Karen” narrative should
have seemed amiss immediately for anyone viewing the video.
Even though Comrie was instantly compared online to the infamous “Central Park
Karen” (another wildly misunderstood case, incidentally, but with far more
grey area than this one), nothing about her demeanor in the video suggests that
she was responding inappropriately. (She’s having a bad day, but in this
situation, in her shoes . . . you would be too.) She is pregnant, exhausted
from a twelve-hour shift, then suddenly surrounded by aggressive young men who
are claiming her bike, mocking her with insults about her fake tears and how
her “baby gonna come out retarded,” and filming her for posterity. All in a
city where, famously, things can go bad fast and without any warning. O ye
brave souls: Imagine yourself a 5’4” late-term-pregnant woman unexpectedly
surrounded and prevented from going home by four angry young men. How would you
handle it? She cried a little and called for help.
More than anything else, one cannot help but be utterly
revolted by the reaction of Comrie’s employer, NYC Health + Hospitals/Bellevue.
In a shameful replay of the sort of corporate cowardice we are now sadly
accustomed to, Bellevue, rather than support Comrie, immediately put her “on
leave pending review.” Her evidence is utterly airtight, and her lawyer is
righteously angry; surely she would have presented the evidence to her
superiors had she been given the chance. Instead, a pregnant nurse, innocent of
all but being the randomly chosen victim of a viral hate hoax, has been
punished by her employer, has had her name dragged through the mud (the
vindication always gets far less play than the original slander), and has had
her career potentially damaged.
We all know why: The endless demand for intoxicatingly
narrative-confirming stories of panicky white women who are overreacting to
black men. These stories — and they obviously make up a sub-genre at this point
— seem to scratch some sort of thinly veiled sadomasochistic itch among white
urban progressives. (One imagines their pleasure centers lighting up as they
shout, “GOD, yes, we are so awful, we’re the worst, oh, I love it,
give me more.”) The outrage machine grinds on endlessly because it produces
temporary endorphins (and clicks, always clicks), so who cares about poor Sarah
Comrie? She’s just more grist for the mill, and there’s a narrative to fuel
here.
Well, I care. Sarah Comrie was set up to take a fall
during social media’s most recent round of slash-and-burn reputational
destruction for no better reason, near as I can tell, than certain people’s
being bored and this being “something to do.” She was blameless, a scared
caregiver, pregnant and vulnerable, just wanting to get home after a
twelve-hour day of nursing. And she suddenly became a pariah, was suspended
from her job, and was tarred as a racist for no reason. All the while she was
the same person, just viewed through two different lenses: one in proper focus
and the other distorted. So, if anyone deserves justice, it is her, and proper
justice would be to give Comrie her good name back — all of
it. That name is Sarah, not Karen.
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