And You Won't Fuck Around No More - I AM THE LAW ~ Anthrax,
I am the Law, based on the Judge Dredd Series.
This
NY Times blogpost by Sudhir Venkatesh is a very interesting read of how some senior (crusty) police officers view the legal system and the ways in which they would like to dispense justice.
From the interviews:
You laugh, but the good cops never let problems get to judges. They are judge on-site, I like to say. And, I don’t mean just for stupid things like kids shoplifting... I mean for serious things.What strikes me is the sense
real justice is not to be found in the courtroom. I don't know if this is an unconscious feeling gained from watching too many Charles Bronson flicks. The comment section has insightful views from people.
If you agree we should have Police, which
is a valid question, what do you want the Police to do? Well, that's a huge question, for which I'm unprepared to diverge into right now, I will state Police Officers usually do not like having to respond to inane calls from people about the wind breaking their tree branches.
But, in concert with the Venkatesh piece, there have been several recent high profile stories involving police forces and the Use of Force.
The
dumping of a paraplegic man out of his wheelchair by a Hillsborough County Sheriff's Deputy in February 2008.
The
April 2008 acquittal of three New York PD Detectives for shooting and killing Sean Bell.
An
May 30, 2008 Chicago Police raid on a Hispanic club on 2514 W. Fullerton is now the basis for a $10 million dollar Federal Civil Rights Violation lawsuit.
Here is the NBC 5's venerable Carol Marin covering of the story of the raid.
I mention these examples because they are
perhaps** the most egregious recent instances. Additionally, with the ubiquitous nature of video cameras today (
watch this example) police officers need to actually behave properly.
From Chicago Public Radio Eight Forty-Eight,
here is an interview with Daniel P. Smith about his book, On the Job: Behind the Stars of the Chicago Police Department. (Greetings & Salutations to
Queen of the Harpies for the link.)
Smith discusses one of the key points of distrust between Police Officers and the American populace the predilection to apply perfect hindsight to stressful split-second decision making situations.
However, this is not only a problem with American law enforcement but with the American Iraq War as well.
The Hadithah incident, the
shooting in Fallujah of a wounded enemy in a mosque and everyone one of the checkpoint shooting Americans don't ever hear about or just plain ignore are others. Young men (and women hurray equality!) are placed in high stress situations which they judge to be
kill or be killed.
The oft quoted and perhaps trite maxim is summed up as,
Better to be judged by Twelve, than carried by Six. Of course, what the Chicken Hawk, Warmongering Cowards who champion war at home while ensuring their pasty, flabby, blubbery white asses do not get besmircthed by a grain of sand never understand is those choices injure even when the soldier making them is never physically wounded.
And that's the difference. As Smith said in his Chicago Public Radio interview (at 04:17) he "will never criticize a Cop, myself, for instinctual reaction" so too will I not criticize my fellow warriors for their immediate reactions on the battlefield. But Vulgar pre-mediated displays of power (Shock & Awe) can not be defended.
And this is one of the chief evils of the Iraq War. But maybe it's just another system of control, perhaps understood by those in power or perhaps not understood but simply exploited by the
Architects of War. A by-product of our evolutionary past and tribal beginnings in which our brains can focus and contemplate the deaths of a few of our fellow humans and can not grasp the horror of the hundreds of thousands dead as a result of our Invasion of Iraq.
**- There have been, thus far,
21 Chicago Police shootings (6 fatal) in 2008.