The Phony 'War on Cops' & the Real War on Us: Cops try to defend their hyper-militarization
http://www.demingheadlight.com/deming-opinion/ci_21088115/phony-war-cops
Since early 2011 the mainstream press has expressed moral panic over an alleged War on Cops. That panic was sparked by a rash of police killings in January 2011. According to a March Christian Science Monitor article, 24 cops were killed on the job compared to only 15 during the same period in 2010. Speculation as to cause included rising anti-government sentiment, or disrespect for law enforcement. The panic itself apparently fostered a shoot first mentality among police, reflected in a record number of so-called justifiable homicides. US Attorney General Eric Holder called this state of affairs the spike in cop deaths, not the over-reaction unacceptable, promising federal action.
Like most moral panics used to justify government just doing something, this one turned out to be to say the least quite overblown. Smith County, Texas, Sheriff J.B. Smith was quoted as saying: I think its a hundred times more likely today that an officer will be assaulted compared to twenty, thirty years ago. It has become one of the most hazardous jobs in the United States, undoubtedly in the top five. Well, not quite (thats a polite, family-friendly substitute for bull-!).
In fact on-the-job police deaths had declined by almost half over the previous twenty years, at the same time as the number of police nearly doubled. The short-term upward fluctuation in police deaths was an anomaly, albeit a very visible one against the background of such low levels. Thats why statisticians look for large sample sizes.
Libertarian columnist Radley Balko reported in April of this year that
police officer deaths were down 48% from last year the lowest in sixty years. Death rates for cops is actually lower than that of the general population in 36 of Americas 74 largest cities. The job-related death rate for police is below that of several other occupations, including firefighter, coal miner and sanitation worker (from the carbon monoxide fumes they breathe walking behind garbage trucks). But if violence AGAINST cops hasnt increased, violence BY cops certainly has. Complaints of police brutality rose 25% in the seven-year period after 9/11, compared to the previous seven-year period. Despite an overall decline in crime rates and danger of on-the-job injury, police have developed an intensified sense of entitlement to minimize risk to themselves by any available means no matter how unreasonable.
Nearly every day Balko, who specializes in stories of police abuse, cites accounts of police shooting non-hostile dogs and even unarmed citizens. Grounds? The officer felt threatened. Every day another story of a person tased or beaten to death while in an epileptic seizure or diabetic coma for resisting arrest.
Police do whatever they feel necessary to avoid feeling threatened under any circumstances, and their political masters back them up. With crime and on-the-job police deaths their lowest rates in decades, cops defend their hyper-militarization, aggressiveness and SS-chic aesthetic with siege mentality rhetoric about an unprecedented danger to police. Frankly, they sound like Lt. Calley psyching himself up to massacre the inhabitants of My Lai.
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