It’s the middle of the night. A family is sleeping
peacefully, all in one room together—including several children. A two-year-old
sleeps nearby in a crib. Their rest doesn’t last long, though. Seemingly out of
nowhere, a group of armed thugs breaks down the door. They toss a flashbang
grenade—a weapon made for soldiers in combat—into the room. It lands in the
toddler’s crib, seriously injuring the child, and the family can only watch in
dismay as the same thugs who injured their son—maybe fatally, for all they
know—carry him off. The family has done nothing to deserve any of this. They’re
not even the ones the thugs came for—just an honest mistake. We blew a hole in
your two-year-old, but hey, no hard feelings, right?
I wish I was making this up, but I’m not. For those who
haven’t heard the story already, it’s entirely too real. The two-year-old is
still in the hospital, seriously injured. The armed thugs were a SWAT team,
funded by taxpayer dollars. They were searching for a relative of the family in
question who they believed had made a fifty-dollar drug deal (God only knows
why this requires combat weapons to deal with). The relative was not at that
house. The police department’s response has simply been that they had no way of
knowing there was a child there (a dubious claim, since the family says there
were toys on the front yard). Even if one believes this claim, you might expect
them to be fairly sure there wasn’t a child there before acquiring a no-knock
warrant for the house (again, God knows why this would be necessary for some
minor drug offender).
But at least it’s an isolated incident. Generally speaking,
the police are obviously much more competent than this. After all, there’s no
other story in the news exhibiting grotesque police brutality—except for the
one about how Albuquerque police shot a homeless man. In the back. They then
proceeded to shoot him with beanbags (once again, God knows why they didn’t use
those non-lethal rounds before mortally injuring the man). But these are
certainly just “a few bad apples,” right?
Maybe not. At the risk of sounding repetitive (as I’ve
mentioned it in past blog posts), there was the widespread police brutality
against the Occupy movement. More recently, the ACLU released a report
condemning the increasing militarization of police forces across the nation. So
occurrences like the ones earlier mentioned may be anything but isolated, then
(even if those are extreme examples).
To state the glaringly obvious, this is troubling.
Obviously, the fact that unarmed people are being hurt or killed by the police
completely unnecessarily is horrific enough in and of itself, but the
implications for the future are even more ominous. Typically, the establishment
in America—which is to say the government and corporations (which are very often
allied)—have stayed in power not so much through force, but through propaganda,
“manufacturing consent,” to use Noam Chomsky and Edward S. Herman’s term. But
we may be seeing a real departure from that. The government (or governments,
more precisely) has already decided what you are and aren’t allowed to put in
your body. It’s now reinforcing that message with brute force. Tactics like
these make people afraid of the police. The police enforce the status quo
viciously. Their enforcement makes the people afraid. Because they’re afraid,
the people don’t change the status quo. The police enforce the status quo
viciously. A vicious circle if there ever was one.
In 1968, outside of the Democratic National Convention,
there were widespread protests, which were met with equally widespread police
brutality. Hunter S. Thompson wept. Walter Cronkite, the reserved, professional
news anchor the nation trusted, was so appalled that he called the Chicago
police “thugs” in a live broadcast. The nation was horrified. Would that sort
of reaction exist at all today? Or would we just sort of agree that it was no
real surprise at this point? I know I wouldn’t be surprised.
Militarized, corrupt, unnecessarily violent police forces
are not a norm that should be, or can be, accepted in a free society, or
anything resembling it. It’s becoming increasingly clear that we have let the
wrong people become police officers—people who abuse their power relentlessly
with utter disregard for those they’re supposed to be serving. Now they’re
getting the sort of weapons soldiers use in battle. This needs to be an issue
at the forefront of our national dialogue. If we let it go further, we may very
well surrender our chance to roll it back.
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