Pastor Terry Jones, the pastor and shepherd of the small flock of The Dove World Outreach Center in Gainesville, FL, has been caught, yet again, making an effort to burn the Quran. Exactly 2,998 Qurans, to be exact. I am not sure if he thinks this number is somehow Divine or if the good reverend just can't count for beans. In either case, he is a complete moron. As I graduated from the University of Florida in Gainesville, fortunately a long time before Jones arrived in town, I feel a certain embarrassment at what he says, thinks and does. It is personal to me in a way.
Let there be no doubt, I strenuously object and otherwise abhor what this nutball thinks and says of another religious group. Unfortunately, I defend his Right to say what he wants, think what he wants and engage in acts that express that thinking. I have to go back to the school-age rhyme that starts "sticks and stones..." Contrary to what we see in the movies, we don't get to smack a guy in the mouth for saying something objectionable. I will make one personal exception to that, insult my sainted mother and I'll break your jaw. Call it a claim of personal privilege.
Jack asses like Pastor Jones are one of the many prices we pay to live in a free society. He is the exception that gives the normal people the Right to be normal. The expression of his obvious hatred of Muslims, by burning their Holy Book, does have limitations, however.
At the time he was arrested in Polk County, FL, with 2,998, kerosene-soaked, Qurans, Pastor Jones was on his way to burn them at a location where he had previously been denied a permit to do so. I am not absolutely sure what the rationale for the denial was, but I can think of one, public safety. I cannot burn waste paper in my back yard without a permit and the county will not issue me one. My relatively modest amount of flammable trash would not compare with the fire created by almost 3,000 kerosene-soaked Holy Books. I would object to the pollution caused by such a burning, and this is based on their paper content, not their designation as Holy.
The above scenario represents a subterfuge to prevent this man from making a statement. I shall leave it to the lawyers to argue over which value prevails; that is why we have Courts and lawyers. My preferred way to deal with it is to just brand him the nut job he is and ignore him. If he held a massive Quran burning and nobody came, nobody wrote about it and the Muslim World embraced his Right to do this stupid and pointless thing, he would eventually just go away. This man wants to shout at the top of his lungs a position I would spend a lifetime opposing, but I will defend his Right to do it, within limits. I just wish the Muslim World could see the point.
I do not see Muslims doing nothing and my fellow Liberals will, no doubt, engage in their Right to protest. In this case and others, I like what my parents taught me, "If you just ignore him, he'll go away."
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
TEA PARTY Sounds So Much Nicer than Mob of Racist Homophobes
Recently the Tea Party held a
political event on the grounds of the Arizona State Capitol. A reporter came to the event to document the
speeches being given, but he was recognized as an individual that might not see
it exactly the way the Tea Partiers would have liked it reported.
Their reaction was at first, to just try to make it difficult for him. They somehow came to the conclusion that the State Capitol grounds had somehow become private property when they got a permit to gather; it had not. They also apparently thought that they got to approve, authorize and accept who was going to be there and that they could limit access; they could not. All of these erroneous thoughts left them with the idea that they could make the man leave; and they could not. There was no legal justification for these Tea Party Members to prevent a new media person, or just a citizen on public property, from video-taping their speeches, and yet they thought they could. I would identify the problem as being related to the fact that these people were Neanderthal morons so often times associated with the Tea Party.
Their reaction was at first, to just try to make it difficult for him. They somehow came to the conclusion that the State Capitol grounds had somehow become private property when they got a permit to gather; it had not. They also apparently thought that they got to approve, authorize and accept who was going to be there and that they could limit access; they could not. All of these erroneous thoughts left them with the idea that they could make the man leave; and they could not. There was no legal justification for these Tea Party Members to prevent a new media person, or just a citizen on public property, from video-taping their speeches, and yet they thought they could. I would identify the problem as being related to the fact that these people were Neanderthal morons so often times associated with the Tea Party.
In this case, they were clearly
“biker-types.” These individuals had
long, unkempt grey beards, long grey head hair, jean or leather jackets with
numerous motorcycle “club” patches on them.
They used words like “Motherf**ker”
this and “Motherf**ker” that. This
language was more indicative of the complete lack of sophistication the people
had. They also lacked anything
resembling “class.” OK, they had class,
but it was all low class. These Tea
Party members had all the class one would expect of a wanna-be motorcycle gang;
big soft bellies, on both the men and women; hugely sagging breasts suggestive
of softballs in sweat socks; too much make up, ratty grey hair. Oh ya, they were classy folks alright, and
the acted exactly consistent with their appearance.
They engaged in the usual tactics
of the school-yard bully. They
approached the man, first trying to block his view and spewing their tripe
about it being private property. These
morons thought the State Capital Grounds could be private property, a blunder
of monumental proportion, but these gentlemen, and ladies, had no interest in
what was right or true, they wanted to do whatever they wanted to do. What they wanted to do was make this man leave,
and it became clear that they would use force if necessary, those Second Amendment remedies, but the reporter
stood his ground. Even the speaker
tried to point out to the crowd that the reporter had Rights under the First Amendment, but this did
not deter our group of troglodytes, no way.
The next action was to push the
reporter with their rather large beer-infused bellies. While doing so on video tape, they narrated
how the reporter was pushing them, in spite of the video tape showed them belly
bumping the reporter, in an effort to move the reporter out of the way. I was reminded of a grade-school bully who
would grab another weaker kid’s arm and start hitting him with his own arm, the
whole time saying, “Why ya hittin’ yourself?”
Huh? Why ya hittin’ yourself? It was just pathetic on so many levels. It was an embarrassment is what it was, and I
was appalled.
This group clearly thinks they
have all the rights to the First Amendment to the exclusion of all others. When this reporter stated he had his First
Amendment Rights, the crowd was reduced to calling him a “COMMIE,” because we
all know that Communists don’t have Free Speech Rights in the United States,
right?
This Tea Party group exhibited every hypocritical and abusive behavior for which they have become the brunt of jokes and for which they are reviled. Hell they did elect Jan Brewer as their Governor. They deserve to be the brunt of jokes with a Governor like that. They have clearly found the least common denominator to represent them in Arizona, a fellow moron!
Monday, September 9, 2013
PERSONAL PRIVACY – I WAS WRONG….BUT, I TOLD YA SO !!
Yes, I admit it, I was wrong in my May 23, 2011, blog post
regarding personal privacy and the threats to personal privacy. I was wrong because I so incredibly
underestimated what the government of the United States, and specifically the
National Security Administration (NSA), was and is doing to compromise the security
and privacy of…of…well EVERYTHING !
The NSA has adopted a policy that everyone is suspect, until
proven otherwise, and then, in all probability, that one time they prove
otherwise applies only until the next time they suspect you. They have adopted a policy of collecting everything
and then they get to figure out who was naughty and who was nice, only Santa
they ain’t. This policy has likely
created the largest dragnet of personal information of innocent people the
world has ever known.
Thanks to the revelations of Edward Snowden, we now know
that the NSA has been collecting pretty much every communication between every
United States citizen and anyone else on the planet inside or outside the
United States. This includes email,
telephone calls, radio calls (okay, that was always pretty open anyway) and the
United States Mail. We now know, in
fact, that the NSA has done its level best to compromise, by hook or crook, any
kind of communication security in which we engage in this country and probably
the world.
The NSA has worked to compromise the security of
communications using requests, begging and pleading and finally, conniving, threats,
coercion and force. Every company and designer
of security software has been asked to put a weakness in their encryption
software or install a “back-door” that allows the NSA to circumvent the need
for a password to de-encrypt an otherwise coded message. Those that refused found themselves “under
investigation” and their top-level executives threaten with prosecution and
jail if they failed to comply. Many
companies just got “hacked” and the back-doors installed without their
knowledge.
As more and more information becomes known, we find the NSA
reeling. Why? Because they never thought they would ever
get caught. They never thought they
would have to explain, to a previously unsuspecting citizenry, why they need to
read our mail and listen to our phone calls.
They are having a huge hard time of it.
It seems that when they have screwed up in the past, the so-called
FISA Court, has admonished them. What
has been the result? Greater secrecy! The NSA is not about doing what the Courts tell it what it should be doing, it
is about figuring out how to make things ever more secret; make it harder to
get caught. When the NSA and the
government get caught with their hands in the information/intelligence cookie jar,
they just add a few more layers secrecy so no one can figure out how they are
violating the privacy of the people. It
is that simple.
Nothing healthy grows in the dark. The kind of growth you don’t want is what thrives
in secret. The NSA has become a mold on
freedom and all it wants is more secrecy, more darkness so it can flourish at
the expense of us all.
Edward Snowden will be forever reviled in the intelligence
community. As a result of what he has
released, and what he continues to release, We The People, have figured out
what our government is collecting on us, but this is not about Edward Snowden
as much as it is about what the government is collecting on each one of We the
People.
I do not understand why people are not standing on very tall
soapboxes, screaming at the top of their lungs, to whoever will listen, that
this is wrong. We are being raped of our
privacy and the NSA’s response to getting caught, in addition to trying to make
it harder to catch them next time, is to tell us it is necessary and for our
own good. The government is engaged in the
moral equivalent of combining “Trust Us” and “It is inevitable, just lay back
and enjoy it.”
I know the response of most of my Conservative friends, “Well,
I don’t care who knows what I am doing.
I am not doing anything wrong.
Let them look.” As I have said
before, that is fine, you are welcome to give up your Right to Privacy, but you
are not entitled to give away mine. Sit
down right now, draft a letter to the NSA and give them the authorization to
read every letter, email, text message, note and memo you write. Give them the authority listen in on every
conversation you have, tap your phones and hell, while you are at it; let them
take a peek at your medical records. Why
would you care if they know you aren’t sick or maybe you are? What difference does it make?
It is when you start to try to give away MY right to privacy that I take great
exception. Remember, some of the worst
oppressions on the planet came at the hands of a majority against a minority. Just ask African Americans (You remember,
slavery?), Native Americans (does Wounded Knee ring a bell? Reservations?
The Trail of Tears?). The world
is rife with examples of uncaring majorities allowing the rights of minorities
to be compromised or eliminated altogether.
The Jews in Nazi Germany were just such a minority and now we hear that
prolific cry, “Never Again.” Where are
those cries now, in light of the massive violation of our privacy at the hands
of the government?
Since it is a Right (note the capital R) as defined by the
Supreme Court as being guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States, I
do not have to justify why I wish to invoke that Right. It is my Right to do so, and I am not
required to explain it to anyone. Ask a Conservative to justify why he wants or
needs to keep and bear arms, they will routinely tell you, “Because it is my
Right.” Oh and one of the justifications
for why the government cannot require you to register your firearm(s) is
because you have a Right to Privacy.
By the way, all you so-called “Constitutionalists,” the word
“privacy” never once appears in the Constitution, but it comes from an
interpretation of the Fourth Amendment by the Supreme Court. Does that reviled term “judicial activism” work
for you here, or would you argue that in the United States we have no Right to
privacy and the government can act with impunity and disregard to anything
related to personal privacy? You better
watch out because without a Right to Privacy, gun registration may not be far
behind. Is there anything at all that is
just none of their business? I am afraid
the American People have a strange way of deciding what is and is not anyone’s
business for themselves, but then there is that pesky majority rules, minority Rights
argument.
This issue is becoming less and less about Edward Snowden
and more about the abuses of power and technology in which the U.S. Government is
engaged. We are finding out that the
Government views us as little children who have no idea what is in our best
interests, but as good parents, our government thinks they can tell us. This does not, in my opinion, square with
government by the people, but most
certainly fits within their definition of government of the people.
Friday, August 23, 2013
Snowden: Hero or Traitor? Maybe a Little of Both
In this digital age, when Edward Snowden released
information related to the NSA gathering of telephone and email information on
what can only be described as a massive scale, there was the digital age rush
to judgment. We have, as a society, been
increasingly immediate gratification oriented.
The digital age has replaced that with instantaneous gratification
orientation. Anything less than light
speed is just to slow. Such is the case
with Edward Snowden.
I figured something was seriously wrong when the U.S. Government tried so hard and so fast to get out in front of the Snowden situation. By that I mean, they were right there, out front and center, condemning this guy in unequivocal terms. It was too much and too fast for my liking. I am a very much a let’s wait and see what all the facts tell us.
I figured something was seriously wrong when the U.S. Government tried so hard and so fast to get out in front of the Snowden situation. By that I mean, they were right there, out front and center, condemning this guy in unequivocal terms. It was too much and too fast for my liking. I am a very much a let’s wait and see what all the facts tell us.
The government knew exactly what Snowden had access to and
what he could possibly release well before he released it. They had to do whatever was necessary to
discredit him, immediately, if not sooner.
For the government it was initially pure damage control. Edward Snowden was a traitor, thousands of
lives were placed in jeopardy and the Cardinal sin of intelligence, revealing sources
and methods, would destroy us. Terrorists
would launch attacks, nuclear weapons would be required, millions would be
killed and other such tripe was issued forth.
They had to poison the well, so to speak, and make Snowden the single
least credible person on the planet.
They had to make sure the people did not believe anything he said and
trust them, in spite of the disclosures.
I have personally had access to secret materials, the
content of which I will not reveal, but I can assure you that the single most
often used reason for classifying material, at whatever level, is to prevent
some moron who did something stupid from being exposed. It rarely has anything to do with revealing
sources and methods or keeping national secrets nor maintaining national
security. It usually has everything to
do with someone in power or position, in the military or the government, who
has done something illegal, immoral, unethical or just stupid or fattening and
might be embarrassed if anyone finds out.
Poof, it becomes classified and no one is the wiser, problem solved.
The problem with this is that it makes for an incredibly
non-responsive government. How do you
complain if you have no idea who did it?
Hell, how do you even know to complain if you don’t even know that something
went wrong? That is the problem with secrecy;
it limits and often eliminates accountability.
We live in a country based on a system of checks and balances. This system, as implemented by our Founding
Fathers, in my humble opinion, is divinely inspired. I am not a religious fanatic, but I do not
believe that human beings are that smart, and God, Allah, Yahweh or whoever you
happen to believe in, helped us out. Of
course, in keeping with the religious concepts, we have free will, and we are
screwing it up, or more accurately, our leaders are leading us down the
primrose path to Hell. We are following
the leaders as they tell us over and over again, “Trust us; we’ll take care of
everything.” The problem is they are
lying to us, either actively by just making statements that are not true, or
passively by just not telling us anything at all and doing everything behind
our backs in the name of protecting us.
There is something to be said for the leaking of information
by Edward Snowden. We are now engaged in
a national discussion as to whether the NSA should be doing what it is
doing. There are a very significant
number of people, myself included, that are asking, “Exactly why do you need to
know who I call, who calls me, how long we talk and where I am when I am
talking to them? This is, among other
things, exactly what the government is gathering when it collects so-called “metadata.” In law enforcement, we used this information
to discover the organization of drug dealers in the county in which I lived and
it worked. We developed a chart of circles
and arrows that would have made Amway proud.
We got this information on specific individuals through the use of a “pen
register,” and you could tell a whole lot about a person with just this
information. It was actually scary.
Now we have the NSA collecting the same class of data on
every American in the world. Ya, I know
they have said they only get it for foreign contacts, but we are just now learning
that they gathered this information on residents of Washington, DC and New York
City, “by accident.” In their net, the NSA says they inadvertently
captured “inappropriate data” on not hundreds, not thousands, but tens of
thousands of American Citizens in our nation’s capital and our most populace
city. Accident my ass! I am not a big believer in conspiratorial
thinking, but you do not have to have to be Michael Moore to turn this into a
conspiracy worthy of a movie. If I were
a betting man, I would bet that Edward Snowden had access to this information
and the NSA figured, before he leaks it, we need to get out in front of the disclosure
ourselves. The NSA thinks they become
the white knights because they ratted themselves out. See, you can trust us. BULSHIT!!
We have another reason for asking whether we want to view
Edward Snowden as a hero or a traitor.
The disclosure of information has opened a discussion the likes of which
we have not seen since Nixon’s Watergate Affair. Remember, the scandal that eventually brought
down a President? August 9, 2014 will be
the 40th anniversary of Big Dick’s resignation, by the way. People all along the political continuum in
this country are starting to ask the same questions about the NSA’s various
programs. Conservatives, Liberals and
everyone in between are asking questions, and the NSA does not like it. They should not like it and aren’t supposed
to like it; it is the nature of a system of checks and balances. They want to do something and another branch
of government says, “No you can’t do that.”
In this case, the
people themselves are starting to ask the questions. The politicians, who ostensibly represent us,
in spite of their best efforts to convince We
the People that we have nothing to worry about are seeing the political
winds shift. As a result, the politicians
are beginning to see the convergence of doing their jobs and keeping their jobs. Usually they consider these events not to be
cause and effect as they should, but as nearly mutually exclusive. The result is an inertia that is nearly
impossible to overcome. The ball cannot
be moved, or once it begins to roll, it cannot be stopped and the direction cannot be changed.
Allow me to describe the idiocy of some of the bureaucrats
in the intelligence field in this country, the people we entrust with our
national security. While in a government
position, I received a memorandum and a bunch of attachments from the chain of
command above me. I reviewed the material and with the
scrunched-up-nose look you get when you don’t get it, I asked, why the Hell
would this get sent to me? I signed off
that I had received and reviewed the materials as indicated on the memorandum
and shrugged it off.
A couple of days go by and another memo comes in. This is about the previous memo and
materials. Someone screwed up and sent
the stuff to the wrong distribution list.
I was requested to sign the memo telling me I had reviewed the memo sent
in error, had made no copies, and had received and reviewed the memo telling me
about it having been sent in error.
Okay, I get it; if they could have used an MIB “Nuerolyzer” (You know
the “flashy thing” that ‘K’ and ‘J' used to erase the memories of people.),
they would have. Okay, so I sign the new
memo and send it down the chain of command.
Problem solved….but wait, there’s more.
A couple of days later, I get another memo. Attached to this memo is the memo with my
signature on it saying I reviewed it and the previous memo. They want me to initial my signature. WTF?
Okay, I initial my signature on the previous memo as instructed by the
most recent memo. The people that put
this system of memos in place and had people initialing their original
signatures are the people we entrust with our national security, God Help
us!! Otherwise, we are truly doomed.
Thursday, August 22, 2013
George Zimmerman - He Is Not A Criminal, But That Doesn't Make Him Right
I am finally going to weigh in with an opinion
on Trayvon Martin, as to whether George Zimmerman committed a crime when he
shot him. My answer is, no, George
Zimmerman did not commit a crime and I do not think the jury got it wrong, as
many allege. While I do not believe that
George Zimmerman committed a crime when he shot Trayvon Martin, I do not believe
he was right in doing so. The two are
different. Allow me to go through the
facts as they have been brought out. I
also want to address some of the responses I have gotten, particularly on
Twitter, from people that quite frankly, haven’t got a clue.
George Zimmerman did not stop Trayvon, he
followed him, and he had called the police.
By all accounts, Trayvon could have stopped, waited for the cops and
dealt with them and George when they got there.
The accounts at trial lead most to believe that Trayvon instead chose to
confront George and at some point hit him in the face. The pair went to the ground and, again, by
the only account available, that of George Zimmerman, Trayvon began to bounce
George’s head off the pavement or the concrete.
George had the physical evidence indicative of taking such a beating;
the broken nose and the cuts and bruises to the back of his head. George Zimmerman did not break his own nose and pound his own head on the ground.
Trayvon Martin is beating a man, but Trayvon does
not know that man is armed. Trayvon
thought it was a fist fight, but, much to his surprise I imagine, it turned
into a gunfight, and Trayvon did not bring a gun. When George started to lose the fist fight,
he had a reasonable fear that Trayvon might discover his gun and use it against
him. One woman Tweeted me with, “How do
you know Trayvon knew how to use a gun?”
I don’t, but I can assure you I am not going to bet my life on whether
Trayvon could or would shoot me after he takes my own gun away from me after I
am unconscious. The testimony from
George was that Trayvon, in fact, tried to take the gun from him. George was in a really bad situation and,
based on the facts developed in Court, George started to fear for his
life. He drew his gun and eliminated the
threat by killing Trayvon. George
Zimmerman was legally, the key word being legally,
justified in using deadly force to stop Trayvon from beating him, taking his
(Zimmerman’s) gun from him and killing him with it. The jury decided this was the case and I
happen to agree with it.
The people to whom I take exception are those
who are willing to start making wild assertions that have no basis in fact. In response to blog entries I made in 2012 and
Tweets I posted, I have a number of responses that all amount to “What if….” In the words of my father, God rest his soul,
“What if cows could fly? Would we all
need steel umbrellas?” I can take any
situation and “What if” it to death. We
do not make decisions of guilt or innocence in a criminal trial based on “What
if’s….” “What if’ing” is the last
bastion of the losing side in an argument.
It amounts to assuming as fact things that have not been proven and/or
don’t exist to disprove the concrete, provable and arguable facts we have
available to us. It defies logic and I
answer it with, “Ya, but that didn’t happen.”
My other despised argument starts, “Is it
possible…” The answer is always, “Yes.” I don’t even let the rest of the question get
asked, because it makes no difference what it is. Is it possible the sun will come up in the
west tomorrow? I believe that all things are possible, so the answer
is always yes. The people of the opinion opposing mine have
been reduced to “What if’ing… and “Is it possible…” arguments because they do
not have any facts.
Among the unsubstantiated allegations is that
George Zimmerman “profiled” Trayvon Martin.
Folks, people profile other people every day. The presumption is that it is bad. Not always, in my humble opinion. As a police officer, I came to recognize that
there were situations we referred to as “crimes” that were never on the
books. One of these was “White Boy in a
No-White-Boy Zone.” There were
neighborhoods in which we were pretty sure the white guy (or girl) cruising
through at 3:00AM was not there delivering peach cobbler. We had a reasonable suspicion they were in
the neighborhood to buy drugs. We
stopped them and, as often as not, we found they were there to buy or had
already bought drugs.
When you boil all this down to its basic elements,
George Zimmerman did nothing criminal.
Whether he did something for which he can be held civilly liable is
another matter. What we have going on is
people who want to make George Zimmerman a criminal for mostly emotional
reasons. They want or need to make this
about race. They want or need to make this
about a bad law. They want or need to make Trayvon an innocent victim, and most of these people
have a vested interest in the outcome, whether it be emotional, political or
financial, but Trayvon was anything but innocent.
Monday, August 19, 2013
Power vs Righteousness….Who wins?
We live in a world where what once were bright-line distinctions have resolved into mottled shades of gray. It really no longer matters what is true, nor really even what can be proven. What matters is who is in the position of power. This is a pity, but it is also incredibly dangerous and I ponder whether or not there is an answer. Let us think about a few situations…
In many situations, the dreaded, your word against mine is the unfortunate situation. I know of a real situation in which a young teenage girl was prevented from going to her high school homecoming dance by her father due to some sort of misbehavior. Her response, of course, was to call the child welfare services department where they lived and tell them that her father had been sexually molesting her for years. Daddy was fairly shortly thereafter arrested and, you guessed it, his daughter went to homecoming.
Not too long afterwards, the daughter went to the prosecuting attorney’s office and tried to set the record straight. The reaction to her confessing to having lied was that she was threatened with being charged with perjury, unless she maintained her story. The prosecution continued and the daughter dutifully restated the original story in Court. Daddy went to prison for a large number of years. Several times the young woman attempted to convince the prosecutor’s office that she had lied and her father was indeed innocent. The prosecutors publicly went on record as stating the daughter told the truth in Court, they believed her then and she was lying now because she was remorseful for having put her father in prison.
Finally, the daughter attempted to win her father’s freedom and went public in a big way, shouting from on high that she had lied, making sworn affidavits to that effect and doing television interviews. She explained the reaction of prosecutors as turning a blind eye and deaf ear to what she had to say. The prosecutor’s office maintained they had prosecuted the right man for the right crime and stated the daughter was doing this only because daddy now had cancer and was going to die…in prison. Daddy died in prison.
At the time the allegations were made, the girl had the power by virtue of the fact that she made the allegation and was the victim of a despicable crime. She made heinous allegations and no one would believe they could not be true at the time. Unfortunately for daddy, when the daughter decided to recant her statement, she no longer had the power to do so effectively; the prosecutor did. He chose the version of the truth most convenient for him and actually threatened the alleged victim with prosecution if she changed her story. She did not feel she had much choice, as she did not wish to go to jail. She stuck with the “daddy did it” version to keep herself out of jail.
The daughter never had enough power, nor moral fortitude, to accept the consequences and recant the allegations successfully. The prosecutor got to determine what was true and what was not. So, her father died in prison. She lives with that guilt to this day.
Many people have been in the unfortunate situation in their employment where allegations are made against them. The truth or falsity of the allegation almost becomes irrelevant in the your word against my word situation. The supervisor, boss or other person in control makes the allegation and, as it was with the Pharaohs, so it is said; so it shall be written, so it shall be done. Make no mistake; there is no real justice here. The response of the employee at the bottom of the counseling form is fairly meaningless. It is dismissed as a self-serving statement that is untue. Besides, let’s look at it from an employer perspective, if I have a person who has a write-up for something, especially if it is serious, why take the chance? You become marked.
Let us take the above scenario, and make the false allegation sexual harassment or even worse, workplace violence. You got pissed off. Maybe said something you wish you hadn’t and now you have a supervisor who wants to write you up as if you were John Wayne Gacy, Ted Bundy and the Columbine Shooters all rolled into one. You aren’t, never were and never will be, but someone feels a little uncomfortable and, “poof”, you are marked. In the case of these two allegations, you are marked with giant, Scarlet Letters, prominently affixed to your forehead. You are also, chronically unemployed, broke, and generally considered a threat to humanity. Lock your doors and windows folks. Get the kids inside…all because someone said, “He scared me.” Or “He got really pissed.” God forbid we should ever say, in the heat of anger, “I’m gonna kill that guy.” Quick, break out the tar and feathers!!
Words are powerful weapons and false allegations of misconduct that even subtly label us can scar us for life, especially in this day and age of the permanent record on the Internet. Should there be a higher standard of proof as a result? Should any one person have the kind of power over us that it affects permanently our ability to earn a living? Where do we set the bar for employees and employers?
Employers have the legitimate right and, quite frankly, the responsibility, to maintain safe working environments for their employees. However, there must be a balance between that requirement and giving a sexual harassment or workplace threat label to an individual. There are those that will say, you have a right to go into Court and sue, for defamation, libel or any number of other causes of action. Does anyone rationally think that someone who takes their employer to Court is employable in the future? Enforcing your rights has the same stigma as the allegations originally made. You lose either way.
We now live in a world of Hitler's "Big Lie." All you have to do is make the allegation, make sure it is your word against another and watch as the accused slowly swings in the breeze.. In some situations, it really doesn't matterif it is on audo tape or video tape. A Simi Valley jury refused to convict the police officers who were on video beating Rodney King. A NYPD Sergeant was asked for the forms necessary to make a complaint against another police officer. After dismissing the complainant initially, the citizens returned and renewed the request for the paperwork. The Sergeant walked around from behind the desk and belted the citizen in the face, breaking his nose. It was on video tape. What happened to the Sergeant? He got tranferred, but onl;y after he tried to say that the citizen attacked him and had he had no choice but defend himself.
It is getting to the point where it makes no difference what the truth may or may not be the truth. It is only important who has the power and who can tell the most outrageous story. Power is winning over righteousness.
We now live in a world of Hitler's "Big Lie." All you have to do is make the allegation, make sure it is your word against another and watch as the accused slowly swings in the breeze.. In some situations, it really doesn't matterif it is on audo tape or video tape. A Simi Valley jury refused to convict the police officers who were on video beating Rodney King. A NYPD Sergeant was asked for the forms necessary to make a complaint against another police officer. After dismissing the complainant initially, the citizens returned and renewed the request for the paperwork. The Sergeant walked around from behind the desk and belted the citizen in the face, breaking his nose. It was on video tape. What happened to the Sergeant? He got tranferred, but onl;y after he tried to say that the citizen attacked him and had he had no choice but defend himself.
It is getting to the point where it makes no difference what the truth may or may not be the truth. It is only important who has the power and who can tell the most outrageous story. Power is winning over righteousness.
We Need To Demilitarize the Police
In everyone’s life, there is a
moment when they have an idea and later find out that someone implemented the
idea, generally making a ton of money.
While my particular idea will never make me a bunch of money, anyone
that knows me will tell you I have been saying this for years. The growing problem with police in our
society is based in large part of the militarization of those originally tasked
with the words protect and serve. Those
who were once the Boy Scouts who wanted to help their fellow man have, over the
years, become literally, the jack-booted storm troopers with the us vs them
mentality. The problem is “us” is the
cops and “them” is everyone who isn’t a cop, you and me.
We have gotten far too close to
the losing end of the quote often attributed to Benjamin Franklin, “Those who would give up Essential Liberty
to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.” We are in the process of mortgaging our future
rights with the militarization of the police and it needs to stop.
I was reminded of my oft-told
“theory” of the militarization of law enforcement in an article by Wall Street Journal essayist Radley Balko entitled
“Rise of the Warrior Cop.” I will let
you read Mr. Balko’s article and book to speak for themselves, but allow me to add some
personal perspective.
As I have stated previously in
this blog, I was once a cop, so I have some considerable personal knowledge from the
inside looking out. I have also been a
criminal defense investigator, so I have seen things from the outside looking
in, too
I joined law enforcement back
in the days when the pendulum was starting to swing back from the Liberal days
of Justice Earl Warren’s Supreme Court.
Some police departments, in an effort to be more “people friendly” had
actually abandoned the ubiquitous blue uniforms made popular by the LAPD in
favor of blue blazers, white shirts, ties and grey slacks. All you need to do is check out the uniforms
of Menlo Park, CA and Lakewood, CO in the late 1960’s and 70’s for examples. The idea was that we wanted to de-emphasize
the militaristic style of the police in an open and democratic society. Then things began to change…
Lyndon Johnson had figured out
that he could mobilize the population in this country by declaring “war” on
something. He started the “War on
Poverty.” Richard Nixon was politically
astute enough to recognize that this worked and we had more “wars;” the “War on
Drugs” the “War on Pornography,” etc. We
continue the “War on Drugs” (I would argue we have been losing for many years)
and now we have the “War on Terror.” The
result of these domestic and civilian “wars” is militarized law enforcement.
Daryl Gates of the LAPD got the
ball rolling when he started the first “SWAT” Team in 1965. That stands for Special Weapons And Tactics. It began the militarization
of the police in this country. Okay,
maybe Sir Robert Peel, the “Father of Modern Policing” in Great Britain, may
have been the first by declaring that the police had to follow military lines
of authority to be professional in 1829, but Gates is still considered the
“Father of SWAT,” and he clearly started police militarization in uniform
styles and tactics.
In the 1980’s the department for
which I worked, wanting to be just like the big boys, started the “Tactical
Patrol Force” or “TPF” (actually they stole the name an idea from the NYPD). What
distinguished this band from the rest of us “road patrol” guys was more than
just their assignments and schedules.
They dressed different, they were armed different and they had
“tactics.” The TPF wore black t-shirts
with “POLICE” over the words “TACTICAL PATROL FORCE” on the back between the
shoulders. “POLICE” was also printed
across the front of the shirt assuming no self-respecting cop would ever be
running away while being shot at. These
guys wore “Battle Dress Uniform” (BDU) pants, bloused into gleaming combat
boots. Later, in a display of esprit de
corps, they adopted, as a unit, the wearing of military-style, paratrooper,
jump boots, a specific type of combat boot.
The TPF’ers also began to wear their bulletproof vests on the outside of
their clothing. This never made sense to
me as I happen to agree with the logic of one of the body armor manufacturers
of the time; “If they see the vest, they’ll shoot for the head.” Thus, police body armor was designed to be
concealable under a uniform shirt. (Note: I also never saw the logic of putting a
bright, shiny badge over my heart on my uniform shirt so the bad guys had a
target at which to shoot, but hey, that is just me. Gotta look good for that scary shooting
incident, I guess.).
Among other things, the TPF became
responsible for the execution of Search Warrants in the city, and execution is a more accurate term than serving these papers. I remember when the police, armed with a
search warrant, would knock on the door, someone would answer and the police would
say, I have a search warrant and go in to do their business. However, once the TPF started executing
Search Warrants, things changed. It is
important to note that nobody had been hurt or killed prior to this, so there
was seemingly no rationale for it; things just changed and the change was
drastic.
TPF would arrive at the house
to be searched, having held a long-winded briefing session to discuss their “attack.” The overall basis of the briefing was “Officer
Safety.” This is the idea of do what you
gotta do and kill who you gotta kill to go home at the end of the shift. Then they would literally roar up to the
house in their patrol cars, surround the house, generally brandishing assault
weapons and “make entry.” “Making entry”
is a very polite and politically correct way of describing kicking the door off
the hinges while repeatedly screaming “POLICE… SEARCH WARRANT!!!” Anyone and everyone in the residence was
taken to the ground, usually violently as they were deemed to have “not
complied” if they were not face down on the ground in about 5 nanoseconds. The “instructions” given by the TPF at gunpoint
were usually liberally laced with obscenities, and few words were not preceded
by some form of the “F-word; “Get the f**k down.” Put your “f**king hands behind your back”,
etc, etc. Their hands were cuffed behind them and they
were searched. They were then lined up
sitting on the floor or, if they were lucky, on a couch. Keep in mind that a Search Warrant is not an Arrest Warrant.
Now this is interesting. If one of these, I guess, “suspects” asked,
am I under arrest? They would normally
get a response that involved some form of the sentiment, “Shut the f**k
up.” A Search Warrant only authorizes a
search of the premises. If a search of a
person was done for the purposes of “officer safety” (a legitimate concern) and
they had no weapons or contraband, then why were they not released? I cannot answer that question. If contraband, usually drugs, were found in
the house, then, okay, maybe the cops could hold the person for further investigation. If the next-door neighbor just had bad
timing in bringing that peach cobbler over, then the cops could
release them, I suppose, but prior to finding that contraband, why was everyone
under arrest? Again, I don’t know, and I
have always wondered.
The point is that the police were
no longer serving Search Warrants in a civilized society; they were kicking
doors with automatic weapons at the ready, more like an infantry squad clearing
a house in an urban combat environment. They
were dressed like, equipped like, looked like and had the tactics of a combat
unit in a high threat environment. This
gives rise to a shoot first, ask questions later mentality. Don’t believe me; ask a Marine who has been
to Fallujah in Iraq, or New York City Police Officer in the Bronx or an LAPD
Officer in Watts. Compare their
answers. Trust me they all have PTSD,
and come by it honestly.
Now go back to the Search
Warrant “execution” and think about this, all the guys on the TPF or SWAT Team
are wearing ski masks in addition to their BDU’s and military hardware when they
kick in the door. I think the thing that bothers me the most is
the fact that police officers now routinely wear masks to hide their identities
while engaged in their “SWAT” duties.
This would seem to be the ultimate method of making sure there is little
or no accountability for their actions.
How can you make a complaint against an alleged public servant when you
have no idea who he or she is? I
remember when only the bad guys wore ski masks; you know, when they were
robbing the local 7-Eleven. Yes, the
Lone Ranger and Batman wore masks, but these are fictional characters, not real
people engaged in civilian law enforcement activities. I look forward to the argument with the moron
that uses Batman and Robin defense for the rationale for local law enforcement
wearing ski masks. Even the police in the comics viewed Batman and Robin as a scourge
because they were vigilantes. Who needs a mask to fight crime, apparently the police of today.
The rationale we are given is
the potential threat to the police who engage in these “high risk” activities. In reality, it is more a function of the us
vs. them mentality. The police perceive
a threat from the society at large and this paranoia results in the need for
them to hide their identity from that society.
It also allows them to more readily act with impunity. I would suggest that the trade off is not fair
to society. If police are engaged in
activity they are afraid to be identified doing, then they should not be doing
it. The threat to society of masked,
armed, potentially-rogue, law enforcement officers who cannot be held accountable
because we don’t even know who they are, outweighs the potential threat to the
officers because someone can see their faces.
The police in the United States
are not an occupation force on foreign territory. They are a civilian law enforcement agency (I
think even the term “police force” gives the wrong impression. If we want to do what every bureaucracy does
with an agency problem we should change the name of the agency. That fixes things, right?). When you have 20-something kids, fresh out of
a police academy, generally with military combat backgrounds (and yes, that’s
who gets on these units, because they are young, aggressive and want to change
the world), kicking in doors and pointing military hardware at the “enemy,”
more consistent with the 101st Airborne than a police department,
you are asking for trouble. Based on my
reading, there are lots of troubles, and more dead citizens than anyone cares
to admit.
Interestingly, we give the cops
that all important benefit of the doubt.
We uniformly take them at their word and refuse to indict them when they
kill unnecessarily. How can we do
anything else? If we start to hold the
police to the higher standard to which they should be held, and are uniformly
disappointed, how do we feel safe? We
cannot destroy the perception that makes us feel safer, regardless of whether
we actually are safer, or just face a new threat from the police themselves. The very people we expect to protect us. Unfortunately, that perpetuates the behavior.
While I do not think we need to
go to the Brooks Brothers police uniform, can we just take the militarization
of law enforcement down a few notches?
Hell, the police have hard enough time remembering they are there to protect and serve
others when every morning you put on a bulletproof vest and a firearm. I know I was reminded each and every day of
both my own mortality and the fact that there were those in my small world that
would seek to do me harm if I was not careful. There is however a difference
between being careful and dressing like a combat infantryman and taking the offensive in a “War on Crime.” I
believe we have allowed law enforcement to have descended way too far into the
us vs. them mentality and the thinking that everyone
is trying to kill them. I want some
of the Boy Scouts back...please?
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