Heroic local police at work. |
"Which
is better—to be ruled by one tyrant three thousand miles away, or by three
thousand tyrants not a mile away?" –
Attributed to Boston
physician Mather Byles, 1770.
“Do you see this soldier in this
checkpoint?” Iraqi Wael al-Khafaji asked a Reuters
reporter, pointing to a spot just a few feet from his Baghdad barbershop.
“He can do whatever he wants to me right now and I can't say a word. Is
this democracy?”
Before the U.S. invasion, this
businessman – like millions of other Iraqis – was ruled by a distant dictator
who had little direct influence on his life. Today, everything he does takes
place under the shadow cast by armed men who have given themselves permission
to brutalize or kill anybody who refuses to obey them.
For Mr. al-Khafaji, it makes no
material difference whether the checkpoint is manned by U.S. soldiers, State
Department-employed mercenaries, members of Saddam’s Republican Guard, or
elements of a local sectarian militia. The problem is the presence of people
who claim the right to use aggressive violence to force him to submit to their
will. The problem is not one of geography or affiliation; it is a matter of
institutionalized immorality.
Americans who supported the Iraq
war would be scandalized by Mr. al-Khajafi’s ingratitude. They would be wise to
ponder his insight while examining the extent to which our own country is
becoming a garrison state. They would also do well to emulate his habit of
looking with acute suspicion – and no small measure of resentment – on the
oddly dressed armed men who presume to exercise authority over us.
Democracy is the art of inducing victims of government power to focus on the question of who controls the government, rather than what it does. The same can be said of the perspective encapsulated in the slogan “Support Your Local Police” (SYLP).
As sociologist David Bayley
pointed out, “The police are to the government as the edge is to the knife.” The police are an implement of coercion wielded by the political class, whether they are operationally under the control
of Washington, D.C. or City Hall.
From the SYLP perspective, the police and the “criminal
justice” system they serve exist to protect life and property against criminal
violence and fraud. If this were true, it would follow that most of those
arrested and punished would be found guilty of crimes against person and
property.
According to the most recent available statistics regarding
incarceration, however, people convicted of actual crimes compose a very small
minority of America’s
vast and growing federal prison population. As of 2009, crimes of
violence accounted for roughly eight percent of that total, and property crimes
contributed a bit less than six percent. More than half of all inmates were
convicted of non-violent drug offenses, and thirty-five percent were caged for
what are called “public order” offenses.
Libertarian activist Michael Suede points out that eighty-six
percent of all federal inmates were punished for what are called “victimless
crimes” – that is to say, offenses not properly described as crimes
at all. It is reasonable to assume that similar trends exist at the state and
local level as well.
There are instances in which police act in defense of
persons and property. Those are genuinely exceptional, because rendering that
service is not part of their formal job description: The Supreme Court has
repeatedly ruled that
police have no enforceable duty to protect individual rights. This helps
explain why, as
economist Robert Higgs pointed out roughly a decade ago,
“there are three times as many private policemen as there are public ones.”
In choosing to pay for private security assistance,
Americans freely spend more than twice the amount stolen from us each year to
pay for the government’s armed enforcement caste. This is because the
government that takes our money fails to provide the promised social good –
protection of life and property.
Writing nearly a century ago, when our contemporary police
state was in its infancy, the
immortal H.L. Mencken protested that the government supposedly protecting
him was actually the most rapacious and tenacious enemy of liberty and personal
security. While it is possible for the typical American to repel the aggression
of private criminals, “he can no more escape the tax-gatherer and the
policemen, in all their protean and multitudinous guises, than he can escape
the ultimate mortician. They beset him constantly, day in and day out…. They
invade his liberty, affront his dignity, and greatly incommode his search for
happiness, and every year they demand and wrest from him a larger and larger
share of his worldly goods.”
The one refinement we can make to this otherwise flawless
polemical gem is to note that the terms “tax-gatherer” and “policeman” are
functional synonyms. Both offices exist to extract wealth from the productive
at gunpoint on behalf of the political class. The only substantive difference
between them is that the latter are granted slightly wider latitude in
inflicting aggressive violence, and equipped to do so.
As Carl Watner pointed out in “Call the COPS – But Not
the Police,” a seminal 2004 essay published by The Voluntaryist, gathering taxes has been a
core police function since the institution was first imposed on the
Anglo-Saxons following the Norman Conquest. The feudal order implemented by
William the Conqueror was built upon the “frankpledge,”
which was the institutional foundation for a a police system designed to
collect revenue for the monarch.
The Anglo-Saxon tribes had provided security through
kinship-based groups called “tithes” and “hundreds,” who defended cattle herds
and other property and acted as posses to apprehend thieves. Anglo-Saxon courts
emphasized restitution, with any punitive damages being used to compensate
volunteers who had tracked down the offenders. Under the frankpledge, however,
the “justice” system diverted all revenues into the king’s treasury.
Royal courts worked tirelessly to expand the king’s
jurisdiction, which was enforced by royal appointees called shire-reeves (from
which the term “sheriff” is derived). Eventually, royal enactments criminalized
efforts by victims to seek private restitution; since such arrangements
deprived the treasury of revenue, they were seen as a form of theft. This
concept of the “King’s Peace” could be considered the distant but recognizable
ancestor of the modern notion that the disembodied abstraction called “society”
is a victim of criminal offenses – even those in which no individual has been
injured.
A heavy residue of Anglo-Saxon tradition endured into the 18th
Century. A French visitor to London in the mid-1700s was astounded when none of
the local residents could direct him to the police – or even recognize the
term. “Good Lord! How can one expect order among these people, who have no such
a word as police in their language?” he exclaimed.
In fact, the term was familiar to educated 18th
Century Britons, who – as historian Leon Radzinowicz points out – considered it
to be “suggestive of terror and oppression.” A 1785 Police Bill proposed by
William Pitt the Younger shattered against an iron wall of opposition to what
was regarded as a “dangerous innovation.” Until the second decade of the 19th
century, the British government’s ambition to create a standing police force
was confined to its Irish colony, where its heavily armed Royal Constabulary
field-tested methods that would later be imported to the homeland.
The First Modern Police Chief: Fouche. |
During the same period, Napoleon Bonaparte, the armed
evangelist of the Jacobin revolution, created the first modern police force.
Bonaparte’s ascent to power began with a brutal police action: The massacre of
13 Vendemiaire (October 5, 1795), during which the young Corsican general used artillery
to slaughter Royalist protesters on the streets of Paris.
By 1812, writes David A. Bell in his book The First Total War, large areas of
Europe under Bonaparte’s rule were afflicted with “pervasive bureaucracy,
particularly new agencies for tax collection and conscription…. To implement
the new order, there came new police forces, often staffed largely by
Frenchmen.”
Presiding over this apparatus of regimentation, extraction, and
coercion was secret police Chief Joseph Fouche, the Jacobin fanatic who
prefigured Felix Dzherzhinsky.
Bonaparte’s star was in eclipse by 1814. However, as British historian Paul Johnson
observed in his book The
Birth of the Modern, “the golden age of the political police” had just
begun. The Congress of Vienna gave birth to what one contemporary critic called
“All sorts of wild schemes of establishing a general police all over Europe.”
At the same time, Robert Peel, the military governor of
Ireland, introduced the so-called Peace Preservation Police, a centrally
controlled paramilitary auxiliary to the 20,000-man military force garrisoned
on the island. Peel explained that the force “was not meant to meet any
temporary emergency” but rather intended to become a permanent institution. In
1829, Peel was England’s Home Secretary. With Parliament’s resistance at low
ebb, Peel proposed the creation of the Metropolitan Police.
“The new police institution had many supporters in
government, but opposition was to be found in the wider society,” wrote Watner
in The Voluntaryist. “The fundamental
principles behind the force were seen as … anathema to Whig political
principles, which emphasized `liberty over authority, the rights of the people
against the prerogatives of the Crown, local accountability in place of
centralization, and governance by the “natural”
rulers of society instead of salaried, government-appointed bureaucrats.’”
Populist
parliamentarian William Cobbett, an outspoken foe of “tax-eaters,” was
among the fiercest critics of the Metropolitan Police, which he saw as the
vanguard of a country-wide army of occupation.
“Tyranny always comes by slow degrees,” Cobbett declared in
an 1833 speech in Parliament, “and nothing could tend to illustrate that fact
[better] than the history of police in this country.” Less than a generation
ago, Cobbett pointed out, the very term “police” was “completely new among us.”
Now, owing to Peel’s innovations, London was now overrun with “Blue Locusts” –
“a police with numbered collars and embroidered cuffs, a body of men as regular
as the King’s service, as fit for domestic war as the redcoats were for foreign
war.”
In 1783, the last of King George’s occupation troops were
evicted from New York. In 1844, New York City’s municipal government became the
first in America to embrace Robert Peel’s system of paramilitary police. This
amounted to exchanging Redcoats for “Blue Locusts.” Other major cities – New Orleans
and Cincinnati in 1852, Boston, Philadelphia, and Chicago in 1855 -- soon
followed. State police agencies began to appear in the last decade of the 19th
century, and first decades of the 20th.
While those police agencies were locally controlled, they
were not servants of the public; they were instruments of the political class
that created them. On the western frontier, where political power was either
radically decentralized or entirely theoretical, security for person and
property was “protected by private policemen who were paid by – and, so,
responsible to – the community where they served,” notes libertarian writer Wendy McElroy.
Unlike the European gendarmes and royal British “shire-reeves,” McElroy points
out, “Western sheriffs did protect
people and property; they did rescue
schoolmarms and punish cattle rustlers. Their mission was to keep the peace by
preventing violence.”
Most importantly, in the Old West, sheriffs and marshals
didn’t claim a monopoly on the legitimate use of force. Thus when corrupt
sheriffs like Montana’s Henry Plummer or Idaho’s David Updike used their office
as cover to operate as “road agents” (horse thieves and highwaymen), they
were arrested, tried, and punished by private “committees of vigilance.”
The only legitimate role for a
peace officer is to interpose himself on behalf of individuals threatened by
aggressive violence. That is a role that can (and should) be carried out by any
law-abiding individual – including instances
when the purveyor of aggressive violence is a police officer or other state
official.
In the
recent nationally coordinated police crack-downs on “Occupy” protesters we
have seen the following scenario play out numerous
times: Peaceful demonstrators confront riot police; individual riot
policeman commits physical aggression against protester, then immediately
escalates the conflict by using potentially lethal force; when the crowd
reacts, the other police officers – rather than coming to the aid of the victim
– form a protective barricade (I call it a “thugscrum”) around the assailant.
It is all but impossible to find
an example of a police officer who interposed himself on behalf of the victim
of criminal violence inflicted by a fellow officer. This isn’t surprising: A
policeman can refuse to render aid to a crime victim without legal liability,
and abuse innocent people without alienating his professional peers – but “going rogue” by intervening
to prevent a criminal assault by another member of the punitive priesthood
is a career-killer. Former Austin
Police Officer Ramon Perez can supply
the details.
"The local police are not your enemy. Your committee is not here to attack them, blame them for violating the Constitution or your civil liberties because they are enforcing a measure of the Patriot Act or conducting a joint Federal and State anti-terror drill. Those are federal issues, which the local police in some cases may have already have little to no say if they are to continue receiving their additional Homeland Security funds, new equipment and weaponry.... We urge all responsible citizens in this community to work with us to ...[s]upport our local police in the performance of their duties [and] oppose all harassment or interference with law enforcement personnel as they carry out their assigned tasks.... [We must accept] our responsibilities to our local police, to defend them against unjust attacks, make them proud and secure in their vital profession, and to offer them our support in word and deed wherever possible." (Emphasis added.)
Their "assigned task": Local Police grab guns in New Orleans. |
It apparently didn't occur to the author of that passage that claiming citizens have "responsibilities to our local police" is to assume that the people exist to serve the government, rather than the reverse. Furthermore, it's pretty clear that from this perspective, the police have no reciprocal "responsibilities" to the citizenry.
Does that "responsibility" to defend the police and "make them proud" extend to supporting local police when they carry out lethal paramilitary raids, like the one that resulted in the murder of Jose Guerena? Would it include support for firearms confiscation of the sort carried out by local police (as well as National Guard personnel) in post-Katrina New Orleans?
At the very least it would mean refusing to interfere when an armored bully carries out his "assigned task" of brutally assaulting a helpless, unarmed citizen, rather than carrying out the moral duty to do whatever is feasible to prevent the crime or end the attack.
"When law and morality are in contradiction to each other," observed Frederic Bastiat, "the citizen finds himself in the cruel alternative of either losing his moral sense, or of losing respect for the law -- two evils of equal magnitude...." The "Support Your Local Police" perspective undermines morality by enshrining unconditional support for the police -- who are, as SYLP admits, simply local affiliates of a nationalized Homeland Security system -- as a supposed civic duty.
No individual or institution has the moral right to use aggressive force. That principle applies not only to the Federal Leviathan, but to the loathsome little replicas of that vile beast found in every city, county, and state. Rather than helping to consolidate the existing police state, supporters of the rule of law should work to end their local government's monopoly on the police power -- with the ultimate objective of abolishing it outright.
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Dum spiro, pugno!
8 comments:
Looking at the picture of the Nazi thug compared to the UC Davis thug, one notices how grossly obese the modern variety is. This knowledge may come in handy some day....
And yet we're told time and again by the propagandists, within government and its media shills, that we should support our "heroic" boys in black and blue while they beat anyone they view as "non compliant" black and blue. I can only hope that the rat cop who wrote an article telling the public to expect a bullet if they try and assert their rights should get his comeuppance at the hands of a mob. Torn limb from limb. I call it the "Ceaucescu Solution" to our oligarchic criminals.
The reason we know that they the heroes in black and blue is because they keep telling us.
Quoted and linked at http://greenmnts.blogspot.com/2011/11/careful-with-your-laughter.html
He that would make his own liberty secure, must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty, he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself.
Thomas Paine
So the SYLP wants its members to do the same thing they accuse the SPLC of doing: tell on people.
“Since the early 1970s, U.S. local police departments no longer have their own independent intelligence departments to keep tabs on or investigate the activities of revolutionary leftist and other subversive organizations. Unless you are in a major metropolitan area, and even there this may still be unknown information to the police commissioner, your local police may not be aware of the current antipolice activities of the activist Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL) and the Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP). Both of these subversive parties run campaigns and sponsor demonstrations to "Stop Racist Police Brutality,” annually on October 22.
Yeah, that’s what I thought a few months ago when I looked up the JBS and their opposition to “Civilian” Police Review Boards. It was only when blacks rioted or marched that the JBS went berserk. Bunch of racists. If they had anything to do with getting rid of Police Review Boards, as they brag, it is only because the police and the govt don’t want to be reviewed in the first place, and were happy for the support. I’m sure the JBS would be just as successful if they started a committee to “Stop the Communist Attempt to Force Your Local Police From Taping Interrogations With Criminal Suspects!” because it only serves to “cripple” and “demoralize” the police.
“[We] also ask the question why the federal government has not lived up to its responsibility relative to our borders. Increasing numbers of police have been killed lately partly due to the fact that illegal aliens are creating a problem with drug gangs.” Borders, as in plural? Don’t you mean border, as in singular? We know what you mean. Such concern for the “increasing numbers” of police being killed; not a word about the 40,000 Mexicans who have died because of the savage American War on Drugs.
And it seems strange indeed that they have no problem with Homeland Security or the Patriot Act, except as it affects their boyfriends-in-blue.
They make me sick. I repent that I ever had anything to do with that organization. You go to somebody’s house, drink coffee, pledge allegiance to the flag, and write letters to your “representative”: (Dear Mr. High–and–mighty, please vote “yes” for school prayer, and all such things as seemeth important).
From the SYLP Reprint:
The SPLC’s penetration of certain law-enforcement circles is especially alarming. In 2009, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano was forced to apologize to military veterans for a DHS report to law enforcement entitled “Rightwing Extremism” that warned of the danger of terrorism posed by “returning military veterans from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.”
Just because Napolitano was “forced” to apologize for the inclusion of veterans in terrorist groups does NOT mean that they were removed from the list.
I think all states have a Terrorism Awareness and Prevention course (TAP), which are either online or you can order them. Alabama’s was online, but quickly yanked off after it went viral on the Intenet. It is now archived, but Pennsylvania’s is still online. They’re practically identical; same groups, same pictures. Part of the “course” called “Who are the Terrorists?” lumps terrorists into two groups, International and Domestic. Al has two pages devoted to International and six pages devoted to Domestic. PA has three pages of International and nine pages of Domestic.
Included with the usual “hate” groups (white supremacists and KKK) are Environmentalists, Anti-genetic, Animal Rights, Pro-life, Anti-Nuclear, Anti-War, and Gay Rights Activists. PA’s has more information, because you can download PDF files such as “the PA Citizens Guide to Hate Crime,” Pennsylvania Hate Groups,” “CRS Hate Crimes” and “Patriot Groups in the U.S.”: “Patriot groups(1) in the United States have been in existence for many years and are found in most states across the United States. Information derived from the Southern Poverty Law Center indicates that a total of 194 patriot groups have been identified as active in the United States as of the year 2000.” (Footnote (1): A “patriot group” is defined by the Southern Poverty Law Center as opposed to the “New World Order” or advocating or adhering to extreme antigovernment doctrines.)
Yeah, leave it to the SPLC to label anyone asserting their "rights" as a terrorist. This is the topsy-turvy thinking of bizarro world advocates where right is wrong and up is down in their twisted noggins. Ironic that they see nothing wrong in sucking funds out of the proles to keep them down. That alone tells me that they're simply yet another tentacle of the beast.
pretty much all of them Cops are lard asses. Is that all they do sit on their butts and eat. Cops and police work for the Mayors to protect the mayor and all his assets. If they have time some times they help a Citizen. They break their Oaths every time they punch into work. State troopers and cops, Police are not the ones to trust when TSHTF. They will take your Guns faster than Hitler did and violate every amendment in the Constitution. Stay armed, stay vigilant, stay alive
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