A
man sits in front of a police line at City Hall during an anti-Wall Street
protest in Oakland, California, October 25, 2011. (REUTERS/Kim White)
The above scene is no different than those we saw of brave Egyptians sitting on the streets, or the other countries who were supported during "Arab Spring", that new weapon of war created by Israel and the US to bring about "peaceful" regime change in the Middle East more in line with current political and hawkish demands.
We are now seeing a defiant American populace and the consequent empowerment of the paramilitary police force. Peaceful supporters and protestors all around the globe watch as OWS peoples’ tents
are torn down and people trampled, arrested despite their peaceful
stance.
Hindsight is the best of all educators. If only this gentleman below, Norm Stamper, had possessed the insight
with which he writes when he was within the American forces aka the paramilitary group policing the
nation!
There are some good points made here but the reality of the situation
makes resolution between the people and the police highly unlikely. Nice dreams
though. I wish I could smoke whatever he has in his pipe!
By Norm
Stamper
November 12, 2011
They came from all over, tens of thousands of demonstrators from around the world, protesting the economic and moral pitfalls of globalization.
Our mission as members of the Seattle Police Department?
To safeguard people and property ~ in that order. Things went
well the first day. We were praised for our friendliness and restraint ~ though
some politicians were apoplectic at our refusal to make mass arrests for the
actions of a few.
Then came day two.
Early in the morning, large contingents of demonstrators began
to converge at a key downtown intersection. They sat down and refused to budge.
Their numbers grew. A labor march would soon add additional thousands to the
mix.
We have to clear the intersection,” said the field commander.
“We have to clear the intersection,” the operations commander agreed, from his
bunker in the Public Safety Building. Standing alone on the edge of the crowd,
I, the chief of police, said to myself, “We have to clear the intersection.”
Why?
BECAUSE OF ALL THE WHAT-IFS.What if a fire breaks out in the Sheraton across the street?What if a woman goes into labor on the seventeenth floor of the hotel?What if a heart patient goes into cardiac arrest in the high-rise on the corner?What if there’s a stabbing, a shooting, a serious-injury traffic accident?How would an aid car, fire engine or police cruiser get through that sea of people?
The cop in me supported the decision to clear the intersection.
But the chief in me should have vetoed it. And he certainly should have
forbidden the indiscriminate use of tear gas to accomplish it, no matter how
many warnings we barked through the bullhorn.
My support for a militaristic solution caused all hell to break
loose.
Rocks, bottles and newspaper racks went flying. Windows were
smashed, stores were looted, fires lighted; and more gas filled the streets,
with some cops clearly overreacting, escalating and prolonging the conflict.
The “Battle in Seattle,” as the WTO protests and their aftermath came to be
known, was a huge setback ~ for the protesters, my cops, and the community.
More than a decade later, the police response to the Occupy movement,
most disturbingly visible in Oakland ~ where scenes resembled a war zone and
where a marine remains in serious condition from a police projectile ~ brings
into sharp relief the acute and chronic problems of American law enforcement.
Seattle might have served as a cautionary tale, but instead, US
police forces have become increasingly militarized, and it’s showing in cities
everywhere: the NYPD “white shirt” coating innocent people with pepper spray,
the arrests of two student journalists at Occupy Atlanta, the declaration of
public property as off-limits and the arrests of protesters for “trespassing.”
The paramilitary bureaucracy and the culture it engenders ~ a black-and-white world in which police unions serve above all to protect the brotherhood ~ is worse today than it was in the 1990s.
Such agencies inevitably view protesters as the enemy.And young people, poor people and people of color will forever experience the institution as an abusive, militaristic force ~ not just during demonstrations but every day, in neighborhoods across the country.
Much of the problem is rooted in a rigid command-and-control
hierarchy based on the military model. American police forces are beholden to
archaic internal systems of authority whose rules emphasize bureaucratic regulations
over conduct on the streets.
An officer’s hair length, the shine on his shoes and the
condition of his car are more important than whether he treats a burglary
victim or a sex worker with dignity and respect.
In the interest of “discipline,” too many police bosses treat their frontline officers as dependent children, which helps explain why many of them behave more like juvenile delinquents than mature, competent professionals.
It also helps to explain why persistent, patterned misconduct,
including racism, sexism, homophobia, brutality, perjury and corruption, do not
go away, no matter how many blue-ribbon panels are commissioned or how much
training is provided.
External political factors are also to blame, such as the continuing madness of the drug war.
Last year police arrested 1.6 million nonviolent drug offenders.
In New York City alone almost 50,000 people (overwhelmingly black, Latino or
poor) were busted for possession of small amounts of marijuana ~ some of it, we
have recently learned, planted by narcotics officers.
The counterproductive response to 9/11, in which the federal
government began providing military equipment and training even to some of the
smallest rural departments, has fueled the militarization of police forces.
Everyday policing is characterized by a SWAT mentality; every
other 911 call a military mission.
What emerges is a picture of a vital public-safety institution
perpetually at war with its own people.
The tragic results ~ raids gone bad, wrong houses hit, innocent
people and family pets shot and killed by police ~ are chronicled in Radley
Balko’s excellent 2006 report Overkill: The Rise of Paramilitary
Police Raids in America.
It is ironic that those police officers who are busting up the
Occupy protesters are themselves victims of the same social ills the
demonstrators are combating: corporate greed; the slackening of essential
regulatory systems; and the abject failure of all three branches of government
to safeguard civil liberties and to protect, if not provide, basic human needs
like health, housing, education and more.
With cities and states struggling to balance the budget while
continuing to deliver public safety, many cops are finding themselves out of
work.
And, as many Occupy protesters have pointed out, even as police
officers help to safeguard the power and profits of the 1 percent, police
officers are part of the 99 percent.
There will always be situations ~ an armed and barricaded
suspect, a man with a knife to his wife’s throat, a school-shooting rampage ~ that
require disciplined, military-like operations.
But most of what police are called upon to do, day in and day
out, requires patience, diplomacy and interpersonal skills. I’m convinced it is
possible to create a smart organizational alternative to the paramilitary bureaucracy
that is American policing.
But that will not happen unless, even as we cull “bad apples” from our police forces, we recognize that the barrel itself is rotten.
Assuming the necessity of radical structural reform, how do we proceed?
By building a progressive police organization, created by
rank-and-file officers, “civilian” employees and community representatives.
Such an effort would include plans to flatten hierarchies;
create a true citizen review board with investigative and subpoena powers; and
ensure community participation in all operations, including policy-making,
program development, priority-setting and crisis management.
In short, cops and citizens would forge an authentic partnership
in policing the city. And because partners do not act unilaterally, they would
be compelled to keep each other informed, and to build trust and mutual respect
~ qualities sorely missing from the current equation.
It will not be easy. In fact, failure is assured if we lack the
political will to win the support of police chiefs and their elected bosses, if
we are unable to influence or neutralize police unions, if we don’t have the
courage to move beyond the endless justifications for maintaining the status
quo.
But imagine the community and its cops united in the effort to
responsibly “police” the Occupy movement.
Picture thousands of people gathered to press grievances against
their government and the corporations, under the watchful, sympathetic
protection of their partners in blue.
Norm Stamper
Norm Stamper was chief of the Seattle Police Department during the
WTO protests in 1999. He is the author of Breaking Rank: A Top Cop’s Exposé
of the Dark Side of American Policing (Nation Books).
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