Why are Police in the USA so Terrified?
Robert J. Burrowes, KalimNews, Kalimpong: In a recent incident in the United States,
yet another unarmed man was shot dead by police after opening his front door in
response to their knock. The police were going to serve an arrest warrant on a
domestic violence suspect – the man’s neighbour – but went to the wrong
address.See ‘Police kill innocent man while serving warrant at wrong address’. https://www.nationofchange.org/2017/07/27/police-kill-innocent-man-serving-warrant-wrong-address/
For those who follow news in the United
States, the routine killing of innocent civilians by the police has become a
national crisis despite concerted attempts by political and legal authorities
and the corporate media to obscure what is happening. See ‘Killed by Police’ http://killedbypolice.net/ and ‘The Counted: People killed by police
in the US’. https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/series/counted-us-police-killings
So far this year, US police have killed
1,044 people. In contrast, from 1990 to 2016, police in England and Wales
killed just 62 people. See ‘Fatal police shootings’. http://www.inquest.org.uk/statistics/fatal-police-shootings
Of course, these murders by the police are
just the tip of the iceberg of police violence as police continue to
demonstrate that the freedoms ‘guaranteed’ by the Fourth Amendment have been
eviscerated. See ‘What Country Is This? Forced Blood Draws, Cavity Searches and
Colonoscopies’. http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/47765.htm
So why are the police so violent? you might
ask. Well, several scholars have offered answers to this question and you can
read a little about what they say in these articles reviewing recent books on
the subject. See ‘The Fraternal Order of Police Must Go’ https://www.thenation.com/article/the-fraternal-order-of-police-must-go/ and ‘Our Ever-Deadlier Police State’. https://www.truthdig.com/articles/ever-deadlier-police-state/
While there is much in these works with
which I agree– such as the racism in US policing and the corruption of the
legal system which is used to violently manage oppressed peoples in the name of
‘justice’ while leaving the individuals, banks and corporations on Wall Street
unaccountable for their endless, ongoing and grotesque crimes against society,
the economy and the environment – I would like to pose a deeper question:Why
are police in the USA so terrified? This is the important question because
only people who are terrified resort to violence, even in the context of
policing. Let me explain why this is the case and how it has occurred in the
police context in the USA.
Violence does not arise ‘out of nowhere’.
And, sadly, its origin can be traced to what is euphemistically called the
‘socialization’ of children but which is more accurately labeled
‘terrorization’. You might think that this sounds extreme but if you spend some
time considering the phenomenal violence – ‘visible’, ‘invisible’ and ‘utterly
invisible’ – that we adults inflict on children during the ordinary course of
the day – see ‘Why Violence?’http://tinyurl.com/whyviolence and ‘Fearless Psychology and Fearful Psychology:
Principles and Practice’http://anitamckone.wordpress.com/articles-2/fearless-and-fearful-psychology/– while deluding ourselves that we are
preparing them to become just, decent and powerful citizens, then you might be
willing to reconsider your concept of what it means to nurture children.
Tragically, we are so far from any meaningful understanding of this notion,
that it is not even possible to generate a widespread social discussion about
how we might go about it.
So, having terrorized children into
submission so that they unthinkingly and passively accept their preordained
role in life – to act as a cog in a giant and destructive enterprise which they
are terrorized into not questioning and over which they have no control – each
of them takes their place in the global ‘economy’ wherever they can find a set
of tasks that feels least painful. The idea of seeking their true path in order
to search out their own unique destiny never even occurs to most of them and so
they lead ‘shadow lives’ endlessly suppressing their awareness of the life that
might have been.
Some of these individuals end up as
recruits at a police training facility, where they are further terrorized into
believing an elite-sponsored ideology that precludes genuine appreciation of
the diversity of people in the community they will later police (that is,
terrorize) in the name of ‘law and order’. After all,elite social control is
more readily maintained when people, including the police, live in fear.
Police training further terrorizes the
individuals involved and militarizes policing by encouraging recruits ‘to adopt
a “warrior” mentality and think of the people they are supposed to serve as
enemies’; the equipment they use, such as battering rams, flashbang grenades
and Armoured Personnel Carriers, evoke a sense of war. See ‘War Comes Home: The
Excessive Militarization of American Policing’. https://www.aclu.org/sites/default/files/assets/jus14-warcomeshome-report-web-rel1.pdf
But it doesn’t end with terrorization
during childhood and then police training. Police practice functions within a
long-standing cultural framework which has both wider social dimensions and
narrower, localized ones. And this cultural framework has been changing, more
quickly in recent years too. Unfortunately, more than ever before, this
framework is increasingly driven by fear and older, delusional social
expectations that police are there to maintain public safety or defend the
community from criminal violence have given way to militarized assumptions,
language and procedures that regard virtually everyone (and certainly
indigenous people and people of color) as both dangerous and guilty until
proven otherwise and treat the family home and car as targets to be
‘neutralized’ with military-style tactics and weapons. And this trend has been
accelerated under Donald Trump. See ‘Trump to lift military gear ban for local
police’. http://edition.cnn.com/2017/08/28/politics/police-military-gear-ban-lifted/index.html
By triggeringfear and using military-style
tactics and weapons, however, the very essence of the relationship between
police and civilians is more rapidly, completely and detrimentally transformed
in accord with elite interests. It equates law-enforcement with
counter-terrorism and community safety with social control.
Fundamentally, of course, this plays its
part in ensuring minimal effective resistance to the broader elite agenda to
secure militarized control of the world’s populations and resources for elite
benefit.
This transformation in the relationship
between police and civilians has been accelerated by training US police in the
use of military tactics that the Israeli military employs against the occupied
Palestinians. See ‘Israel trains US law-enforcement in counter-terrorism’. http://www.timesofisrael.com/israel-trains-us-law-enforcement-in-counter-terrorism/
But consider the implications of this.
As Rashid Khalidi, the Edward Said
professor of modern Arab studies at Columbia University, has noted in
discussing this phenomenon: US police are learning paramilitary and
counterinsurgency tactics from the Israeli military, border patrol and
intelligence services, which enforce military law.
‘If American police and sheriffs consider
they’re in occupation of neighborhoods like Ferguson and East Harlem, this
training is extremely appropriate – they’re learning how to suppress a people,
deny their rights and use force to hold down a subject population’. See ‘US
Police Get Antiterror Training In Israel’. https://popularresistance.org/us-police-get-antiterror-training-in-israel-on-privately-funded-trips/
Moreover, the most tangible evidence that
the militarized training is having an impact on US policing is that both Israel
and the US are using identical equipment against demonstrators, according to a
2013 report by the Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem and photographs
of such equipment taken at three demonstrations in the USA. ‘Tear gas grenades,
“triple chaser” gas canisters and stun grenades made by the American companies
Combined Systems Inc. and Defense Technology Corp. were used in all three U.S.
incidents, as well as by Israeli security forces and military units.’ See ‘US
Police Get Antiterror Training In Israel’. https://popularresistance.org/us-police-get-antiterror-training-in-israel-on-privately-funded-trips/
Given the sheer terror that drives Israeli
military policy towards occupied and militarily undefended Palestine, it is
little wonder that this fear is transmitted as part of any training of US
police. All knowledge and technology is embedded with emotion, and fear is
utterly pervasive in any military activity. Especially when it is directed in
defense of unjust ends.
So what can we do?
If you are interested in working to reduce
police fear and violence, you will get plenty of ideas in the document ‘A
Toolkit for Promoting Justice In Policing’ http://www.justiceinpolicing.com/docs/JusticeInPolicing.pdf
which is summarized here: ‘15 Things Your
City Can Do Right Now to End Police Brutality’. http://mic.com/articles/121572/15-things-your-city-can-do-right-now-to-end-police-brutality
If you want to organise a nonviolent action
while reducing police fear to minimize the risk of police violence, there is a
comprehehensive list of guidelines here: ‘Nonviolent Action: Minimizing the
Risk of Violent Repression’. https://nonviolentstrategy.wordpress.com/articles/minimizing-risk-violent-repression/
If you want to work towards ending the
underlying fear that drives police (and other) violence, consider making ‘My
Promise to Children’. https://feelingsfirstblog.wordpress.com/my-promise-to-children/In essence, if you want powerful
individuals who are capable of resisting elite social control, including that
implemented through police violence, then don’t expect children terrorized into
obedience by parents, teachers and religious figures to later magically have
this power.
And if you are inclined to resist violence
in other contexts, consider participating in ‘The Flame Tree Project to Save
Life on Earth’,http://tinyurl.com/flametree signing the online pledge of ‘The People’s
Charter to Create a Nonviolent World’http://thepeoplesnonviolencecharter.wordpress.com and/or using the strategic framework
explained in Nonviolent Campaign Strategy https://nonviolentstrategy.wordpress.com/for your peace, environmental or social
justice campaign.
Why are the police so terrified?
Essentially because they were terrorized as children and then terrorized during
police training to violently defend elite interests against the rest of us.
Elite control depends on us being too terrified to defend ourselves against
their violence.
If humans are to survive this elite-driven
onslaught, we need people courageous enough to resist police violence and other
elite-driven violence strategically. Can we count on you?
Robert J.
Burrowes has a lifetime commitment to understanding and ending human violence.
He has done extensive research since 1966 in an effort to understand why human
beings are violent and has been a nonviolent activist since 1981. He is the
author of 'Why Violence?'http://tinyurl.com/whyviolence His email address is flametree@riseup.net and his website is here.http://robertjburrowes.wordpress.com
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