So the University of Houston suspends Sigma Chi for hazing practices so dangerous as to be criminal whether or not the pledges voluntarily submit. The District Attorney may press criminal charges. You didn't hear about it through the week long din of gnashing and wailing and rending of clothes over rude comments made on a bus at another university. Boys will be boys and at least they're not racists. We're only accepting racism outrage this month and next month will be reserved for Hillary's e-mail.
So two cops walk into a house in Dallas. There's a man standing there with a screwdriver. His mother tells the cops he's mentally ill and wants help getting him to the hospital. "we don't have time for this" says one of them. They shoot him repeatedly until he's dead. That's right, CNN is not covering this round the clock, there are no nationwide demonstrations reminding us that bipolar lives matter. Call me a racist, and some have, but the struggle for justice and equality for all isn't well served by ignoring anyone's liberty and civil rights. Human life matters.
So a guy gets a phone call from a neighbor. His house is surrounded by 40 police cars, SWAT team with rifles and battering rams. There's a remote control bomb disposal robot, there are armored assault vehicles. Returning home, the parents of the teenager inside are told not to enter "the kill zone." Later they're told the kid "is deceased." They could only get details from the TV news the following day. It was claimed the kid had a long police record. He didn't. A neighbor saw the plainclothes officers approaching the young man and thought they were robbers. It's likely the victim did too. They jumped the fence, tackled him and when he defended himself, they killed him. Happens in Phoenix all the time: the mentally ill, the poor, the Hispanic, the innocent, the harmless. We tend not to demonstrate round the clock, not to burn cars, rob liquor stores, loot businesses. We tend not to notice. The conductor's baton is pointing elsewhere. This is what it means, all that it means and nothing else is pertinent, anything else is out of line and racist.
Last year the police story about the homeless New Mexico man who pulled a small knife when ordered to move along and had to be killed, was contradicted by video that shows he was complying, not resisting. His life mattered and his "white privilege" availed him not.
The U.S. Justice Department issued a report last year documenting that the Albuquerque Police Department has for years engaged in a pattern of excessive force that violates the U.S. Constitution and federal law. The mentally ill, ethnic minorities, the homeless, the poor, the helpless:
officers too frequently use deadly force against people who pose a minimal threat, said the report.
Albuquerque officers use “less lethal” force, including Tasers, on people who are non-threatening or unable to comply with orders.
Encounters between APD officers and persons with mental illness and in crisis too frequently result in a use of force or a higher level of force than necessary.
Police brutality, excessive force -- it seems to correlate more with helplessness than with anything else, but that observation departs from the official line, deflects anger from the target we're given. It flirts with racist thoughts. It admits shades and colors into our prescribed, black and white arguments. In fact we have a problem with the way the police sometimes treat people in general. and for those without such effective advocates and agitators, their plight is worse. Black, Brown, Indigenous and indigent people all suffer from official brutality as well as from official lack of concern and it's time to step out of line and take a stand against the incompetence, the bias, the anger and increasing militarism of our police. But for the love of justice, let's stop forcing our force-fed examples to monopolize the news while ignoring the real problem. All lives matter!
“what we choose to obsess about seems chosen for us … to produce and direct passion on demand, outrage on cue”
ReplyDeleteThe concept of a Global Village screeching through our media does that to us. Media mirrors the primordial screech of humanity – those distant tragedies and torments normally removed from earshot - now made manifest before our eyes. The screech is a stream of sound bites and the headlines de jour running fast and shallow. We see the blur of detritus floating past but rarely focus on the details.
One of the problems with the orchestrated outrage is that we miss truly important and sometimes pivotal things while obsessing about the insignificant. Is this done on purpose? Do we get unrelenting and pointless ranting about a missing airplane so that we won't notice what Congress is or isn't doing? Do we have a concerted effort by professional anger mongers with ulterior motives who make a living making their share of the outrage market more attractive than someone else's? Can we tell from watching the news if some incident is rampant or rare, one in ten million or one in ten, on the rise or on the decline?
ReplyDeleteHow many stories took precedence over an illegal and dangerous act of Congress? Why?
It is way over my head. The only thing I think I know for sure is our American two party system has essentially become a circus with the ring leaders occasionally changes hands.
ReplyDeleteThe politics of distraction has been perfected with the media certainly complicit in achieving this low point in our history.
Our destiny as a nation rests in the manipulating fingers and hands of oligarchs we neither see or hear. The distractions they create keep them in power. For now.
It-s late so I must go before I start to really ramble.
I know I'm starting to sound paranoid, but just because one is paranoid, doesn't mean they're not out to get you.
DeleteDoes Media Hebephrenia hype racism just because it sells? Or are there more devils behinds the details?
ReplyDeleteI can make the case that there is bigotry in our law enforcement establishment, but not necessarily the kind that fits standard definitions – only the kind that make headlines sensational. Let’s take the time to look under the hood:
No doubt, law enforcement is a dangerous job but this shouldn’t mean using lethal force or violent means of pacification (note ironic usage) in every instance. There are reasons why inner city youth or persons suffering from a mental illness become unruly.
A mentally ill person may have a dystonic awareness of their disorder, meaning they see themselves as defective, ostracized by society, shunned everywhere by everyone, and generally regarded with suspicion. Self-anger and a need to lash out coupled with a lack of impulse control accounts for a high percentage of fatalities when law enforcement deals with this population.
Similarly, inner city youth have their demons too: Poverty and privation, constant harassment borne of racial profiling, absentee parents struggling to put food on the table, street criminals serving as role models, and an inner city culture that further alienates them from the rest of society.
Among law enforcement personal, the occupational hazard of on-again-off-again adrenaline rushes that become involuntary and uncontrollable. Yes, this is an occupation hazard that has not been properly researched, discussed in policy circles, or mentioned in our media; yet it is real. I believe this condition accounts for a significant percentage of unintended fatalities.
No doubt, there are also a few bad apples – reflexive bullies who seek careers in law enforcement and take out their aggressions on the public.
Finally, a pervasive hardliner attitude against crime and the militarization of our police force have seeped into the grey areas of law enforcement – resulting in unnecessarily fatal overreactions: Not every bad mouth is a criminal who deserves a bullet in the head.
I'm just guessing here, but it could be that the poor and helpless, the homeless and confused and all those who might be taken for one of those are far more likely to be victims of the system. More likely to be thought suspicious, dangerous and a threat to law and order.
ReplyDeleteWho wants to pay for better training for police? Who wants to pay to attract and retain better police. Hell, who even wants to bother to vote for better government?
It seems like everyone I hear is parroting "we need to have a discussion about race" but insisting that the discussion consist of a catechism and nothing else and in some instances promoting demonstrations that usually get out of control and turn former supporters into cynics. Zealotry is the life blood of organizations which I deplore because it puts the loudest and least rational in charge. We have endless "leaders" shouting ME ME ME while behind the curtain, ancestral voices working toward repression, subjugation, war and poverty.
Our problems with race and social/economic/educational status are not simple. We can't pass a law and make it go away and we certainly can't do anything but make it worse by alienating one group from another and shouting each other down and seeking out microscopic reflexes and calling it racism. It doesn't help to deny that there has been huge progress or that huge mistakes have been made unless in the end the objective is polarization and a Hobbesian war of all against all. Somehow I'm starting to think that's just what is being promoted by all sides in the effort to start everything all over after a man made apocalypse.
“the poor and helpless, the homeless and confused and all those who might be taken for one of those are far more likely to be victims of the system …”
DeletePerhaps I dropped the ball in my above comment and did not complete the thought. What I meant to say when I said, “I can make the case that there is bigotry in our law enforcement establishment,” is that there is a pervasive tendency to marginalize people who don’t fit the standard mold or meet standard expectations. In marginalizing people, law enforcement dehumanizes them (which makes it far easier to kill).
I am not an Apocalypse Cultist by any means, but there are a lot of holes in the dike of civilization – far more than I have tentacles. And even if did try to plug the holes to hold back the flood, the direction would in reverse: Not to keep the land dry, but to keep plastics and other human flotsam away from my domain.
In Cephalopodia, when we eat someone for lunch, it is about nourishment, not about politics or religion or any other form tribal identity. Everything about media and the world you live is in service of wanton tribalism.
Make than wonton, please!
Wanton, Wonton, Guantanamera - it's all the same caus language gotta change
DeleteYo soy un hombre sincero
De donde crece la palma, . .
Let's all sing.
This isn't exactly the balm of Gilead, but I hope it brings some surcease to some of our woes.
ReplyDeleteWho is this Gilead and why is he balmy? Next thing you know Obama's gonna appoint him a Czar or something.
ReplyDeleteBut of course my constant yapping about entities dedicated to promoting and preserving the notion that everything is going to hell fits nicely with this link. I wish it were just the Right, with the flood of dire warning about what Obama and his executive orders and his policies and all are about to do to us at any moment, it
's us too with the hyperbolic howling about how you can't go outside any more or send your kids to school what with all the deadly cell phones and electric meters and assault rifles with armor piercing bullets spraying all over like hail and hordes of child molesters and mysterious toxins and genetically modified corn that turns you into a toad.
It's not true and the worst part is that while we're busy raving like Chicken Little on crack they're robbing us blind. We're not a nation of people but a nation of special interest gropus with policies and agendas and litanies to force us all to recite -- from the goddamn pledge of allegiance to vaccination phobia to -- well you name it.
It's not just the Koch Brothers, my fellow Americans. Every group falls prey to zealotry and self protection. Think of how many activists woule have to find real work if even a quarter of us could tell up from down.
The whole thing is watching television. Just don't fucking do it.
ReplyDeleteI'm guessing that the story about the homeless camper in the New Mexico desert started making the rounds of the Albuquerque and New Mexico bloggers before the frenzy-feeding elasmobranchs got ahold of it. I think that a lot of local news stories first get national attention from faithful b-listers and are then spotted by alert reporters, often enough by reporters who work for FOX.
I don't think it was Big Brother who was instructing us to care. It was particularly egregious. The guy had a neat camp. Was clearly carrying out all of his trash. Everything he owned was in some bag or another. Nothing was loose. He was just a lonely man not hurting anyone. The APD soldiers brought guns and just couldn't resist killing him. Just for fun. They already knew exactly who he was. They just woke him up to kill him. The guy was no more dangerous than a puppy or a kitten. And he was trying to cooperate as well.
But if you want the story of a line of bullshit so thick you could walk on it, I vote for the hype that North Korea hacked SONY's intranet to prevent the release of The Interview in theatres. They had a turkey on their hands and needed a quick way out of their contract.
Avoiding these stories is harder than turning off the tube. I watch precious little TV news except for Bloomberg.
ReplyDeleteCaptain,
ReplyDeleteThis miscarriage of injustice (two wrongs don’t make a right) may raise your blood pressure:
LAPD Officers Who Shot Unarmed Man With Autism Awarded Millions In Discrimination Lawsuit:
Two LAPD officers who fatally shot an unarmed man in 2010 were awarded a total of nearly $4 million last week in a discrimination lawsuit that accused the department of treating them unfairly because they are Latino …
Corrales and Diego each fired one shot. One bullet hit Washington in the head and he was pronounced dead at the scene. Washington wasn't armed.
A civilian commission ruled in 2011 that the officers were not justified in the shooting …
The same year Corrales and Diego initially filed their suit, Washington’s mother received a settlement from the city for $950,000.”