RangerDave wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
What's **** ridiculous is pretending there's any "militarization: going on based on such trivialities as rifles and camo patterns.
They're not trivialities, though, DE. They both reflect and reinforce an aggressive, violence-centered approach (both in attitude and tactics) that is similar to a military engaging with a hostile, foreign population (e.g., US troops patrolling in Afghanistan or Iraq) rather than the protection/enforcement-centered approach that a domestic police force engaging with its own community should have. That's what "militarization of the police" refers to, and the rifles, camo patterns, armored vehicles, etc. are the visible indications of that underlying mentality.
This is a circular argument that amounts to "the police are becoming militarized because they're becoming militarized" and based entirely on superficialities of appearance. Your entire paragraph is nothing but vague buzzwords.
The police are not engaging in a "violence centered approach" at all.. and what's really hilarious is that, in Iraq particularly, the
military struggled not to do so, and finally was able to make a go of it when the surge strategy was implemented. In Afghanistan this has not been as practical to implement, but even there (whining about drones notwithstanding) the military has mad major efforts to reduce the indiscriminate use of firepower - you don't see the massed B-52 raids of Viet Nam, or for that matter, even the approach of the Israelis in Gaza.
Armored vehicles - insignificant. So what if a vehicle is "armored"? Military armored vehicles use belt-fed crew-served weapons (at a minimum), which are noticeably absent from police armored vehicles - armored vehicles which are not only nothing new, but are also notably not the same type as the ones used to "Ward off bombs" that the article refers to. In this context, "armored vehicles" is a loaded term used for it's very broad nature. A tank is an armored vehicle, and so is the truck that picks up cash from the safe at the gas station. The term is used intentionally to create an impression of militarism, when in point of fact "armored vehicles" are not inherently military.
If the National Guard shows up, however, to quell the riots - which is what happens when we intentionally cripple the police because we focus on trivial appearance issues - they will be using military armored vehicles with crew-served weapons.
Rifles - These are the same rifles that anti-gun nitwits whine are for the "battlefield" and complain that "citizens don't need". Amazing how quickly that argument gets polished off and refurbished by whiners when the police have the same weapons. There is nothing wrong with the police having rifles, just like there is nothing wrong with the citizens having them.
Camo pants - most likely, they picked up some cheap surplus military camo pants to save money, since these are really not the normal colors for the police, but still...
CAMO PANTS!!
This sort of straw-grasping is almost as good for the comedy value as it is for demonstrating how far some people will go to take issue with the cops.
I mean, never mind the kid that got shot originally - that was on Saturday, but no one made a thread about that, even though it's certainly an incident worthy of scrutiny. Never mind the people looting and rioting that are the reason for this deployment of police force. Never mind that civil unrest
actually is normally a reason to deploy the military - in the form of the National Guard. Never mind that "looking intimidating" is a good way to get people to
quit rioting and go home, and stop looting the stores of people that had nothing to do with the shooting! No, let's whine about rifles and vehicles and.. and... and CAMO PANTS!! THEY'RE WEARING THE WRONG PANTS!!