The
Iron Jaws of the Police State: Trump’s America
Is a Constitution-Free Zone
By John W.
Whitehead
“Policing is broken… It has evolved as a
paramilitary, bureaucratic, organizational
arrangement that distances police officers
from the communities they’ve been sworn to
protect and serve. When we have shooting
after shooting after shooting that most
people would define as at least
questionable, it’s time to look, not just at
a few bad apples, but the barrel. And I’m
convinced that it is the barrel that is
rotted.”
—
Norm Stamper, former Seattle police chief
Please.
Somebody give Attorney General Jeff Sessions a
copy of the Constitution.
And
while you’re at it, get a copy to President
Trump, too.
In
fact, you might want to share a copy with the
nation’s police officers, as well.
I have
my doubts that any of these individuals—all of
whom swore to uphold and defend the
Constitution—have ever read any of the nation’s
founding documents.
Had
they actually read and understood the
Declaration of Independence, Constitution and
Bill of Rights, there would be no militarized
police, no mass surveillance, no police
shootings of unarmed individuals, no SWAT team
raids, no tasering of children, no asset
forfeiture schemes or any of the other
government-sanctioned abuses that get passed off
as law and order these days.
We’ve
got serious problems in this country, and they
won’t be solved on the golf course, by wining
and dining corporate CEOs, giving local police
forces more military equipment, locking down the
nation, or pretending that the only threats to
our freedoms are posed by forces beyond our
borders or by “anti-government” extremists
hiding among us.
So far,
Trump’s first 100 days in office have been no
different from Obama’s last 100 days,
at least when it comes to the government’s
ongoing war on our freedoms.
Government corruption remains at an all-time
high.
Police
shootings and misconduct have continued
unabated.
The
nation’s endless wars continue to push us to the
brink of financial ruin.
And “we
the people” are still being treated as if we
have no rights, are entitled to no protections,
and exist solely for the purpose of sustaining
the American police state with our hard-earned
tax dollars.
Just
take the policing crisis in this country, for
instance.
Sessions—the chief lawyer for the government and
the head of the Justice Department, which is
entrusted with ensuring that the nation’s laws
are faithfully carried out and holding
government officials accountable to abiding by
their oaths of office to “uphold and defend the
Constitution”—doesn’t
think we’ve got a policing problem
in America.
In fact, Sessions thinks the police are doing a
great job (apart from “the
individual misdeeds of bad actors,”
that is).
For
that matter, so does Trump.
Really,
really great.
Indeed, Sessions thinks the nation’s police
forces are doing such a great job that
they should be rewarded with
more military toys
(weapons, gear, equipment) and
less oversight
by the Justice Department.
As for Trump, he believes “the
dangerous anti-police atmosphere in America is
wrong” and has
vowed to “end it.”
Excuse
me for a moment while I flush what remains of
the Constitution down the toilet.
Clearly, Trump has not been briefed on the fact
that it has never been safer to be a cop in
America. According to Newsweek, “it’s
safer to be a cop than it is to simply live
in many U.S. cities…
It’s safer to be a cop than it is to live in
Baltimore. It’s safer to be a cop than it is to
be a fisher, logger, pilot, roofer, miner,
trucker or taxi driver. It’s safer to be a cop
today than it’s been in years, decades, or even
a century, by
some measures.”
You
know what’s dangerous?
Being a
citizen of the American police state.
Treating cops as deserving of greater
protections than their fellow citizens.
And
training cops to think and act like they’re
soldiers on a battlefield.
As journalist Daniel Bier
warns, “If you
tell cops over and over that they’re in a war,
they’re under siege, they’re under attack, and
that citizens are the enemy—instead of the
people they’re supposed to protect—you’re going
to create an atmosphere of fear, tension, and
hostility that can only end badly, as
it has for so many people.”
Frankly, if there’s a war taking place in this
country, it’s a war on the American people.
After
all, we’re the ones being shot at and tasered
and tracked and beaten and intimidated and
threatened and invaded and probed.
And what is the government doing to
fix this policing crisis
that threatens the safety of man, woman and
child in this country?
Not a
damn thing.
Incredibly, according to a study by the American
Medical Association,
police-inflicted injuries send more than 50,000
Americans to hospital emergency rooms every year.
Yet as Slate
warns, if you
even dare to criticize a police officer let
alone challenge the myth of the hero cop—a myth
“used to legitimize brutality as necessary,
justify policies that favor the police, and
punish anyone who dares to question police
tactics or oppose the unions’ agendas”— you will
be roundly denounced “as
disloyal, un-American, and dangerous.”
As reporter David Feige concludes, “We should
appreciate the value and sacrifice of those who
choose to serve and protect. But that
appreciation should not constitute a
get-out-of-jail-free card for the vast army of
800,000 people granted general arrest powers
and increasingly armed with automatic weapons
and armored vehicles.”
Vast
army.
Equipped with deadly weapons.
Empowered with arrest powers.
Immune
from accountability for wrongdoing.
What is
this, Hitler’s America?
Have we
strayed so far from our revolutionary roots that
we no longer even recognize tyranny when it’s
staring us in the face?
The fact that police are choosing to fatally
resolve encounters with their fellow citizens by
using their guns speaks volumes about what is
wrong with policing in America today, where
police officers are being dressed in the
trappings of war, drilled in the deadly art of
combat, and trained to look upon “every
individual they interact with as an armed threat
and every
situation as a deadly force encounter in the
making.”
Mind
you, the federal government is the one
responsible for turning our police into
extensions of the military, having previously
distributed billions of dollars’ worth of
military equipment to local police agencies,
including high-powered weapons, assault
vehicles, drones, tactical gear, body armor,
weapon scopes, infrared imaging systems and
night-vision goggles—equipment intended for use
on the battlefield—not to mention federal grants
for militarized training and SWAT teams.
Thus,
despite what Attorney General Sessions wants you
to believe, the daily shootings, beatings and
roadside strip searches (in some cases, rape) of
American citizens by police are not isolated
incidents.
Likewise, the events of recent years are not
random occurrences: the invasive surveillance,
the extremism reports, the civil unrest, the
protests, the shootings, the bombings, the
military exercises and active shooter drills,
the color-coded alerts and threat assessments,
the fusion centers, the transformation of local
police into extensions of the military, the
distribution of military equipment and weapons
to local police forces, the government databases
containing the names of dissidents and potential
troublemakers.
Rather,
these developments are all part of a concerted
effort to destabilize the country, institute
de facto martial law disguised as law and
order, and shift us fully into the iron jaws of
the police state.
So, no,
the dramatic increase in police shootings are
not accidents.
It wasn’t an “accident” that 26-year-old
Andrew Lee Scott,
who had committed no crime, was gunned down by
police who knocked aggressively on the wrong
door at 1:30 am, failed to identify themselves
as police, and then repeatedly shot and killed
Scott when he answered the door while holding a
gun in self-defense. Police were investigating a
speeding incident by engaging in a
middle-of-the-night “knock and talk” in Scott’s
apartment complex.
It wasn’t an “accident” when
Levar Edward Jones
was shot by a South Carolina police officer
during a routine traffic stop over a seatbelt
violation as he was in the process of reaching
for his license and registration. The trooper
justified his shooting of the unarmed man by
insisting that Jones reached for his license
“aggressively.”
It wasn’t an “accident” when
Francisco Serna,
a 73-year-old grandfather with early-stage
dementia, was shot and killed by police for
refusing to remove his hand from his pocket.
Police were investigating an uncorroborated
report that Serna had a gun, but it turned out
he was holding a crucifix and made no aggressive
movements before he was gunned down.
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It wasn’t an “accident” when
Nandi Cain, Jr.,
was thrown to the ground, choked and punched
over a dozen times by a police officer after the
officer stopped Cain for jaywalking. Cain made
no aggressive moves toward the officer, and had
even removed his jacket to show the officer he
had no weapon.
It wasn’t an “accident” when 65-year-old
Thomas Smith,
suffering from Parkinson’s Disease, called 911
because of a medical problem only to have his
home raided by a SWAT team. Smith was thrown to
the ground and placed in handcuffs because his
condition prevented him from following police
instructions.
It wasn’t an “accident” when
John Wrana, a
95-year-old World War II veteran, died after
being shot multiple times by a police officer
with a Mossberg shotgun during a raid at Wrana’s
room at an assisted living center. This, despite
the fact that there were five police officers on
the scene to subdue Wrana, who used a walker to
get around and was “armed” with a shoehorn and
not a knife, as police assumed.
It wasn’t an “accident” when a
10-year-old boy
was subdued by two police officers using a taser
because the child became unruly at the day care
center he attended.
It wasn’t an “accident” when police in South
Dakota routinely subjected persons,
some as young as 3 years old,
to catheterizations in order to forcibly obtain
urine samples.
It wasn’t an “accident” when
Charles Kinsey,
a behavioral therapist, was shot by police as he
was trying to help an autistic patient who had
wandered away from his group home and was
sitting in the middle of the road playing with a
toy car. The officer who shot Kinsey was
reportedly told that neither Kinsey nor the
patient had a weapon.
It wasn’t an “accident” when
Frank Arnal Baker
was mauled by a police dog and kicked by an
officer for not complying quickly enough with a
police order. Baker, who had done nothing wrong,
spent two weeks in the hospital with fractured
ribs and collapsed lungs and needed skin grafts
for the dog-bite injuries.
No,
none of these incidents were accidents.
Nor are
they isolated, anecdotal examples of a few bad
actors, as Sessions insists.
Far from being isolated or anecdotal, police
misconduct cases have become so
prevalent as to
jeopardize the integrity of all of the nation’s
law enforcement agencies.
Unfortunately, as I make clear in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American
People,
this is what happens when you allow so-called
“law and order” to matter more than justice:
corruption flourishes, injustice reigns and
tyranny takes hold.
Yet no
matter what Trump and Session seem to believe,
nowhere in the Constitution does it say that
Americans must obey the government.
Despite
the corruption of Congress and the complicity of
the courts, nowhere does the Constitution
require absolute subservience to the
government’s dictates.
And
despite what most police officers seem to
believe, nowhere does the Constitution state
that Americans must comply with a police order.
To
suggest otherwise is authoritarianism.
This is
also, as abolitionist Frederick Douglass noted,
the definition of slavery: “I didn’t know I was
a slave until I found out I couldn’t do the
things I wanted.”
You
want to know what it means to be a slave in the
American police state?
It
means being obedient, compliant and Sieg
Heil!-ing every government agent armed with a
weapon. If you believe otherwise, try standing
up for your rights, being vocal about your
freedoms, or just challenging a government
dictate, and see how long you last before you’re
staring down the barrel of a loaded
government-issued gun.
Constitutional
attorney and author John W. Whitehead is founder
and president of The
Rutherford Institute.
His new book Battlefield
America: The War on the American People (SelectBooks,
2015) is available online at www.amazon.com.
Whitehead can be contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.