How Do You Prepare a Child for Life in the
American Police State?By John W.
Whitehead
“Fear isn’t so difficult to understand.
After all, weren’t we all frightened as children? Nothing has
changed since Little Red Riding Hood faced the big bad wolf.
What frightens us today is exactly the same sort of thing that
frightened us yesterday. It’s just a different wolf.” ―
Alfred Hitchcock
October 13, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - In an age
dominated with news of school shootings, school lockdowns, police
shootings of unarmed citizens (including children), SWAT team raids
gone awry (leaving children devastated and damaged), reports of
school resource officers tasering and shackling unruly students, and
public schools undergoing lockdowns and active drills, I find myself
wrestling with the question: how do you prepare a child for life in
the American police state?
Every parent lives with a fear of the dangers that
prey on young children: the predators who lurk at bus stops and
playgrounds, the traffickers who make a living by selling young
bodies, the peddlers who push drugs that ensnare and addict, the
gangs that deal in violence and bullets, the drunk drivers, the
school bullies, the madmen with guns, the diseases that can end a
life before it’s truly begun, the cynicism of a modern age that can
tarnish innocence, and the greed of a corporate age that makes its
living by trading on young consumers.
It’s difficult enough raising a child in a world
ravaged by war, disease, poverty and hate, but when you add the
police state into the mix—with its battlefield mindset, weaponry,
rigidity, surveillance, fascism, indoctrination, violence, etc.—it
becomes near impossible to guard against the toxic stress of police
shootings, SWAT team raids, students being tasered and shackled,
lockdown drills, and a growing unease that some of the monsters of
our age come dressed in government uniforms.
Children are taught from an early age that there
are consequences for their actions. Hurt somebody, lie, steal,
cheat, etc., and you will get punished. But how do you explain to a
child that a police officer can shoot someone who was doing nothing
wrong and get away with it? That a cop can lie, steal, cheat, or
kill and still not be punished?
Kids understand accidents: sometimes drinks get
spilled, dishes get broken, people slip and fall and hurt
themselves, or you bump into someone without meaning to, and they
get hurt. As long as it wasn’t intentional and done with malice, you
forgive them and you move on. Police shootings of unarmed people—of
children and old people and disabled people—can’t just be shrugged
off as accidents, however.
Tamir Rice was no accident.
Cleveland police shot and killed the 12-year-old, who was seen
playing on a playground with a pellet gun. Surveillance footage
shows police shooting the boy
two seconds after getting out of a moving patrol car.
Incredibly, the shooting was deemed “reasonable” and “justified” by
two law enforcement experts who concluded that the police use of
force “did
not violate Tamir's constitutional rights.”
Aiyana Jones was also no accident.
The 7-year-old was killed after a Detroit SWAT team launched a
flash-bang grenade into her family’s apartment, broke through the
door and opened fire, hitting the little girl who was asleep on the
living room couch. The cops weren’t even in the right apartment.
Ironically, on
the same day that President Obama refused to stop equipping
police with the very same kinds of military weapons and gear used to
raid Aiyana’s home, it was reported that the police officer who shot
and killed the little girl
would not face involuntary manslaughter charges.
Obama insists that
$263 million to purchase body cameras for police will prevent
any further erosions of trust, but a body camera would not have
prevented Aiyana from being shot in the head. Indeed, the entire
sorry affair was captured on camera:
a TV crew was filming the raid for an episode of The First
48, a true-crime reality show in which homicide detectives have
48 hours to crack a case.
While that $263 million will make Taser
International, the manufacturer of the body cameras, a
whole lot richer, it’s doubtful it would have prevented a
SWAT team
from shooting 14-month-old Sincere in the shoulder and hand and
killing his mother.
No body camera could have stopped a Georgia SWAT
team from launching a flash-bang grenade into the house in which
Baby Bou Bou, his three sisters and his parents were staying. The
grenade landed in the 2-year-old’s crib, burning a hole in his
chest and leaving him with scarring that a lifetime of surgeries
will not be able to easily undo.
No body camera could have prevented
10-year-old Dakota Corbitt from being shot by a Georgia police
officer who tried to shoot an inquisitive dog, missed, and hit
the young boy, instead.
When
police shot 4-year-old Ava Ellis in the leg, shattering the bone,
it actually was an accident, but it was an accident that could have
been prevented. Police reported to Ava’s house after being told that
Ava’s mother, who had cut her arm, was in need of a paramedic. Cops
claimed that the family pet charged the officer who was approaching
the house, causing him to fire his gun and hit the little girl.
Alberto Sepulveda, 11, died from one “accidental”
shotgun round to the back, after a SWAT
team raided his parents’ home. Thirteen-year-old Andy Lopez Cruz was
shot 7 times in 10 seconds by a California police officer who
mistook the boy’s toy gun for an assault rifle. Christopher Roupe,
17, was
shot and killed after opening the door to a police officer. The
officer, mistaking the Wii remote control in Roupe’s hand for a gun,
shot him in the chest.
These children are more than grim statistics on a
police blotter. They are the heartbreaking casualties of the
government’s endless, deadly wars on terror, on drugs, and on the
American people themselves.
Not even the children who survive their encounters
with police escape unscathed. Increasingly, their lives are daily
lessons in compliance and terror, meted out with every SWAT team
raid, roadside strip search, and school drill.
Who is calculating the damage being done to the
young people forced to watch as their homes are trashed and their
dogs are shot during SWAT team raids? A Minnesota SWAT team actually
burst into one family’s house, shot the family’s dog, handcuffed the
children and forced them to “sit
next to the carcass of their dead and bloody pet for more than an
hour.” They later claimed it was the wrong house.
More than
80% of American communities have their own SWAT teams, with more
than 80,000 of these paramilitary raids are carried out every year.
That translates to more than 200 SWAT team raids every day in which
police crash through doors, damage private property, terrorize
adults and children alike, kill family pets, assault or shoot anyone
that is perceived as threatening—and all in the pursuit of someone
merely suspected of a crime,
usually some small amount of drugs.
What are we to tell our nation’s children about
the role of police in their lives? Do you parrot the government line
that
police officers are community helpers who are to be trusted and
obeyed at all times? Do you caution them to steer clear of a police
officer, warning them that any interactions could have disastrous
consequences? Or is there some happy medium between the two that,
while being neither fairy tale nor horror story, can serve as a
cautionary tale for young people who will encounter police at
virtually every turn?
No matter what you say, there can be no avoiding
the hands-on lessons being taught in the schools about the role of
police in our lives, ranging from active shooter drills and
school-wide lockdowns to incidents in which children engaging in
typically childlike behavior are suspended (for
shooting an imaginary “arrow” at a fellow classmate), handcuffed
(for
being disruptive at school), arrested (for
throwing water balloons as part of a school prank), and even
tasered (for
not obeying instructions).
For example, a middle school in Washington State
went on
lockdown after a student brought a toy gun to class. A Boston
high school went into
lockdown for four hours after a bullet was discovered in a classroom.
A North Carolina elementary school locked down and called in police
after a
fifth grader reported seeing an unfamiliar man in the school (it
turned out to be a parent).
Better safe than sorry is the rationale offered to
those who worry that these drills are terrorizing and traumatizing
young children. As journalist Dahlia Lithwick points out: “I don’t
recall any serious national public dialogue about lockdown protocols
or how they became the norm. It seems simply to have begun,
modeling itself on the lockdowns that occur during prison riots,
and then spread until school lockdowns and lockdown drills are as
common for our children as fire drills, and as routine as
duck-and-cover drills were in the 1950s.”
These drills have, indeed, become routine.
As the New York Times
reports: “Most states have passed laws requiring schools to
devise safety plans, and several states, including Michigan,
Kentucky and North Dakota, specifically require lockdown drills.
Some drills are as simple as a principal making an announcement and
students sitting quietly in a darkened classroom. At other schools,
police officers and school officials playact a shooting, stalking
through the halls like gunmen and testing whether doors have been
locked.”
Police officers at a Florida middle school carried
out an active shooter drill in an effort to educate students about
how to respond in the event of an actual shooting crisis. Two armed
officers, guns loaded and drawn, burst into classrooms, terrorizing
the students and placing the school into lockdown mode.
What is particularly chilling is how effective
these lessons in compliance are in indoctrinating young people to
accept their role in the police state, either as criminals or prison
guards. If these exercises are intended to instill fear and
compliance into young people, they’re working.
Sociologist Alice Goffman understands how
far-reaching the impact of such “exercises” can be on young people.
For six years, Goffman lived in a low-income urban neighborhood,
documenting the impact such an environment—a microcosm of the police
state—on its residents. Her account of neighborhood children playing
cops and robbers speaks volumes about how
constant exposure to pat downs, strip searches, surveillance and
arrests can result in a populace that meekly allows itself to be
prodded, poked and stripped.
As journalist Malcolm Gladwell writing for the
New Yorker
reports:
Goffman sometimes saw young children playing
the age-old game of cops and robbers in the street, only the
child acting the part of the robber wouldn’t even bother to run
away: I saw children give up running and simply stick their
hands behind their back, as if in handcuffs; push their body up
against a car without being asked; or lie flat on the ground and
put their hands over their head. The children yelled, “I’m going
to lock you up! I’m going to lock you up, and you ain’t never
coming home!” I once saw a six-year-old pull another child’s
pants down to do a “cavity search.”
Clearly, our children are getting the message, but
it’s not the message that was intended by those who fomented a
revolution and wrote our founding documents. Their philosophy was
that the police work for us, and “we the people” are the masters,
and they are to be our servants. Now that has been turned on its
head, fueled by our fears (some legitimate, some hyped along by the
government and its media mouthpieces) about the terrors and
terrorists that lurk among us.
It’s getting harder by the day to tell young
people that we live in a nation that values freedom and which is
governed by the rule of law without feeling like a teller of tall
tales. Yet as I point out in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American People,
unless something changes and soon for the young people growing up,
there will be nothing left of freedom as we have known it but a
fairy tale without a happy ending.
John W. Whitehead is an attorney and author who
has written, debated and practiced widely in the area of
constitutional law and human rights. Whitehead's concern for the
persecuted and oppressed led him, in 1982, to establish The
Rutherford Institute, a nonprofit civil liberties and human rights
organization whose international headquarters are located in
Charlottesville, Virginia. Whitehead serves as the Institute’s
president and spokesperson, in addition to writing a weekly
commentary that is posted on The Rutherford Institute’s website (www.rutherford.org)