Monday, April 26, 2021

Trouble Finding Police Recruits? Cry Me An Effin' River

 The Philly Inquirer has an article today on the city’s problem with filling openings in its police department. Mike Neilon, spokesman for the FOP Lodge 5 (the union) said, “All of that coming together is creating some issues with finding the best and brightest to sign up to be Philadelphia police officers,” he said.

The problem MAY be that “the best and the brightest” don’t want to work in law enforcement, given the racism and hatred endemic in the field. “The best and the brightest,” more or less by definition, want to IMPROVE our country, not tear it apart.

In addition, current attempts to hold officers accountable for their illegal acts, and the efforts to remove the “qualified immunity” that shields them, coupled with the recent convictions of several officers who decided to take the law into their own hands, is scaring off the bullies and racists who would otherwise apply.

“Every action has a reaction. When you vilify every police officer for every bad police officer’s decision, (people) don’t want to take this job anymore,” said Pat Colligan, president of the New Jersey State Policemen’s Benevolent Association, the state’s largest police union. 

And until the good cops start speaking out against the bad cops, society is going to continue to distrust ALL cops.

“It’s been a very trying and difficult time to put on the badge every day,” he added. Whether his difficulty is due to the criminal actions of his fellow officers, or the fear they may be held accountable is moot.

People do not trust the police anymore, and with good reason. The abuse of persons of color at the hands of the police has not diminished. It has, in fact, increased, especially after president trump implicitly approved of the violence and hatred in the field (remember when he urged cops not to be “too gentle” with arrestees?).

The refusal of the police hierarchy to hold officers accountable is also partially to blame. The refusal of department brass to control corrupt, violent, criminal officers, simply encourages misbehavior. Good cops standing with bad, to protect corrupt officers because of the “thin blue line” mentality further alienates the public.

The illegal activities of the cops are nothing new; almost 50 years ago, a young NYPD detective testified before the Knapp Commission, investigating police corruption in New York City, saying:

“The problem is that the atmosphere does not yet exist, in which an honest police officer can act ... without fear of ridicule or reprisal from fellow officers. Police corruption cannot exist unless it is at least tolerated ... at higher levels in the department.” 

That detective had been shot in the face during a drug bust, possibly on the orders of his fellow officers, who were afraid of his belief that cops should follow the law, just like everybody else. The cop’s name, by the way, was Frank Serpico.

 

Monday, April 05, 2021

Drunks. Pfui.

I've had it with drunks.

I will not deal with them any more.

And I don't want to hear "alcoholism is a disease." No, it is NOT a disease, it is a choice. Nobody forces a person to drink. Nobody holds a gun to somebody's head and forces him to drink. A person gets up in the morning and pours himself a glass of orange juice. Adding vodka to the glass is a conscious choice.

Getting hammered every day is a conscious decision to avoid reality, to avoid life, and to avoid the consequences of one's actions.

I used to drink myself into a blind stupor on a regular basis, until I saw what it was doing to me, and what it was doing to those I loved. At that point, I made a conscious decision NOT to drink. And I have no superpowers. In fact, I probably have less willpower than most people. Yet I didn't need a twelve-step program, or sobriety coins, or any of that bullshit. I needed to start each day saying "I don't need to get smashed."

My father and both brothers were mean, nasty, vicious drunks, the kind who get drunk then look for excuses to start trouble.

My mother was less of an alcoholic, but an alcoholic nevertheless, in that she had a psychological addiction to alcohol. She never got falling-down drunk, but if she missed her one glass of wine at dinner, she was an absolute witch.

If you're a drunk, you can get out of my life now. I don't need your drama, your whining, your pleas for understanding. I don't need you trying to excuse your behavior by saying "I'm sick, I have an illness."

You don't have an illness. You are a weak, pathetic loser.