Feeling
Good? Take a Ride on the Taser!
by
Christopher Manion
by Christopher Manion
DIGG THIS
When most Americans
read about the Bush Administration’s defense of torture, they undoubtedly
think of faraway fascists whom supporters of the war describe as
animals
and turn the page. But torture, like endless war, can rend the fabric
of civilized life, which is why our founders strongly opposed
both.
While we weren’t
looking, the brutality of torture and preemptive war propounded
by our national government has steadily seeped ever deeper into
the consciousness of state and local bureaucrats, especially those
armed with deadly weapons. I notice especially the emergence of
an increasingly non-random pattern of preemptive government torture,
this time by Taser.
Spend a couple
of minutes on the web, and you can find numerous such incidents
– in, Ohio,
Florida,
Florida,
and South
Carolina (in the South Carolina case, a 75-year-old infirm woman
was actually Tased in a nursing home).
Apparently,
this "harmless" little device is a favorite among domestic
police forces.
But Tasers
are not harmless: they can kill innocent victims who pose no mortal
threat merely because police officers consider the victims to be
insufficiently obsequious.
For instance,
last October, police in Vancouver
tasered Robert Dziekanski to death. Last Tuesday, Minnesota
police killed Mark Backlund with Tasers when they found him "uncooperative."
The incident
which has probably gotten the most coverage, and which first attracted
my attention when I
saw it on Lew’s blog, occurred in Utah last fall. A Utah State
Highway Patrol (UHP) officer Tased an unarmed, nonviolent man whom
he had stopped for speeding. Weeks later, the victim acquired the
video from the trooper’s dashboard-mounted videocam in a public
records request and posted
it on the internet. To date, a million and a half people have
watched it.
Naturally,
the UHP was swamped with outraged calls and e-mails, so it announced
an investigation. It investigated itself, of course, but without
the public outcry it would undoubtedly not have done even that.
Without such a public uproar, Utah’s "bureaucrats with guns"
would probably consider Tasing the innocent as unremarkable as stopping
for a free cup of coffee and a donut at Mom’s Diner. In fact, maybe
they still do.
The investigation
was obviously a coverup. Since the UHP knew that the victim was
considering a lawsuit, its top brass were undoubtedly advised by
counsel that an honest investigation would amount to "self-incrimination."
Hence, the "investigation" probably took all of five minutes.
The "results" were not reported to the public for weeks,
and, to no one’s surprise, the Tasing officer, one Trooper John
Gardener, was exonerated.
Nonetheless,
in trying to say nothing, the UHP let the cat out of the bag, and
painted a picture of where "law enforcement" is heading,
not only in Utah but in the entire nation.
The telling
admission came when Col. Lance Davenport, Commander of the Utah
Highway Patrol, explained his decision to exonerate Gardener. According
to Col. Davenport, Trooper Gardener "felt threatened and
acted reasonably."
Here, Dear
Reader, is the "guilty" plea of the highest-ranking police
officer in Utah to the charge that he and his troopers are irrational.
In fact, he is so proud of it that he calls a news conference to
announce it. Unfortunately, this condition is common among armed
agents of the state everywhere.
Any grade-school
teacher fifty years ago would instantly correct a pupil who confused
her feelings with rational thinking. Alas, this is not the case
in today’s government schools. There, pathetic educrats try to make
the little toddlers "feel
good about themselves" and call it education, even as their
test scores sink below those of Lower Slobbovia.
Let me hazard
a guess: Trooper Gardener and Col. Davenport went to government
schools.
I am in the
music business and I’ve been teaching college courses off and on
for years. Early on, I have learned, both from artists and from
students, that it is virtually impossible to argue with a feeling.
Feelings must be respected, to be sure, and powerful feelings must
be respected powerfully. But I often find myself having to tiptoe
gingerly (and respectfully) around them, awaiting the opportunity
to commence a rational conversation. I repeat: You simply cannot
argue with a feeling. You have to wait for a rational opening.
Sometimes that
opening never comes. Too many of today’s government school students
are raised on the pure drivel of self-esteem.
"I am special, I am special, look at me, look at me, "
they chant. And, when they show up in my class, they write things
like, "I feel that Plato was a fascist."
Well, I don’t
care if they write, "I feel that Aquinas was a great saint."
That is, whether their feelings tend to agree or to disagree with
what I think, I realize that we have to get the discussion onto
a rational level in order to proceed.
Col. Davenport
no doubt considers his whitewashing of Trooper Gardener to be a
smashing success. But he has unwittingly laid bare the fatal flaw
in his entire operation, admitting outright that Gardner, by his
own admission, acted passionately, not reasonably, and that his
superiors want him to continue to do so. How comforting to the people
of Utah!
But not to
the rest of us. Think about Col. Davenport’s admission for a moment.
The next time you are confronted by a government employee who is
armed with a deadly weapon, you have to keep constantly in mind
that his superiors have drilled into his psyche that he should act
according to his feelings. You cannot expect him to be rational,
or try to engage in rational discourse, or even expect him to understand,
much less to answer, a simple factual question. That approach, you
see, might make the armed agent of the state feel threatened!
And frankly, I run into people all the time who feel threatened
by rational inquiry into even their most firmly-held convictions
(example: try having a rational conversation with your friends who
still believe that Bush’s invasion of Iraq was a "success.")
Long ago I
had an old jalopy and put a bumper sticker on it that said, "Support
Your Local Police." Try asking your local police about
their standards regarding the use of force. They will probably respond
that they are trained to use reasonable force. That is, the
individuals applying that principle must be rational people.
Apparently, Utah is an exception. Or is it the rule?
By the way,
to pacify any unreasonable readers who might feel threatened by
these observations: I am not judging the legal particulars of the
incidents linked above. I believe in letting the jury decide. From
them I draw two inescapable conclusions: police use Tasers a lot,
and Tasers can kill people (the manufacturer objects, however, and
insists that there is always another reason the victim is dead.
You can look
it up). I am focusing here simply on the outrageous but inescapable
conclusion that it is law enforcement’s policy to act irrationally,
at least in Utah. On the video, Trooper Gardener even brags to a
backup officer on the scene that he has made his victim "take
a ride on the Taser." You don’t have to be a psychology major
to analyze the personality disorder represented by that line, but
Col. Davenport exonerated him because of the way he felt.
Two years ago,
Pope Benedict XVI delivered a historic address
that encourages the world to engage in civilized and rational discussion.
Benedict is speaking not only the world of Islam, but also the West:
be rational! Act rationally!
It is good
advice. Let us pray that someone in the Utah Highway Patrol is listening.
January
19, 2008
Christopher
Manion [send him mail] is
president of Manion Music,
LLC, which produces copyrighted, royalty-free music collections
for telecommunications media and commercial and hospitality sites
that use background music or music-on-hold. He writes from the
Shenandoah Valley, where he is a volunteer Spanish translator for
local law enforcement.
Copyright
© Christopher Manion 2008. All Rights reserved.
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