May Day Keeps Militarized Police in the News; ACLU Looking Into Cops and Homeland Security
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May Day Keeps Militarized Police in the News; ACLU Looking Into Cops and Homeland Security http://bit.ly/12utST7
http://antiwar.com/blog/2013/05/02/may-day-keeps-militarized-police-in-the-news-aclu-looking-into-cops-and-homeland-security/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+AWCBlog+%28Antiwar.com+Blog%29
Reports from May 1 protests around the US, particularly in Seattle, may look disturbingly familiar to anyone worried about police militarization.
To be fair, this outlet suggests Seattle saw a contingent of aggressive marchers and rioters who were determined to provoke a response from law enforcement. Some protesters allegedly threw bottles and chunks of concrete at police who responded with pepper spray, and potentially-lethal flashbang grenades. Eight officers were injured, and 17 protesters arrested. Maybe some of those 17 deserved it.
But at least since Occupy lead to middle class white kids pepper sprayed, Tasered, and cuffed on Smartphone camera, the militarization of police has become worthy of general debate and it must be debated. This week it was Mayday, the week before it was the heavy-handed manhunt for the Tsarnaev brothers that provoked argument over the rightness of domestic policing turning jackbooted. Less common knowledge, and harder to suss out than police brutality footage on Youtube, though, is the close ties that the Department of Homeland Security has to law enforcement militarization. This is to the tune of billions of dollars in DHS loans for tanks, surveillance, and other tech that have helped turn Officer Friendly into the riot-ready or even war-ready soldiers you see at every protest, and sometimes at your doorstep.
In March, the American Civil Liberties Union launched an investigation into this phenomena. Theyre calling it Towns Dont Need Tanks. So far they have [f]iled over 260 public records requests with law enforcement agencies and National Guard offices to determine the extent to which federal funding and support has fueled the militarization of state and local police departments.
(More at the link.)