Somhairle Kelly (
mirrorshard) wrote2009-04-19 05:00 pm
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Policemen are not our Enemy
After the Late Unpleasantness at Bishopsgate, I've thankfully seen a very sensible attitude towards the police from all my friends-list. A couple of times, though, I've seen commenters talking about "pigs" or "filth", as though the police were some monumental dehumanized bloc. Please, if someone does this on your journal, point them to this.
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I do believe that this has been precisely the problem during the G20 protests: 90 complaints and counting, and lots of lovely independent video to corroborate something we've known about for years, and both individuals and insitutional structures have been denying.
Turns out--just for example--that some police officers were blacking out their numbers, an accusation that has been made and denies for well over thirty years.
So while I agree with your post about language, I'm not sure I agree with your title.
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Fundamentally, I think, I just don't want to think of all this in terms of Enemies. I'm sure there are some people who'd see that as a weakness on my part; I know you're not one of them.
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The police really are there to control us, protection is pretty far down the list.
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Speaking of misunderstandings, here's (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8007580.stm) a juicy one -
former shadow home secretary David Davis said the actions of a minority of police officers had undermined the trust and confidence of the public.
"We have a police force in this country, uniquely in the world.... [which] comes from Robert Peel's original proposal the police will be of the public and the public will be of the police. They are indistinguishable, they are the public in uniform. And that trust and confidence is critical."
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How are you finding the way the media is continuing to cover this? From reading the BBC, I think it's improving, but they still do things like quote the police (or their pals) as saying that the kettling was essential to contain the violence, without mentioning that it wasn't a violent situation and that many believe that kettling, when used in those circumstances, is actually more likely to create hostility.
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As an aside: Jerry White's NIneteenth Century London argues that the police were deliberately drawn from rural areas, both because of better health and height and precisely because they would have no local loyalties.
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