The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

‘Defund the police’ an odd slogan

- Gene Lyons Arkansas Times

“No, I don’t support defunding the police,” Joe Biden told CBS News recently, thereby keeping Democratic hopes for his presidenti­al candidacy alive.

Has there ever been a dumber political slogan?

“Demilitari­ze,” definitely. “Reform,” absolutely. But “Defund the Police” is just plain stupid; a political suicide note. What does it even mean?

A few weeks ago, everybody was all about our heroic “first responders.” The murder of George Floyd by Minneapoli­s cops shocked everybody. Even so, most Americans broadly support law enforcemen­t. But with even President Donald Trump giving lip service to reform, what I call the “Anti-gravity Left” had to come up with something suitably absurd.

Psychologi­st Steven Pinker dealt memorably with the broader question in his 2002 book “The Blank Slate.” As a lad growing up in Canada during the 1960s, he’d fancied himself an anarchist. Then the Montreal police staged a wildcat strike in 1969.

“By 11:20 a.m., the first bank was robbed,” he wrote. “By noon, most of the downtown stores were closed because of looting. Within a few more hours, taxi drivers burned down the garage of a (rival) limousine service … a rooftop sniper killed a provincial police officer, rioters broke into several hotels and restaurant­s, and a doctor slew a burglar in his suburban home. By the end of the day, six banks had been robbed, a hundred shops had been looted, 12 fires had been set, 40 carloads of storefront glass had been broken, and $3 million in property damage had been inflicted, before city authoritie­s had to call in the army and, of course, the Mounties to restore order. This decisive empirical test left my politics in tatters.”

CNN anchor Alisyn Camerota recently put a pertinent question to Minneapoli­s City Council President Lisa Bender, a passionate exponent of defunding: “What if in the middle of the night, my home is broken into? Who do I call?” Bender informed Camerota that her sort of question “comes from a place of privilege.” Do these high-minded specimens even hear themselves?

The remainder of the interview consisted of multisylla­bic bafflegab, making it practicall­y impossible to determine exactly what “defund” meant to Bender and her colleagues who voted unanimousl­y for a (nonbinding) resolution supporting the concept.

Minneapoli­s Mayor Jacob Frey, you may recall, was heckled and driven from the platform by angry protesters for refusing to support full abolition of the police department.

But then precious few activists using the slogan actually do. “For most proponents,” explains Georgetown law professor Christy E. Lopez in The Washington Post, “’defunding the police’ does not mean zeroing out budgets for public safety, and police abolition does not mean that police will disappear overnight — or perhaps ever.”

Then don’t use the phrase, professor. A political slogan you’ve got to keep explaining away is counterpro­ductive.

Instead, Lopez would recommend “shrinking the scope of police responsibi­lities and shifting most of what government does to keep us safe to entities that are better equipped to meet that need.” You know, increased care for the mentally ill, alcohol and drug counseling, homeless shelters, domestic violence interventi­ons and the like. All that good stuff.

“We must teach officers to be guardians, not warriors,” Lopez adds in a resonant phrase that probably means something to her.

In short, all we’ve got to do is transform American cities into Copenhagen, and there will be a lot less police violence.

OK, I’m being a smart aleck. But let’s get real. Most cops would be happy to be relieved of having to deal with psychotic or delusional people. Also with public drunkennes­s and drug overdoses. They famously hate domestic violence calls.

People call police because they’re scared. You can have an army of social workers on call, but it’s going to be cops who make first contact. And if I have to call 9-1-1, I want somebody competent and decisive to show up fast.

One time a few years ago, six out of eight houses on our street in Little Rock, Ark., got broken in the middle of the night. The thieves kicked two small dogs into a neighbor’s swimming pool and left them to drown. No cops? Please.

The Little Rock Police Department long has been a hive of factionali­sm and discord. Much of the fighting centers upon race. It’s the American South.

But they do show up when you need help. And I’ve always been damned glad to see them.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States