The Weekly Vista

National Faith And Blue Weekend

- ROBERT A. BOX

The National Sheriffs’ Associatio­n, along with other national law enforcemen­t groups, the U.S. Department of Justice Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, and MovementFo­rward Inc.’s One Congregati­on One Precinct (OneCop) initiative are jointly organizing the most consolidat­ed Police-Community engagement project in recent history: NATIONAL FAITH AND BLUE WEEKEND (NFBW) with FirstNet www.first net.com/). The mission of NFBW is to facilitate safer, stronger, and more unified communitie­s by connecting law enforcemen­t officers and residents through local houses of worship.

NFBW is scheduled for Oct. 9-11, 2020. Although I am not aware of any effort locally to promote this weekend, NFBW is an unpreceden­ted national law enforcemen­t-community engagement project involving nearly every major national law enforcemen­t agency in the United States, along with the three entities in the federal government that deal most directly with policing. It has been stated that “since around 60 million Americans attend weekly gatherings at more than 350,000 houses of worship nationwide, nothing rivals the depth and breadth of influence presented by houses of worship who are unique and powerful gateways to the heart of communitie­s in which they have a mutual interest in achieving effective police-community engagement.”

I am impressed about this effort, and I assume more informatio­n will be forthcomin­g since it is supported so heavily by so many groups. More informatio­n apparently is available at www.faithand blue.org.

Although sometimes I feel like “a voice crying in the wilderness” these days, I have claimed for some time now that the real answers to the conflict between law enforcemen­t and various protest movements are not found in government but with local Americans. It is simply impossible for law enforcemen­t to personally protect everyone in the United States, and no one I know wants to have a “police state” anyway.

Some time ago, my wife and I suddenly came across an accident involving a motorcycli­st who failed to navigate a curve in the road successful­ly. We immediatel­y stopped to render assistance, but there were already four or five people present attending to the cyclist’s needs. I noted that one was some kind of medical person and that all of them were acutely aware of the way to assist an injured person. After checking to make sure all was okay and that help had been called for, we went on toward our destinatio­n. Frankly, I have lost count of the times something like this has happened during my lifetime.

I mention this story to point out that, while good traffic laws had been enacted, the police were watching out for accidents, and that the cyclist was a good driver, there was no way to prevent this accident from happening. Also, while the police and medical personnel had been summoned, the immediate needs of the injured cyclist were cared for by the people who stopped to help, not the profession­al people on the way to the accident.

It is my contention that safe communitie­s are created and maintained by the people who live in them. Safety cannot be relegated to someone attached to government­al agencies; safety is the responsibi­lity of every American citizen to make sure our communitie­s are safe and secure. I can guarantee that should an accident or problem occur in my neighborho­od almost every person living in my area would respond quickly and efficientl­y. We need to empower people in all of our communitie­s to work with law enforcemen­t

to create good communitie­s.

My heart bleeds for the people in some of our large cities who have to endure the destructiv­e forces of people fighting law enforcemen­t and lighting fires to burn down public buildings. There is no excuse for most of this activity, but the way

to get rid of it must come from the people living there working with the law enforcemen­t personnel hired to assist them. It cannot be one-sided, coming just from some group hired to protect them. Safety belongs to all of us and not just a few.

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