Posted on 06/15/2015 1:44:45 AM PDT by Kaslin
All lives matter. Blue lives matter. One poster reads, Not in the news. Today, 1 million cops flawlessly protected your streets. Flawlessly? No, perfect only happens in cop shows where they can retake bad scenes. With only 2.5 officers for every 1,000 citizens, flawless isnt possible.
Sadly, cases like Eric Garner, Freddie Gray, and Walter Scott have provided the media with a continuous stream of nightly cell phone videos of police officers acting bad and have given demonstrators a rallying cry for their protests.
But today, crime is at historic lows and most cities are safer than they have been in generations. This deserves more accolades than derision, but Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum, confessed, People arent buying our brand. If it was a product, wed take it out of the marketplace . Weve lost the confidence of the American people.
Hold bad cops responsible, but its time to let some of our good officers receive the coverage and honor they deserve. Jimmy Capra, former DEA Chief of Operations and founder of the Frontline Leadership Group, says what most of our finest officers feel:
Theres been a number of high profile cases over the decades of law enforcement officers failing to uphold their oath of office by violating civil rights and in some cases, engaging in criminal conduct. When instances like this arise, it literally grieves the law enforcement community, and were wounded as a result of the loss of public trust.
"That said, there are approximately 900,000 law-enforcement officers serving in this great country who daily race into the arena to protect, serve and love yes love those individuals in their communities who they will never know. Most law enforcement professionals will tell you that this most honorable profession is not a job to us its a calling .
"Our calling has nothing to do with power and influence over other citizens, it has everything to do with serving others first, to protect others, to defend the defenseless, to establish a standard against evil and to restrain and/or pursue evil at all costs.
"Were a strange bunch, well leave everything behind including our own family, safety, and security to help someone in need. We have this intrinsic need to make things right, to ensure justice is served. We run towards the cries for help, the screams in the night, and move toward the sound of gunfire. It becomes part of our DNA and has nothing to do with bravado, but everything to do with love.
"We also know that most Americans support law enforcement officers and their agencies even in such a time as this where some have condemned the police as armed occupiers instead of public servants.
"When my daughter became a police officer, I had the distinct honor of pinning on her badge. As I pulled her to the side holding back my tears, I told her, Because of your calling, some you will serve will hate you because of what you represent; love them anyway. Some will lie and misrepresent your actions; love them anyway. You will see the most heinous things that human beings are capable of doing to each other. At the same time, if you look closely, youll see miracles in the making throughout your beat where you serve. Finally, youll be told by some that youre not here to save the world. Im telling you, you are here to save the world . Youll just do that one call at a time.
The weapons officers carry will never control citizens unwilling to give them respect. Its time for parents and grandparents to once again tell our children and grandchildren to respect and obey police officers instead of taunting and defying them. Its time we stand for law and order and with those who keep it.
Pro-police rallies seldom make the news, but Bruce Heilman, attending a rally in Des Moines, confessed, "I'm ashamed of myself for never having said 'thank you' to a cop. Its so long overdue." Join me in thanking those on the thin blue line who keep us safe every day.
That number is probably a little low. The real number is probably closer to 4.0, though there are ambiguities about "who is a cop" that make definitive answers impossible.
You know the country has a collective neurosis when it’s considered racist to say “white lives matter”.
You know the country has a collective neurosis when it’s considered racist to say “white lives matter”.
Crime is down, safer than in generations? Oh I don’t think so, not with the thug crap going on every day. Yes, every day.
Police need to visit schools to talk to the kids about the way they should act toward the police. At the same time, the police could talk to the kids about the many things that they do to help the public in a days work, such as going to 911 calls to accompany ambulances during medical emergencies.
Sure there are some bad cops, just as there are some bad nurses or teachers who should have never chosen these professions. Unfortunately these make the reputation for all bad. Only education and information to the students can change that. Also parents and teachers and the police must work together not against each other
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