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Resistance is Futile: The Violent Cost of Challenging the American Police State
The Ruthaford Institute ^ | Sept. 9, 2014 | John W. Whitehead

Posted on 09/10/2014 2:40:49 PM PDT by drypowder

“Police are specialists in violence. They are armed, trained, and authorized to use force. With varying degrees of subtlety, this colors their every action. Like the possibility of arrest, the threat of violence is implicit in every police encounter. Violence, as well as the law, is what they represent.”—Kristian Williams, activist and author

If you don’t want to get probed, poked, pinched, tasered, tackled, searched, seized, stripped, manhandled, arrested, shot, or killed, don’t say, do or even suggest anything that even hints of noncompliance. This is the new “thin blue line” over which you must not cross in interactions with police if you want to walk away with your life and freedoms intact.

The following incidents and many more like them serve as chilling reminders that in the American police state, “we the people” are at the mercy of law enforcement officers who have almost absolute discretion to decide who is a threat, what constitutes resistance, and how harshly they can deal with the citizens they were appointed to “serve and protect.”

For example, police arrested Chaumtoli Huq because she failed to promptly comply when ordered to “move along” while waiting outside a Ruby Tuesday’s restaurant for her children, who were inside with their father, using the bathroom. NYPD officers grabbed Huq, a lawyer with the New York City Public Advocate’s office, flipped her around, pressed her against a wall, handcuffed her, searched her purse, arrested her, and told her to “shut up” when she cried out for help, before detaining her for nine hours. Huq was charged with obstructing governmental administration, resisting arrest and disorderly conduct.

Oregon resident Fred Marlow was jailed and charged with interfering and resisting arrest after he filmed a SWAT team raid that took place across the street from his apartment and uploaded the footage to the internet. The footage shows police officers threatening Marlow, who was awoken by the sounds of “multiple bombs blasting and glass breaking” and ran outside to investigate only to be threatened with arrest if he didn’t follow orders and return inside.

Eric Garner, 43 years old, asthmatic and unarmed, died after being put in a chokehold by NYPD police, allegedly for resisting arrest over his selling untaxed, loose cigarettes, although video footage of the incident shows little resistance on Garner’s part. Indeed, the man was screaming, begging and insisting he couldn’t breathe. And what was New York Mayor Bill De Blasio’s advice to citizens in order to avoid a similar fate? Don’t resist arrest. (Mind you, the NYPD arrests more than 13,000 people every year on charges of resisting arrest, although only a small fraction of those charged ever get prosecuted.)

Then there was Marine Brandon Raub, who was questioned at his home by a swarm of DHS, FBI, Secret Service agents and local police, tackled to the ground, handcuffed, and forcibly transported to a police station. Raub was then detained against his will in a psychiatric ward, without being provided any explanation, having any charges levied against him or being read his rights—all allegedly because of controversial song lyrics and political views posted on his Facebook page.

Incredibly, police insisted that Raub was not in fact under arrest. Of course, Raub was under arrest. When your hands are handcuffed behind you, when armed policemen are tackling you to the ground and transporting you across town in the back of a police car, and then forcibly detaining you against your will, you’re not free to walk away.

If you do attempt to walk away, be warned that the consequences will likely be even worse, as Tremaine McMillian learned the hard way. Miami-Dade police slammed the 14-year-old boy to the ground, putting him in a chokehold and handcuffing him after he allegedly gave them “dehumanizing stares” and walked away from them, which the officers found unacceptable. According to Miami-Dade Police Detective Alvaro Zabaleta, “His body language was that he was stiffening up and pulling away… When you have somebody resistant to them and pulling away and somebody clenching their fists and flailing their arms, that’s a threat. Of course we have to neutralize the threat.”

As I point out in my book A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State, this mindset that any challenge to police authority is a threat that needs to be “neutralized” is a dangerous one that is part of a greater nationwide trend that sets the police beyond the reach of the Fourth Amendment. Moreover, when police officers are allowed to operate under the assumption that their word is law and that there is no room for any form of disagreement or even question, that serves to chill the First Amendment’s assurances of free speech, free assembly and the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

Frankly, it doesn’t matter whether it’s a casual “show your ID” request on a boardwalk, a stop-and-frisk search on a city street, or a traffic stop for speeding or just to check your insurance: if you feel like you can’t walk away from a police encounter of your own volition—and more often than not you can’t, especially when you’re being confronted by someone armed to the hilt with all manner of militarized weaponry and gear—then for all intents and purposes, you’re under arrest from the moment a cop stops you.

That raises the question, what exactly constitutes resisting an arrest? What about those other trumped up “contempt of cop” charges such as interference, disorderly conduct, obstruction, and failure to obey a police order that get trotted out anytime a citizen engages in behavior the police perceive as disrespectful or “insufficiently deferential to their authority”? Do Americans really have any recourse at all when it comes to obeying an order from a police officer, even if it’s just to ask a question or assert one’s rights, or should we just “surrender quietly”?

The short answer is that anything short of compliance will get you arrested and jailed. The long answer is a little more complicated, convoluted and full of legal jargon and dissonance among the courts, but the conclusion is still the same: anything short of compliance is being perceived as “threatening” behavior or resistance to be met by police with extreme force resulting in injury, arrest or death for the resistor.

The key word, of course, is comply meaning to obey, submit or conform. This is what author Kristian Williams describes as the dual myths of heroism and danger: “The overblown image of police heroism, and the ‘obsession’ with officer safety, do not only serve to justify police violence after the fact; by providing such justification, they legitimize violence, and thus make it more likely.”

How else can we explain why police shot a schizophrenic 30-year-old man holding a pellet gun over 80 times before his corpse was handcuffed? Mind you, witnesses reportedly informed the police that it was not a real gun, but the officers nonetheless opened fire about five minutes after arriving on the scene.

John Crawford was shot by police in an Ohio Wal-Mart for holding an air rifle sold in the store that he may have intended to buy. Oscar Grant, age 23, unarmed and lying face-down on the ground, was shot in the back by a transit officer in Oakland, Calif., who mistakenly used a gun instead of a taser to further restrain him. Ordered to show his hands after “anti-crime” police officers noticed him adjusting “his waistband in a manner the officers deemed suspicious,” 16-year old Kimani Grey was fired at 11 times, and shot seven times, including three times in the back. Reportedly, the teenager was unarmed and unthreatening.

Even dogs aren’t spared if they are perceived as “threatening.” Family dogs are routinely shot and killed during SWAT team raids, even if the SWAT team is at the wrong address or the dog is in the next yard over. One six-year-old girl witnessed her dog Apollo shot dead by an Illinois police officer.

Clearly, when police officers cease to look and act like civil servants or peace officers but instead look and act like soldiers occupying a hostile territory, it alters their perception of “we the people.” Those who founded this country believed that we were the masters and that those whose salaries we pay with our hard-earned tax dollars are our servants.

If daring to question, challenge or even hesitate when a cop issues an order can get you charged with resisting arrest or disorderly conduct, you’re not the master in a master-servant relationship. In fact, you’re not even the servant—you’re the slave.

This is not freedom. This is not even a life.

This is a battlefield, a war zone—if you will—governed by martial law and disguised as a democracy. No matter how many ways you fancy it up with shopping malls, populist elections, and Monday night football, the fact remains that “we the people” are little more than prisoners in the American police state, and the police are our jailers and wardens.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: donutwatch
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To: JimRed

Which is why the gummint is trying to get a National Police Force. THAT is what Ferguson is all about!


41 posted on 09/10/2014 4:38:10 PM PDT by wastoute (Government cannot redistribute wealth. Government can only redistribute poverty.)
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To: Uncle Miltie

“I understand Saudi Arabia cuts off hands. You might be more comfortable there.”

They do not cut off hands for misdemeanors. The cutting off of hands occurs only for shoplifting, burglary, robbery, etc. ;-)


42 posted on 09/10/2014 4:49:25 PM PDT by spel_grammer_an_punct_polise (Why does every totalitarian political hack think that he knows how to run my life better than I do?)
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To: armydawg505
What you are kind of discounting is that cops have the ability to destroy lives. That they choose not to is left to the choices of individual Officers
It is the good king with absolute power who's evil son inherits the good kings absolute power. We are in big trouble when we rely on individuals to do the right thing.

The government institutions are far to powerful. The cops are the only government entity that can kill you right now. We need small government not big government. Cops are big government with guns. So what if they give your kid a lollipop at.the State fair. Irrelevant.

43 posted on 09/10/2014 4:53:53 PM PDT by DariusBane (Liberty and Risk. Flip sides of the same coin. So how much risk will YOU accept? Vive Deo et Vives)
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To: spel_grammer_an_punct_polise

They may wish to increase their punishment level to meet your requirements.


44 posted on 09/10/2014 4:54:33 PM PDT by Uncle Miltie (Clinton / Bush 2016?)
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To: drypowder

I know my local cops. Good guys. First encounter with one involved thugs. I was armed. Officer was proper and respectful.

There are good cops.

But some are thugs who need to be fired or jailed for a LONG time.


45 posted on 09/10/2014 5:12:08 PM PDT by piytar (The predator-class is furious that their prey are shooting back.)
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To: Mariner

Could not agree MORE.


46 posted on 09/10/2014 5:14:42 PM PDT by piytar (The predator-class is furious that their prey are shooting back.)
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To: Spirochete

NO MORE KOOKY NINJYA GEARDO WHACKOS.

Enus and Boss Hoggs, dressed up in black nomex and fingerless gloves.


47 posted on 09/10/2014 5:15:39 PM PDT by gaijin
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To: Sherman Logan

Um, that is because we look at the facts (as best we know them) of each case and judge accordingly...


48 posted on 09/10/2014 5:16:26 PM PDT by piytar (The predator-class is furious that their prey are shooting back.)
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To: drypowder

Hi, I hope you are doing well.

Maybe I didn’t understand the post. Isn’t asymmetric warfare designed to counter this type of threat?

5.56mm


49 posted on 09/10/2014 5:24:11 PM PDT by M Kehoe
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To: armydawg505
No credit for the Indiana cop who stopped and gave the homeless man a pair of his boots? No credit for the cop who comes by to visit the fatherless black kid to mentor and got his a bed, and desk so he would not have to sleep and do his homework on the floor? No credit for the Charleston County SC deputy killed two days ago answering a domestic disturbance call at 4am? Get a damned life.

No. Individual acts of kindness do not excuse systemic abuses.

50 posted on 09/10/2014 5:38:59 PM PDT by papertyger (Those who don't fight evil hate those who do)
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To: armydawg505
Great, live without them, it will be a burden off their shoulders.

If that were a credible choice, you might not sound like a petulant teenage girl....

51 posted on 09/10/2014 5:45:04 PM PDT by papertyger (Those who don't fight evil hate those who do)
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To: armydawg505
" while you and your family are robbed and slaughtered."

I and mine don't need any help with that.

52 posted on 09/10/2014 5:56:43 PM PDT by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: gaijin
I’m very law and order but it is getting more and more clear that numerous police officers have SEAL Team six fantasies dancing in their minds.

Note the Ka-Bar, in case of a bayonet attack by the enraged peasantry...

53 posted on 09/10/2014 6:40:23 PM PDT by kiryandil (making the jests that some FReepers aren't allowed to...)
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To: onona
I remember the story about the guy with the air rifle in Wal Mart or wherever it way. Don't care if we're in a store at the display rack. You NEVER point a weapon at someone unless you desire action, either by yourself or by the other person.

That one is beginning to stink. People who have seen the Walmart video say the dead guy was doing anything wrong, and he may have actually been SWATted.

54 posted on 09/10/2014 6:50:40 PM PDT by kiryandil (making the jests that some FReepers aren't allowed to...)
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To: onona

“the dead guy WASN’T doing anything wrong”


55 posted on 09/10/2014 6:51:25 PM PDT by kiryandil (making the jests that some FReepers aren't allowed to...)
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To: armydawg505
Let them know you are a no cop zone and to put your property off limits to them in the event someone come to terrorize your family. They can get a kitten out of a tree while you and your family are robbed and slaughtered.

Bring it.

56 posted on 09/10/2014 6:52:48 PM PDT by kiryandil (making the jests that some FReepers aren't allowed to...)
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To: Renegade

Or, you do like G Gordon Liddy. He didn’t own any firearms but he was quite fond of telling everyone that his wife owned a lot of firearms.


57 posted on 09/10/2014 7:06:52 PM PDT by ForYourChildren (Christian Education [ RomanRoadsMedia.com - a Classical Christian Approach to Homeschool ])
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To: kiryandil

I still think the cop who shot Oscar Grant should do the honorable thing and swallow a bullet....


58 posted on 09/10/2014 7:11:19 PM PDT by papertyger (Those who don't fight evil hate those who do)
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To: Responsibility2nd

“Oh I do remember the threads on the “dehumanizing stares” assault.

But after all - if anyone deserves a beat-down by the po-leece, its someone who would give them .... “dehumanizing stares”.”

Isn’t it amazing how dehumanizing they treat us though? We aren’t even people in the eyes of cops. Just things to control.


59 posted on 09/10/2014 7:13:01 PM PDT by LevinFan
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To: Sherman Logan
I also sometimes wonder if the “police brutality” complained of by black people for decades, but generally dismissed by many of us, may just be moving out of the ghetto into Main Street. IOW, might they have had a point all along?

You might be right.

Also the militarization of police is horrible. That Pentagon stuff should be given to the National Guard and only brought out if a Governor feels it's absolutely necessary. To routinely have police departments with war surplus is intimidating. Same with Homeland Security... having attack helicopters landing in American cities is thuggy... at best.

We can identify with the black community in some of this... What's your solution?

60 posted on 09/10/2014 7:18:10 PM PDT by GOPJ ("If America was a house, the Left would root for the termites." - Greg Gutfeld)
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