Posted on 07/07/2010 1:59:01 PM PDT by AJKauf
Call it the Ted Kennedy school of merrymaking: we mustnt let the occasional cost of a young womans life stand in the way of having a good time.....
(Excerpt) Read more at pajamasmedia.com ...
Geez, enough with the one liners, already.
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L.A.s Electric Daisy Carnival Is no Party for the Police
Call it the Ted Kennedy school of merrymaking: we mustnt let the occasional cost of a young womans life stand in the way of having a good time.
July 7, 2010 - by Jack Dunphy Share |
If, on the afternoon of June 26, a visitor to Los Angeles from some foreign land had been standing on the corner of Figueroa Street and Exposition Boulevard, he would have beheld a curious tableau: Moving south along the sidewalks on Figueroa were great throngs of strangely and in many cases minimally attired young people, nearly all of them in their teens and early twenties. The southbound traffic lanes were likewise chockablock with cars loaded with similarly costumed young revelers.
Meanwhile, heading north, and with an alarming degree of regularity, was a great fleet of ambulances, their red lights ablaze, their sirens wailing, each one apparently bearing some casualty from whatever spectacle was taking place down the street that all those strangely and minimally attired young people seemed so eager to get to.
The visitor no doubt would have asked himself why, in the face of such clear evidence of imminent peril as presented by the speeding ambulances, all those young people continued to flock southward, not only in blithe denial of the danger but even ecstatic at the prospect of participating in it.
And if that visitor had allowed his curiosity to overcome his better judgment and so proceeded into the pulsing vortex of what was occurring just down Figueroa Street, he might have soon left Los Angeles with his hearing forever damaged and his hope for Americas future forever dashed.
On June 25 and 26, something called the Electric Daisy Carnival was once again held in and around the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, the site of two Olympic Games but lately reduced to hosting less noble entertainment. Billed as an electronic dance festival, the EDC is in reality an enormous outdoor orgy of drug use set to the incessant beat of music which, if it were employed in the service of discomfiting captured al-Qaeda terrorists, would bring threats of sanctions from the United Nations. And it all took place in a publicly owned facility and under the watchful but largely impotent eye of the Los Angeles Police Department.
When I say strangely and in many cases minimally attired young people, its an expression that scarcely does justice to the collection of humanity that pressed together over those two days at the Coliseum. Indeed, the old adage about a picture being worth a thousand words is in the present circumstances apt. I could ladle out the adjectives by the bucketful and never come within a mile of describing it accurately, so I invite you at this point to click over to the slideshow at the L.A. Weekly website for a representative sample. (Some of the photos might be considered unsafe for work.)
And now that youve clicked over, some of you for longer than youd care to admit, you know I wasnt exaggerating in my description of those in attendance. My colleagues made about 120 arrests at the EDC, most for possession of ecstasy or other drugs. Given that the crowd was estimated at over 180,000 over the two days, 120 arrests might seem a trivial figure. But we made arrests in only the most blatant cases. LAPD Deputy Chief Pat Gannon told the Los Angeles Times he had assigned 40 undercover narcotics officers to the event, but that if I had 1,000 I would have made 1,000 arrests it was so packed with drugs. Gannons assessment was an understatement.
If we had arrested everyone we could have for drug possession, there would have been no cops left to deal with the mobs of gate crashers that cropped up from time to time at the various entrances to the venue. No sooner did we chase a crowd away from one gate than we saw them appear at another. Deputy Chief Gannon himself broke two fingers while dealing with a mob seeking to enter without having gone through the customary formality of buying tickets.
And the arrests were by far the least of the blemishes on the event. Sasha Rodriguez, a 15-year-old high school student, died of an apparent overdose of ecstasy after attending the EDC on Saturday. She was one of the more than 100 people taken by ambulance to local hospitals, where the staffs have come to regard the EDC as a mass-casualty event, planning for it as they would if they had advance warning of a train derailment.
But the death of one girl and the injuries to so many others in attendance are of little consequence to some, like those who commented on an L.A. Times story about injuries at the event. What a great success! wrote one. Considering the number of people total, thats a very good ratio. Call it the Ted Kennedy school of merrymaking: We mustnt let the occasional cost of a young womans life stand in the way of having a good time.
Which brings up a few questions some are now asking: Is it appropriate for such an event to take place at a publicly owned venue? The Coliseum is jointly managed by the state of California and the city and county of Los Angeles, each of which no doubt profited handsomely when the promoter kicked in for whatever permits were required. But even if the event provided a welcome boost for the cash-strapped city, county, and state, should they be in the business of hosting such a bacchanalia? And should so many police officers and firefighters be diverted from parts of town far more deserving of their services merely to accommodate this odd rabbles diseased sense of the amusing?
There will be much hand-wringing and earnest talk about making next years Electric Daisy Carnival safer, but any attempts to ban it will almost certainly be blunted by considerations of the bottom line. The event produces revenue, of which the concerned governments are much in need. Come the last weekend in June next year, the EDC will surely be right back at the Coliseum, bigger and messier than ever.
Granted, the EDC was something of a welcome departure from my normal duties, but as fond as I might be of being in the titillating proximity of thousands of half-naked women and getting paid for it all things considered I hope to avoid it like poison next year.
Jack Dunphy is the pseudonym of an officer with the Los Angeles Police Department. The opinions expressed are his own and almost certainly do not reflect those of the LAPD management.
Sadly, that seems to be the truth -- although the sponsors and attendees will never voice it.
BTW, I KNOW you’re just a posting bot for Pajamas Media (you’ve never commented, ever, that I can see), but this does belong under bloggers, not news.
You’d still be a blog pimp, but you’d be classified correctly.
Pajamas Media appreciates your comments that abide by the following guidelines:
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5. Spam and advertising are not permitted in the comments area.
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Hmmm, PJMedia doesn’t like spam, either.
It’s an automated posting protocol, like Robin Masters.
Both are part of the same pimping service.
Well, I wouldn’t want to be a Masters baiter.
Anyway, I wrote this to PJ Media editor:
“Who is AJKauf, and why is this person spamming Free Republic with one liners linking to Pajamas Media?
Don’t get me wrong. Your site is fine. So is FR. But FR isn’t a repository for spam. Members should post content, and stay to discuss.
AJKauf justs posts one-liners, mis-classified under news (instead of bloggers), then leaves until the next thread.
Post the whole article, then stay and discuss, but please don’t spam FR. It annoys us, and reflects very poorly on an otherwise decent site.
L. Lucido”
No discussion, just pimp and run?
What a jerk thing to do.
Well done.
Here is a link to the pics: http://www.laweekly.com/slideshow/electric-daisy-carnival-60-most-memorable-moments-30212621/
Nice. I’d like to know if you get a reply (even if it’s AJKauf ;-)
Part of the “do as I say, not as I do” crowd ?
Click the link in #10. Go to picture #4.
Is that our favorite little stick-bumdle there? iloveamerica1980?
LOL!
Larry, we're sorry you're getting spammed, but we don't know a thing about this person, never heard of them, and have no control over them. Feel free to block them, at least as far as we're concerned.
Best
Charlie Martin
Science and Technology Editor
PajamasMedia.com
Apparently, AJKauf is a rouge posting bot, who is spamming FR mercilessly and is even embarrassing PJ Media.
AJKauf's posting history doesn't seem to include even a single reply post, just thread after thread after thread with one-liners.
I don't know if there is such a thing as a robo-poster, but if it's technically possible, I am guessing someone set it up and left it running.
Since we've identified one, and got the above disclaimer from the PJ Media editor, may we suspend or ban this poster?
I think FR and PJ Media would be most grateful. Thanks!
Larry
See #15.
Nice job, Larry!
Sweet!
That was quick. I enjoy their stuff (although Electric Daisy Carnival not so much ;-) but have a low opinion of ‘bots.
So, what are you gonna do about Robin? lol
The destruction of three generations of our culture is complete.
Ooooh! And I’m IBTZ for once.
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