Posted on 12/30/2014 2:24:10 PM PST by SeekAndFind
The metropolitan police department for the largest city in the United States is ceasing to function, according to a report in The New York Post.
While the New York Police Department has continued its work of policing dangerous and violent criminal activity, quality of life policing has nearly come to a complete halt when statistics from December 20 to December 30, 2013 are compared with that same period this year.
Citations for traffic violations fell by 94 percent, from 10,069 to 587, during that time frame.
Summonses for low-level offenses like public drinking and urination also plunged 94 percent from 4,831 to 300.
Even parking violations are way down, dropping by 92 percent, from 14,699 to 1,241.
Drug arrests by cops assigned to the NYPDs Organized Crime Control Bureau which are part of the overall number dropped by 84 percent, from 382 to 63.
The move is seen by most as a form of protest against the citys administration, and specifically New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio. Police blame de Blasio and his ideological allies for inflaming a tense situation after a grand jurys decision not to indict the officer responsible for the death of Eric Garner.
This virtual work stoppage, as The Post called it, is an extension of protests which have been ongoing since the assassination of two police officers on December 20. After those execution-style murders, NYPD officers have literally turned their backs on the mayor when he has appeared before audiences composed of cops.
Well, The New York Times has just about had it with the NYPDs snarling sense of victimhood a sense they earned when de Blasio emerged hours after the grand jurys decision, blamed it on racial antipathy despite the presence of numerous African-American members on that panel, and confessed that he had taught his own biracial son to fear the police force he commands.
With these acts of passive-aggressive contempt and self-pity, many New York police officers, led by their union, are squandering the departments credibility, defacing its reputation, shredding its hard-earned respect, The Times roared.
By taking the opportunity of de Blasios address to police during the funeral of slain Officer Rafael Ramos to protest the mayor, The Times declared that the NYPD had also “turned their backs” on the grieving family of one of their own.
While The Times conceded that “there is some thanklessness to being a cop,” they note that it has “always been that way.”
But none of those grievances can justify the snarling sense of victimhood that seems to be motivating the anti-de Blasio campaign — the belief that the department is never wrong, that it never needs redirection or reform, only reverence. This is the view peddled by union officials like Patrick Lynch, the president of the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association — that cops are an ethically impeccable force with their own priorities and codes of behavior, accountable only to themselves, and whose reflexive defiance in the face of valid criticism is somehow normal.
The Times closed by noting that de Blasios actions speak louder than his words; hiring Commissioner Bill Bratton and increasing the forces funding suggests that he has an honest desire to do right by the NYPD. But The Times places no onus on de Blasio to repair the mistrust he has sown. The present conflict is one that has been simmering since his mayoral campaign, one in which the candidate focused heavily on the supposed evils associated with the policing policy dubbed Stop and Frisk.
The Times has a point. The NYPD is aggrieved, and they could end up alienating an otherwise sympathetic public with excessive protests or displays of contempt for the mayor. But The Times has avoided confronting the fact that this air of mistrust is not one that the president of the police union invented. He merely gave voice to the concerns shared by thousands of his organizations members. It was de Blasio and an intellectual ethos infatuated with the idea that policing creates an incentive for the susceptible to engage in criminality, a ethos in which The Times editorial board is steeped, that inculcated this supposedly toxic sense of victimhood in the citys police culture.
It takes two to tango, and The Times retreat to its ideological corner is not helping anything. Both the NYPD and the mayor need to set aside their pride and find a compromise so that they can get back to doing the work they have chosen: Keeping millions of New Yorkers safe.
Let’s get Times reporters writing parking tickets, then. Simple solution.
wouldnt it be funny if all the employees of the NY Times had their home addresses/phone numbers published!?! What a hoot!
“Yeah, well, sitting in your patrol car eating your lunch and then getting blasted into kingdom come might make you a trace self-pitying. What arseholes!”
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I just started this thread but your #2 post says it all.
No need for me to go any further.
:-)
.
Leftists have cops in a headlock. Right where they want them. Right where I knew this police abuse thing was headed before the Left acted.
The New York Times thinks the only people with a right to 'victimhood' are liberal 'pets'... all their favorite pet groups. Nicest thing about the police pulling back some is a few of those groups that have made a caraar about of being victims might ACTUALLY BE victims for once...
The police should stay safe until the New York Times boys beg them to go back to full policing... on their knees... same with hiz honor.
The New York Times thinks the only people with a right to 'victimhood' are liberal 'pets'... all their favorite pet groups. Nicest thing about the police pulling back some is a few of those groups that have made a career about of being victims might ACTUALLY BE victims for once...
The police should stay safe until the New York Times boys beg them to go back to full policing... on their knees... same with hiz honor.
Why ObOzO and the regime promote a young punk and a street hustler to justify mob rule is a mystery? They seem to go back to “fast and furious” tactics to justify a national Gestapo. Like killing a border agent with arms transferred to Mexican drug gangs to justify Second Amendment retrenchment, this is destined to fail since the victims are less than sympathetic.
The purpose of the police is to enforce the law. To not back the police in this pursuit is to relegate the rule of law to mob rule. If they don’t like the law, change the law, don’t ignore it or worse, delegate it to the mob.
Pure psychological projection from diblasio and his ilk.
Only those anointed by the NY Times are allowed to be victims.
Bill de Blasio aides asked political allies to publicly slam NYPD officers for turning their backs
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/3242526/posts
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