Collect

Collect for the Fourth Sunday after Trinity

O God, the protector of all that trust in thee, without whom nothing is strong, nothing is holy: increase and multiply upon us thy mercy; that, thou being our ruler and guide, we may so pass through things temporal, that we finally lose not the things eternal; grant this, O heavenly Father, for the sake of Jesus Christ thy Son our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, ever one God, world without end. Amen.

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

An Immodest Proposal (Or, F*** tha Police)

It is certain that political power is of God, from whom proceeds nothing that is not good and lawful … [i.e.,] political power considered in general, not descending in particular to Monarchy, or Aristocracy, or Democracy, comes directly from God alone; for this follows of necessity from the nature of man, since that nature comes from him who made it … Note, secondly, that this power resides, as in its subject, immediately in the whole state, for this power is by divine law, but divine law gives this power to no particular man. Therefore divine law gives this power to the collected body. … As is evident, it depends on the consent of the people to decide whether kings, or consuls, or other magistrates are to be established in authority over them; and, if there be legitimate cause, the people can change a kingdom into an aristocracy, or an aristocracy into a democracy, and vice versa, as we read was done in Rome.

St Robert Bellarmine SJ, De Laicis


John Ball urging on Wat Tyler during the Peasants' Revolt of 1381.

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The wretched record of the police in this country, from institutionalized racism (deliberate or not) to inadequate oversight, has been, quite rightly, a continuous theme in the news for years now. I suspect one reason we sometimes find it hard to believe—and (there’s no way around it) by we, I basically mean white people—is that, like the gross violations of privacy revealed by Edward Snowden and the barefaced lies the state has used to cover them up, we can barely believe that a systemic corruption should be so blatant. Surely they could never get away with it, we think; which is how they get away with it.

Rereading this excellent piece from the illustrious Cracked.com, I do think there’s a solution. That solution is both harder and simpler than something like putting cameras on policemen, beneficial though that would probably be in the meantime; nor is it as naïve as merely taking care to practice affirmative action in hiring officers, though that too would very likely help. But I think what’s needed is a philosophical and cultural overhaul of the whole idea of police work.


The essential problem that seems to underlie this mess is that the police are thought of as government officials in contrast to ordinary citizens. That they may have very silly or nasty habits of mind in dividing ordinary citizens into good and bad, is only a secondary implication of this root problem.

Sir Robert Peel, who championed domestic legal reforms in Britain in the 1820s and first devised the modern police force,1 didn’t consider them agents of the government. What police were—as the name police implies, deriving ultimately from the Greek πολίτης ‘citizen’—were ordinary citizens whose job was to discharge social duties that every citizen had; the difference lay in the fact that policemen were paid to devote their full professional time to those duties, not in a different authority. Two examples that really drive home the difference in approach: in the UK, there is no crime called resisting arrest, and they’re not allowed to lie to suspects about what evidence they have.

It’s not clear whether Peel wrote them himself, but the Nine Principles of Policing (which were included in the general instructions to every new officer from 1829 on) sum up the philosophy fairly well—what, in Great Britain and a few other places, is called policing by consent:

1. To prevent crime and disorder, as an alternative to their repression by military force and severity of legal punishment.
2. To recognize always that the power of the police … is dependent on public approval of their existence, actions, and behavior, and on their ability to maintain and secure public respect.
3. To recognize always that to secure … the approval of the public means also securing the willing coöperation of the public in the task of securing the observance of laws.
4. To recognize always that the extent to which the coöperation of the public can be secured diminishes proportionately the necessity … of physical force and compulsion for achieving police objectives.
5. To seek and preserve public favor, not by pandering to public opinion, but by constantly demonstrating absolutely impartial service to law … by ready offering of service and friendship to all members of the public without regard to their wealth or social standing,2 by ready exercise of courtesy and friendly good humor, and by ready offering of individual sacrifice in protecting and preserving life.
6. To use physical force only when the exercise of persuasion, advice, and warning is found to be insufficient to obtain public coöperation … and to use only the minimum degree of physical force which is necessary on any particular occasion …
7. To maintain at all times a relationship with the public that … the police are the public and the public are the police, the police being only members of the public who are paid to give full-time attention to duties which are incumbent on every citizen in the interests of community welfare and existence.
8. To … refrain from even seeming to usurp the powers of the judiciary of avenging individuals or the State, and of authoritatively judging guilt and punishing the guilty.
9. To recognize always that the test of police efficiency is the absence of crime and disorder, and not the visible evidence of police action in dealing with them.


That’s a really different picture of law enforcement than we have in the US. I think it’s a much better one. It’s certainly far more compatible with any meaningful idea of self-government. I suspect it’d alter the gun control debate substantively, by altering the gun situation substantively. And I think it could be done here.


Sir Robert Peel (1788-1850), pimping.

Now, it’d be extremely tough to do. There would be resistance, and not just from current police officers (many of whom probably don’t want a reduction in their powers or an expensive and tedious retraining): I’m sure there are people who have a vested interest in maintaining and heightening the current suspicion and hostility between the police and the public, just because, wherever there is a systemic injustice, there’s somebody taking advantage of it. Moreover, it would involve training new police officers, and retraining old ones, which means not only the cost of training but finding trainers suitable for the task; and, while the training was going on—and even afterward—the conflict of old habits and new principles would make police work extraordinarily difficult, instead of just highly difficult.

On the other hand, if there is no systemic police reform, I fear that rioting and revolt aren’t out of the question. We’ve seen them already in Baltimore. Whether it’s put into practice or not, Peel’s principle that the police can’t do their work without securing and maintaining public approval and coöperation is less an instruction than an observation. The scales must eventually balance themselves: if they won’t be balanced by free choice, they will be balanced by the forces of nature, and one of the forces of human nature is that oppression and injustice are more intolerable to the human soul than even bloodshed.


Though the aforesaid riots may have had a somewhat different genesis than the media reported ...

We must, of course, be careful to avoid the Politician’s Syllogism: Something must be done; this is something; therefore, this must be done. And we must remember, too, that every system is run by flawed human beings, and that no solution, however potent, is the Elixir of Life. But I think the virtues of Peel’s principles speak for themselves as far as desirability, and I think we can and should take steps toward them.

A few possibilities:

1. We could encourage (perhaps even require, though I’m hesitant about that) police officers to live in the area they police, and form relationships within it. Respect is next to impossible to maintain, and persuasion next to impossible to practice, without a good social reputation among the people whose respect you need and whom you are trying to persuade.

2. Without necessarily going through a total overhaul of their education, give the police some psychological and social training, especially in deëscalating conflicts. One thing Charley Clark (the author of the article I linked above) points out is that, when guns come out, every decision becomes binary: shoot or don’t shoot. Lengthening that list of options would be pretty great, especially adding some along the lines of ‘Get them to chill,’ in which case everybody wins. An important aspect of this would be ridding our society, particularly and emphatically our police, of the noxious idea that disrespect toward policemen is in some way criminal—that idea is little less than the door to tyranny.

3. Introduce some new limits to police powers. It is, inevitably, all but impossible to instill respect for law if you do not follow the law yourself, and the liberties allowed to police—especially (though not only) in the disgusting matter of screwing confessions out of suspects, not infrequently through flat-out lies, and often getting innocent people to confess out of despair and exhaustion—have probably done more than anything else to ruin them in the eyes of the public.

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1And from whose first name the apparently bizarre nickname bobbies for British police comes.
2We could start, for instance, by not punishing people for being homeless.

6 comments:

  1. Thank you for this Gabriel. I am spending most of the day praying and researching a BLM post for 7QT tomorrow and was tremendously saddened to see an Aleteia post on a prayer and adoration vigil (itself a great idea) in Charlotte. It attacked all the protesters as rioters, stated as certain highly disputed facts asserted by police there, and failed to give either local (slaughtered young athlete with car trouble) or national (Terence Crutcher and Tyre King) for the righteous rage fueling the mostly peaceful protesters.

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  2. Is it wrong for me to believe that if whites and blacks separated into two separate countries, EACH of those countries would probably be more stable AND more socially conservative than we are together? And that pluralism is actually just a sort of wedge used by globalist capitalists for creating a "lowest common denominator" secularism?

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    1. Wrong morally, or wrong intellectually?

      I don't think it's *sinful* to believe that racially homogeneous countries are apt to be more peaceful -- though I'd want to see definite statistical evidence across continents and centuries before making any judgment. After all, homogeneity of any kind can go either way: it's one reason civil wars happen, and can be even nastier sometimes than international wars. I definitely don't know of hard *evidence* that racially homogeneous countries are more harmonious, partly because I don't know of any countries that have been really homogeneous; the Torah itself makes countless references to how the Jews are to treat "the alien within your gates" as a fact of life.

      A different objection to the segregated nation concept is that we can be pretty close to certain it isn't *going* to happen even if it would be a good idea (which I'm not inclined to accept in the first place, but that need not detain us). The logistic and financial problems of setting up two countries would be a nightmare even if everyone concerned accepted the idea, which they most certainly would not. That resistance means, in addition, that any such solution could only be effected by force, i.e. by violence, which is what we were trying to reduce in the first place. And anyway, where would we put everybody? The people with the best claim on the continent, "sea to shining sea," are the Amerindian tribes; and frankly, the claim of African-Americans, who were brought here mostly by force and kidnapping, is in that sense better than the claim of Caucasians, who originally came mostly as conquerors and colonists. Compelling Caucasians to return to Europe is a more obviously moral solution than compelling Africans to return to Africa.

      What we shall have to do, I think, is learn to live in a multinational state, i.e. a culture in which many different ethnicities (with all that that implies) are united in a single state. It's been done before: the Persian, Roman, Byzantine, Incan, Chinese, Ottoman, Spanish, Austrian, and British empires were all multinational states. And learning to love our neighbor no matter who he is or what he is like is easier when our neighbor is really different from ourselves.

      Whether pluralism is a wedge used by capitalists to effect LCD secularism ... well, until we explain what *kind* of pluralism we mean, I don't know that the question can be answered at all. Personally I doubt that most capitalists care one way or the other about secularism -- at their worst they care only about profit, and I don't think secularism affects that very much. A Marxist or a fascist might well want to enforce secularism for ideological reasons, but they aren't notable in history for being very tolerant of pluralism, either. Nor do I think any hypothesis of intention, still less of conspiracy, is necessary to explain American pluralism: any country with a substantial and diverse immigrant population, which we have been since the seventeenth century, is bound to attempt something of the sort, or else come to pieces.

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  3. I think that's fair, except maybe for the part about conquerors having no claim to land. Traditionally, conquest was seen as establishing legitimate title to rule. That's sort of the whole military history of the Middle Ages.

    As Catholic Encyclopedia says, "The one point fixed by nature, and by God, is that there must be authority everywhere, and that the authority existent for the time being, under such and such a form, be under that form obeyed; for since there is no actual authority in the country except under that form, to refuse to obey that is to refuse authority simply, and to revert to anarchy, which is against nature."

    But then, I know you're an anarchist...

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  4. TRUTH is authority. Authority vested in man is NOT authority.

    But then, I know the church is full of psychopaths that what to be god on earth and get people to belive the satanic belief of authority being vested in man. It's a convenient lie to tell the parishioners. Because, how would the pyramid scheme stand without the sheep?

    How could the priest class and politicians (and people like Hitler) assert their control of people if they didn't "believe" in manmade "authority"? Rulers want to be the AUTHORS of morality, instead of following Truth under the guidance of NATURAL LAW.

    People with your beliefs are WHY humanity suffers. I highly suggest reading 'Ceasar's Messiah' if you want to break free of the satanic Abrahamic religions that were given to us by dark occultists. Along with Mauro Biglino's work (who translated the LITERAL meaning of the Old Testament. Spoiler alert: Yahweh is NOT a "god". And yes - once people learn the TRUTH of these so called "gods" of the OT, religion will collapse, along with all the other control systems)

    God bless!!! :-)

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    1. The Church certainly contains her share of psychopaths, though I don't know that she has any more than any other segment of society. That aside, I think it's a stretch to refer to her in particular, or to human authority in general, as Satanic. That Catholicism (and many other belief systems -- Islam, Marxism, Calvinism, nationalism) has been used as a pretext to oppress people is a tragic and hideous historical fact; but, in fairness, it must also be admitted that it really has no bearing on the truth or falsity of the tenets of that, or any, belief system. Men will use anything to oppress one another, even the truth.

      I'm not closely familiar with Biglino's work, but what little I've read gives me the impression that he isn't an altogether creditable source. If it is from him that you're getting the assertion "Yahweh is not a god," even according to a literal reading of the Old Testament, I can only say that such an interpretation is considered laughable by every other Old Testament scholar in three thousand years of history, and the (admittedly little) Hebrew I know doesn't support it either. I don't like to condemn a man's work without having read it, but I'm extremely skeptical, and I'd encourage you to take in a broader variety of sources.

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