Roughly a decade
ago, Al Pacino starred in a movie entitled S1m0ne,
a cyber-era updating of the
Pygmalion myth in which a film director creates an uncannily
realistic digital actress. Despite the fact that "Simone"
was a computer-rendered composite fantasy, the lustrous blonde enchantress
becomes a global pop culture sensation – a profitable illusion sustained
through increasingly desperate acts of misdirection on the part
of the director.
It’s tempting
to think that accused
Norwegian mass murderer Anders Breivik is a S1m0ne-style
digital fantasy drawn to specifications provided by Morris Dees’
so-called Southern Poverty Law Center. Breivik used social networking
sites to create a cyber-persona seemingly made to order for left-leaning
"watchdog" groups. Available photographs depict the blonde,
stereotypically Nordic Breivik as if he were a dress-up doll, his
face oddly unmarked and expressionless as he poses in a variety
of guises – including Freemasonic garb and a scuba outfit.
In similar
fashion, his recorded ideological pronouncements – the quotes attributed
to him in the aftermath of the killing spree in Oslo and Utoya,
and his bloated "manifesto" – could be the work of someone
determined to embody every detail of the familiar caricature of
the right-wing
"hate criminal."
"It was
a slaughter of young children," one
witness said following the massacre. They were sheep who had
fallen prey to a wolf wearing what the victims had been taught to
perceive as the attire of a "sheepdog."
The uncomfortable
but irrepressible fact is that every state-licensed "sheepdog"
is a potential murderer, and should be treated as such. We have
this on the unimpeachable authority of "Jack Dunphy,"
an active-duty officer in the employ of the Los Angeles Police Department.
In every encounter
between a police officer and a "civilian," Dunphy
writes, the officer is "concerned with protecting his mortal
hide from having holes placed in it where God did not intend. And
you, if in asserting your constitutional right to be free from unlawful
search and seizure fail to do as the officer asks, run the risk
of having such holes placed in your own." What this means is
that a Mundane who displays anything other than abject servility
is perceived as a threat to "officer safety" – and, by
Dunphy’s calculation, a suitable subject for immediate termination.
As is demonstrated
by the actions of Patrolman
Daniel Harless of the Canton, Ohio Police Department, that assessment
is not hyperbole. In a June 8 traffic stop that was captured on
video, Harless repeatedly threatened to murder the driver, William
E. Bartlett, for carrying a concealed handgun for which he had obtained
a the appropriate license. At the time, Bartlett was attempting
to comply with the state ordinance by notifying Harless that he
was carrying a weapon, and displaying his concealed carry license.
Bartlett was composed and deferential; Harless’s behavior was that
of a borderline psychotic eagerly seeking an excuse to kill somebody.
"As soon
as I felt your gun I should have took [sic] two steps back, pulled
my Glock 40 and just put 10 bullets in your ass and let you drop,"
snarled Harless. "And I wouldn’t have lost any sleep."
Thus did Harless slay the diligently propagated fiction that police
officers are burdened with a bone-deep dread of pulling their firearms.
After threatening
to "put lumps on" a witness to the incident, Harless told
Bartlett, "I’m so close to caving in your f*****g head…. You’re
just a stupid human being…. F*****g talking to me with a f*****g
gun. You want me to pull mine and stick it to your head?" He
later threatened to stop Bartlett every time he saw him, towing
– that is, stealing – his car and taking him to jail.
After the video
was made public by the civil liberties group Ohioans for Concealed
Carry, Harless was put on paid vacation.
"Obviously,
whatever transpired on that video was an isolated incident,"
sniffed Bill Adams, commissar of the local police union. The "whatever"
Adams blithely dismissed was aggravated assault with a deadly weapon:
Rather than continuing to receive a paycheck for sitting at home
swilling beer and consuming internet porn, Harless should be in
jail awaiting trial. Furthermore, this incident was an "isolated"
one only as that term applies to those individuals and that particular
location; it is anything but atypical of the behavior of the State’s
thuggish enforcer caste.
Harless merely
threatened to pull his gun and stick it to William Bartlett’s head.
According to the
eyewitness testimony of his former partner, Officer Sergio Vergillo,
that’s what Phoenix
Police Officer Richard Chrisman did to 29-year-old Danny Rodriguez
just seconds before he gunned down the family’s dog and murdered
the unarmed man.
Chrisman and
Vergillo had responded to a call from Rodriguez’s mother, who was
upset with her son’s behavior. Rodriguez demanded that Chrisman
present a warrant. Drawing on the same lexicon of public service
used by Patrolman Harless, Chrisman
shoved a gun against Rodriguez’s temple and sneered, "I don’t
need no warrant, mother****r." Within minutes, Chrisman had
shot the dog, which – according to his partner – exhibited no threatening
behavior. This left Rodriguez understandably upset.
"Hey,
why did you shoot my dog?" Rodriguez bellowed at the intruder.
Five seconds later, he was dead – thereby validating Officer "Jack
Dunphy"’s warning that summary execution is considered condign
punishment for any Mundane who annoys a member of the Exalted Brotherhood
of Coercion by asserting his rights.
Chrisman, who
had previously been captured on video planting drug paraphernalia
on a homeless woman, was fired and charged with second-degree murder.
Significantly, the local police union, the Phoenix Law Enforcement
Association (PLEA), held
a barbecue at its headquarters to raise
money on
behalf of Chrisman. Following Chrisman’s arrest, PLEA commissar
Mark
Spencer, commissioned a fishing expedition in Vergillo’s background
in the hope of impeaching his credibility as a witness. Even after
the net came up empty, Spencer publicly
denigrated the character of Officer Vergillo, who had violated
the most important canon of police conduct by telling the truth
about a fellow officer’s criminal conduct – in this case, aggravated
murder.
In
New Orleans, the trial
continues of five police officers accused of murdering
two people, and grievously injuring four others at the Danziger
Bridge in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. The victims were unarmed
refugees seeking to flee to higher ground. The
police officers responsible for this atrocity concocted a
cover story – complete with planted weapons and fabricated "witnesses"
– in which the victims supposedly opened fire on the police and
were killed in self-defense. One
of the victims, a 40-year-old disabled man named Ronald Madison,
received a shotgun blast to the back of his head, and then was shot
at least three more times while he was face-down on the ground.
Lance
Madison, an eyewitness to the murder of his brother by the police,
was arrested and charged with "attempted murder of police officers"
– a charge that was eventually dismissed.
While the murders
at Danziger Bridge differed in scale from the bloodletting in Norway,
it was also a fatal ambush in which the perpetrators were attired
in a costume signifying "authority" -- and they behaved
with the same pathological ruthlessness displayed the perpetrator
of massacre on Utoya.
Whenever an
innocent person is confronted by an armed stranger in what appears
to be a government-issued costume, one danger is that he is an imposter.
An even more dangerous possibility is that he isn’t.