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Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 1 Num. 62
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======================================
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("Quid coniuratio est?")
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POLICE STATE AMERICA
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by Brian Francis Redman, Editor-in-chief, Conspiracy Nation
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Copyright (c) 1994 -- All rights reserved
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For starters I want to say that in my younger days, in my
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encounters with the police, many times they "cut me some slack."
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For that I am grateful.
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What sort of person would want to be a politician? I am
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suspicious of anyone saying they want to go to Washington to "do
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good." It may be that there are some who really *are* that
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altruistic, it may be that some of them at least *think* their
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motivation is that they want to "do good." But I've got to
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wonder: Who in their right mind would want that job?
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Ditto for policemen. Why on earth would anyone want to be a
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policeman? It immediately cuts you off, whether you are aware of
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it or not, from your fellow citizens. You become a snoop, whether
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you mean to be or not, wherever you go. Who do policemen
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associate with? Answer: other policemen. "I won't bust you if you
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don't bust me."
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I am not scared of crime. I just avoid certain areas, especially
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at night. What I am scared of is being rousted from my bed at 4
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in the morning. I am a law-abiding citizen, yet I am more afraid
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of the police than I am of the crooks.
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From here on, I am going to start being blunt in what I say. And
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right off, there is some apprehension that they are going to "get
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me" for boldly speaking my opinion. I already suspect that my
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apartment was searched during the last Christmas season when I
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was out of town. Maybe next time they will *plant* the "evidence"
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that they didn't find then.
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But basically, nothing personal Mr. Policeman, but I don't like
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you guys. When Clinton says he will give us 100,000 more police,
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and says it as if that is something that most people want, I am
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personally not happy at the news. My experience with police is I
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feel uneasy when they are around.
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I am not saying that police are not necessary, to an extent. But
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things in this country have been and are getting more and more
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ridiculous. How many cops is enough? When we make everyone a cop
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will there then, at last, be no crime because, after all, the
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police never break the law? (I won't bust you if you don't bust
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me.)
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Or will we just lock up nine-tenths of the population and then
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have one-tenth working as guards? An article in the Summer 1994
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*Adbusters* suggests that this *is* where we are headed. As the
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article points out,
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Millions of people are already prisoners of television
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technology. Although they are allowed to leave their
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living rooms on "work furloughs," they have given up
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control of their time to the rhythms and dictates of
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institutional marketing strategies. But even television
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technology is primitive compared with what's coming.
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Designed to channel the flows of data and political
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power, the panoptic project is a transnational effort to
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overlay Earth with a computerized surveillance grid.
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{1}.
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I recently watched a show that is on in the afternoons called
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something like "Tales of the Highway Patrol." The show has a
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camerman ride along with various state highway patrol officers as
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they do their job. One segment had the Utah highway patrol
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following a car that was travelling 4 miles an hour over the
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speed limit. So they pulled them over. According to what I saw,
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the fact that they were going 4 miles per hour over the speed
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limit (i.e. something like 59 m.p.h. in a 55 m.p.h. zone) gave
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the officers probable cause to search the vehicle. (I personally
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don't see how that could possibly constitute probable cause to
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search the car without a warrant. Maybe one of my readers can
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enlighten me.)
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So they had the guy get out of his car and said to him, "Empty
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out your pockets." His fiance was sleeping in the back seat. They
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woke her and commanded her to get out of the car. These two, the
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guy and his fiance, were in their twenties. If impressions count
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for anything, they seemed like nice kids. They were travelling
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from Utah back to California, as I recall.
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The highway patrol (a.k.a. the highwaymen) searched through the
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car and at last they found an empty pint of rum, a pipe that
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could be used to smoke marijuana, and one marijuana cigarette.
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So they arrested the guy. By now, his fiance was in tears. They
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took him to the magistrate. The "Tales of the Highway Patrol" did
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not follow them into the little office where sat the magistrate,
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but it did show the aftermath:
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HIGHWAYMAN: You are so lucky. I have never seen the
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judge let anybody off like he did for you. I don't know
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why, but you just have to pay a $200 fine.
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THE GUY: Gee, thanks, Mr. Highwayman.
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In olden times, the highwayman was a guy who harassed travellers.
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If they wanted to travel on *his* road, then by God they would
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have to pay *him* some money. In a larger sense, the police in
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general can be seen as a sort of armed tax collection agency. Of
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course, they *say* things like "Your muffler is too loud," or
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"The light over your license plate has gone out." But maybe the
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highwaymen of olden times used to say things like "Your horse
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needs new horseshoes," or "His neighing is disturbing the
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neighborhood." (Maybe that is the etymology of *neigh*borhood, by
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the way. It comes from the days of the highwaymen patrolling the
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*neigh*borhood.)
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So what is the policeman? He is an armed tax collector, *if* you
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have money. If you are poor, or young, or working-class, then you
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must "empty out your pockets" to the highwayman and say, "I have
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no money left to give you, sir."
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If you have no money left to give, then you are effectively
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punished for having no money. How dare you say, "I have no
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money," when the armed tax collectors pull you over or otherwise
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stop you under some pretext?! Just think if *everyone* started
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telling them "I have no money left to give" when the highwayman
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comes riding, riding, riding up to your door. These citizens have
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got to be beaten, imprisoned, and otherwise punished to show them
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that "By God, you'd better have some money when I come
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a'callin'." The word gets around, whispered from ear to ear,
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about how dismal the jails are, how overcrowded they are, how all
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sorts of disgusting things can happen to you in there. So you
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*know*, it is common knowledge, that when the coppers come
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a'callin' you'd better have some bucks you can give them.
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*That* is what the police are about in Police State America.
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Billy Boy Clinton doesn't give a damn about how safe you are.
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Billy Boy's job is to bring in the bucks for =The State=. And
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nowadays, with =The State= having to pay huge interest on its
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debt, the need for a massive influx of funds is desperate. It is
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so desperate that =The State= is about to put 100,000 new, armed
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tax collectors out on the street.
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Coincidentally with their "fine" collecting function, the
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plethora of police will also serve to dampen criticism of =The
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State=. You don't want to get fined, do you? But that is
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incidental (although it *does* serve to maintain things as they
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are). What you should know is, at this point in time, =The State=
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is absolutely desperate for funds. =The State= will seize your
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property, it will increase your taxes, it will disguise new taxes
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as social security payments, it will seize your cash, *and* it
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will put 100,000 new police on the street, for your "safety."
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Why do we put up with it? Well we are heavily propagandized so
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that we do not see the police for what they are: (1) armed tax
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collectors, and (2) muscle for the elite class. Why is it there
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are and have always been so many police shows on television? All
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my life the cop show has been a mainstay of "entertainment" in
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this country. We are instinctively repulsed by these henchmen of
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=The State= as they stick their noses into our lives. To make the
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situation more palatable, =The State= *massively* exaggerates who
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these people are. We see them in television-land as if they are
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the last hope of civilization. We see "bad guys" massively
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caricatured as major, heavy-duty foul protuberances who must be
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beat back to the pit from whence they came. We see the saintly
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policeman, overworked, hemmed in by the pesky Bill of Rights,
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nobly doing his all to save us from these "others".
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For any police forces who are monitoring this, I have a major
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question to ask: If you are so concerned about saving us from the
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"drug menace," then why aren't you speaking out about Bill
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Clinton? There is convincing evidence that our President not only
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used and abused drugs, but it appears that his political campaign
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was actually financed in part by illegal drug sales. Why don't we
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hear you speaking out about this, since you are supposedly so
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concerned about saving us all from the "drug menace"?
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Here's another question for you: Suppose you were to actually win
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this thrice-cursed, never-ending "War on Drugs". Wouldn't you
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then be out of a job? You know, like with the military finally
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winning the Cold War. Hooray! We've Won! (You're fired.)
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So you see, these guys have a career at stake. Best to keep on
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pushing around the little guys rather than really do anything
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serious. Don't worry. The television will cover up your true
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purpose.
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Why are the police wearing star-trek uniforms now? Here at the
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university of Illinois, training ground for future forces of the
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law, I have been seeing guys wearing these weird helmets with
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visors that don't let you look 'em in the eye. Why the new police
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fashions? Is this the new trend? Don't you want us to be able to
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see the man behind the uniform anymore? Is this meant to isolate
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you more, robotize your function, hide your human side, or what?
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One last thing. There used to be a class of people called
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"reporters." This bunch often had working-class roots, working-
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class sympathies, and wasn't afraid to take on the big guys.
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*Then*, they went to college, became journalists, and I swear
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they are now just *so sweet*. Why *no one* ever gets offended by
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what they say anymore! They wouldn't *dream* of "rocking the
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boat" or anything like that. Nope. No need to worry about them.
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*Now* we have the police doing the same thing. The police used to
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come, in large part, from the ranks of the working-class. But
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now, we have got this new, improved, college-trained police force
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arriving on the scene. I suspect that many of these "Babes in
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Badgeland" have gone straight from high school, to college, to
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policeman -- all without having much of a connection with, or
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much of an empathy for, those beings who work at minimum wage and
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crawl back exhausted to their hotel rooms at night.
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So where is the wisdom? A lot of the old-time cops at least had
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that. They came from or had in their memories what it can be
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like. How can they teach these new techno-cops what it is to have
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a heart?
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Hey, coppers. Wise up.
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Get a real job.
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Stop bugging us.
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-------------------------<< Notes >>-----------------------------
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{1} "Techno Prisoners" By Rick Crawford. *Adbusters*, Summer
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1994, Vol. 3 No. 2.
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Aperi os tuum muto, et causis omnium filiorum qui pertranseunt.
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Aperi os tuum, decerne quod justum est, et judica inopem et
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pauperem. -- Liber Proverbiorum XXXI: 8-9
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