Wednesday, June 03, 2020
All this time I considered myself a
reasonably healthy individual, when it turns out I've had a severe
and apparently permanent case of IPMS (Insufficient
Pessimistic-Misanthropy Syndrome).
For all my dismay over how thoroughly
partisanship and the “sports bar/go-team-go” mentality has
corrupted American political discourse (going all the way back to the
end of Bush/beginning of Obama years, when various breeds of Democrat
and Republican flipped positions on civil-liberty and
government-authority matters alongside the POTUS' changing party
membership), and for all the ways I feared "Even by post-2001
standards, Trump's presidency is going to be very very bad for
America; Zod forbid we have anything like a 9/11-level catastrophe on
his watch," in both cases I was insufficiently pessimistic, and
weighed down by too much faith in humanity (or at least the subset of
humanity comprising my fellow Americans).
I never thought to add “worst
pandemic in a century” to the list of “potential American
disasters, 2017-2021, exacerbated by a President Trump.” Even if I
had, I don't recall ever considering "partisan sports-barism
will get so bad that even amidst the worst pandemic in a century, the
simple act of wearing a face mask or not becomes an actual
socio-political symbol." Nor did I expect an appallingly high
number of self-described liberty advocates to commence sneering at
mask-wearers on the apparent grounds that “Basic self-care, let
alone basic concern for others, are both anti-liberty
principles”--best exemplified by Jeffrey Tucker's infamous tweet “Adding to my post-lockdown
predictions: the face mask will be rightly regarded as a symbol of
obsequious obedience and grotesque compliance with arbitrary and
ignorant authority.”
Yet even if I had been sufficiently
misanthropic and pessimistic to foresee and prepare for all this, I
still did not expect “Amidst the worst pandemic in a century,
rampaging American cops will still disregard social-distancing
procedures if that's what it takes to murder harmless people.”
(Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin certainly didn't bother
wearing a face mask while he used George Floyd's neck as a kneeling
bench. At least I don't think he did; I could not bear to watch
Floyd's murder all the way through. If Chauvin did mask up anytime
during those nine or ten minutes, )
And all across America, people
peacefully protesting Floyd's death (and police brutality in general)
have been met by police officers perversely determined to illustrate exactly why people are protesting.This is how American police behave when
they know their actions are being recorded and broadcast to the
world. Imagine what they do when they think nobody's watching.
Chauvin's callous killing of George
Floyd wasn't the first time, nor even the dozenth time, America has
seen undeniable video proof of a cop abusing if not outright
murdering someone. (And that's just killings caught on video;
consider the far greater numbers of people who died in police custody
under deeply suspicious circumstances, but their actual deaths
weren't recorded.)
Even worse, in many cases police
officers who do these things aren't even charged with crimes, they
keep their jobs and their pensions . Many times they even get to keep
their jobs and pensions. Police unions overwhelmingly cover for
abusive cops – the union's criticism of Chauvin was notable
precisely because he was one of the rare times when cop unions did
NOT overwhelmingly converge into a blue wall of silence.
My IPMS is flaring up again, because
despite the surreal horror of these past three months, I find myself
feeling … “optimistic” is far too strong a word, but perhaps
“hopeful” works instead. Since the dawn of the smartphone era –
more precisely, the dawn of the “practically everybody has a camera
and video-recording ability nowadays, plus the ability to post this
on the internet” era – “video shows American cop killing in
cold blood” has practically become its own genre of reality show.
But maybe this time will be different.
It's been over a week now since Minneapolis police officer Derek
Chauvin suffocated George Floyd to death, and the protests are still
ongoing. More importantly, get-out-the-vote efforts are developing in
response. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court might possibly reconsider the
vile doctrine of “qualified immunity,” which basically grants on-the-clock
police officers the legal right to abuse people, with no means of
legal recourse for their victims.
My country's heading for hell so fast
it's leaving the proverbial handbasket in the dust. IPMS kept me from
ever seeing it coming … and my IPMS keeps me hoping maybe, somehow,
this is the start of something which will change America for the
better, even more profoundly than did the civil rights movement of
the mid-twentieth century.
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