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I don’t blame the YouTuber who recorded parts of this video, as he may have warned others not to go there. However, the police were aware of his Livestream and they behaved in a most unprofessional manner.

It’s still hard to believe that these things happen, but last fall, the shooter was finally sentenced to consecutive life terms plus more than one thousand years in prison. I know that will not make sense to anyone outside of the United States, but please believe that the sentence is significant in a country where a man who raped a 16 year-old girl was sentenced to two years. A young lady must now bear the trauma of that attack with her for the rest of her life. Where is her justice?

“Justice” in the U.S. is transient and therefore undefined. What is it, and in which counties and states will it appear as it should? Why should there be a good place to rape or murder because judges are easily bribed or, perhaps, mentally ill themselves?

I hope that this video makes you think about many things: the value, fragility and fleeting nature of human life, the sickening way we fail to treat people with medical care in psychological and somatic fields, and the ease with which people here can arm themselves with enough hardware to kill a dozen or more people in a single location. Mass shootings, indeed, any shooting, is a national crisis and something the world can’t understand about us.

Hell. I don’t understand it.

Ah, So You Poke The Hornet’s Nest?

What do you complain about the most?

I think that, perhaps, the above question was offered by someone who had read my last post. What they provoke in this way from others does not concern me. My insouciance will not be moved; my ennui will never allow it.

It is possible that some may, incorrectly, land on the certainty that I complain constantly without cease. Or perhaps that Taylor Swift is the main target of my criticism, my source of causticity, and its resultant acidic release.

Taylor Swift is rarely on my mind. However, even if I lack the respect I once had for her, she is hardly the muse responsible for my complete and unrelenting anger; she has no such power over me, and I realize how other people in her “cult” of unreasonable fans had swayed my opinion of her.

While the idea that I am an “anti-Swifty” may seem to set me apart from you and everyone you know, I am hardly a lone wolf in this area. For every Swifty, there are hundreds of people who are even more disenchanted, jaded, and weary of her. We have had enough.

I have gone astray, however, in calling the NFL a “fixed” sport. It seems to me that I’ve heard this before from kooks who love to sit around and, in a partly paranoid and delusional state, put hands to keyboard and declare that this event or that incident was the result of a conspiracy.

This nonsense became a conspiracy theory regarding the NFL. There is, however, little to no proof of any such thing. For one to exist, the conspiracy itself would have to be small or compartmented in such a way that if one person (it’s already happened with more than one), a player, coach, or owner leaked information on it, there would be serious consequences. For one, the biggest asset the NFL has is its fans. Imagine the terror they would unleash if they found or were presented with proof that everything is scripted, like the WWF (did John Stossel really have to ask)? I knew it when I was a kid. I could see that for every punch one wrestler threw, one of them would stomp as if it were a real blow. It covered what was usually just a lack of sound.

That fans bought it for so long horrified me. Every time Chief J Strongbow let himself get beaten enough to, were it real, fall down and die, only to suddenly go into a war dance and unleash his well-acted fury, I knew what I was seeing. However, I never made a big deal about it, and from 1974 to 2000, I rarely paid any attention to wrestling. That was excellent timing, as I consider, and I am not alone on this, 2000 to be the best year wrestling ever had, and one which could not be repeated. Yet I never heard any conspiracy theories about wrestling except for the hostile takeovers and buyouts that doomed the WWE to its present, boring state.

What vexed me recently into giving the NFL or Taylor Swift any room on my site may not have anything to do with sports-fixing. Then again, no one can prove that there does not exist any rigging or predetermined “script”, or that the obviously, flagrantly bad calls by the officials I have seen this season did not happen.

Detractors of the NFL conspiracy theories all point out that there are laws that bind the league to prevent any cheating or tanking in any way. However, I challenge you to give me one example of any corporate entity or company large enough to have the power to do things such as price fixing that actually follows the letter of the law, and I will call you on the spot for your proof, which you, of course, will not have.

What draws most of my complaints is hardly Taylor Swift or her newest temporary boyfriend. It isn’t the constant news coverage they get, nor is it the media telling people to watch them, to cheer them on, to love them. The romance will end badly. It may even be messy. I know this just as I knew that the Ravens were not supposed to win. The Chiefs were scoreless in the second half. They did not need to score; it was already over.

My biggest concern, and what I complain most about, aside from my failures and the attendant self-loathing they have caused, is the incredibly uncaring and cavalier attitude people have toward global warming, crime and corporate power, used to further threaten life on earth and steal money from people who do not have any. This corporate power is responsible for the shocking response to the Affordable Health Care Act.

Insurance companies write inscrutable policies that even established attorneys cannot unlock the secrets of. Between that and crime, a lack of governmental concern over firearm availability and the sickening statistics that this lack of concern reflects, people are dying.

These are not deaths from highway accidents, resort conditions, home, or household accidents. No, these deaths are the most heinous things that can happen to people: premature, hollow, meaningless, and unnecessary deaths. There is no glory, no honor, and nothing about such an ending that is good. It’s just evil and tragic.

Please note, I do not for one second believe in fate or “dying for a reason” or “it was his or her time” to go. That’s weak rationalization, which is to say, a pack of lies.

Perhaps you would like to tell a grieving spouse, parent, or sibling that their loved one was murdered by someone with an assault rifle because it was “their time” or worse, that it was “God’s will“. You deserve to be slapped if you say such things.

Answer this question: how many mass shootings took place in the United States in 2023?

You don’t know, do you? Because corporate news stopped telling you. I place even odds that nobody knows, that the books have been cooked to the point that the truth cannot be known. This would constitute a real conspiracy if I am even close. But no one can prove me right…or wrong.

Another killer is fentanyl. It’s everywhere. People claim that it’s a myth that police officers can’t be affected by just touching it or inhaling residual dust. We’re whitewashing a killer. The reason? No one wants to know about it. There’s almost as much misinformation on fentanyl as there still is about Covid-19.

Corporate media covers for corporations that are killing our last chances of surviving global warming. I’ve often said that the “temperature threshold” is already passed, and we’ve crossed the no return line drawn in the sand. No one can even see the line anymore; to many people have kicked sand over it. While wars continue, the need to cut reliance on oil is left out of discussion. We are, as a species, headed inexorably toward extinction. If there’s a way to stop that mass extinction, it lies more in the realm of fantasy than truth. I’m always sorry to write this, but I just don’t believe reliance on fossil fuels will stop.

What’s that you see in a child’s eyes? The desire to be a child, to play, be with friends, grow and become someone important?

Or do you see shock, mute and staring, after their home was destroyed by a rocket attack?

What’s that in that little boy’s eyes? Wonder at the world around him, the possibilities?

Or is it the dull stare of a little kid who’s just been raped by his father? Neither child can ever know trust again. Will never know peace or a world without the innocence it once had for them.

These are the things I complain about the most. The things I care about the most. Sometimes, I believe that we deserve to become extinct. God gave us a beautiful, bountiful place to live and the ability to thrive and to take care of what we’ve been blessed with.

But we deny his existence and fill fields that were once lush and beautiful with trees, grass, and flowers with sewage and toxic sludge.

Folks, those are the things I complain about the most. And I am not about to stop.

Stop The Bleeding!

The following article is very disturbing and caution is advised. If you feel anxious, triggered, or otherwise upset in any way, know first that you have my undying respect: you have a good soul. Second, please don’t hesitate to close this window. My next post may be more to your liking.

The following events are on record. The network, cable, streaming and internet news will not, and has not, told you the truth. I will.

Mass Shootings in the United States of America March 1 through April 10, 2023

1 March- Kansas City, MO: 3 police officers wounded, firefight and standoff. Terminated by shooter’s suicide.

4 March- Los Angeles CA: 5 wounded near beach.

4 March- Douglasville, GA: 2 killed, 6 wounded at a party

4 March- Cape Girardeau, MO: 5 wounded outside bar.

5 March- Shreveport LA: 4 wounded outside church, drive-by.

5 March- Bolingbrook IL: 3 killed (2 minors), 1 wounded, home invasion.

5 March- Lake City, FL: 4 wounded.

6 March- LA Riviera, LA: 2 killed, 2 wounded, domestic violence.

6 March- Memphis TN: 2 killed, 2 wounded, domestic violence.

7 March- Memphis TN: 4 wounded.

8 March- Pine Bluffs, AR: 2 killed, 2 wounded in parked car.

8 March- Los Angeles, CA: firefight; shooter fired at officers, terminated when shooter was killed.

10 March- Miami Lakes, FL: 5 killed including shooter (murder-suicide).

12 March- Dallas, TX: 4 wounded, northwest section.

13 March- Lubbock, TX: 4 wounded.

14 March- near Birmingham, AL: 4 killed at 2 locations by same shooter.

15 March- Modesto, CA: 2 killed, 2 wounded at residence.

18 March- Dallas, TX: 4 wounded, road incident.

18 March- Chicago, IL: 3 shooters wounded 4 in South Shore.

18 March- Columbus, OH: 2 killed, 4 wounded, nightclub.

20 March- Milwaukee, WS: 1 killed (minor), 5 wounded.

21 March- Sumter, SC: 4 killed (3 minors, 1 adult) terminated by shooter’s suicide.

21 March- Trenton, NJ: 4 wounded, drive-by.

23 March- Baltimore, MD: 1 killed, 5 wounded, west side.

25 March- Shreveport, LA: 1 killed, 5 wounded. Multiple shooters fired randomly at pedestrians.

26 March- Girl Scouts HQ, Brooklyn Center, MN: parking lot; 6 minors wounded after more than 50 rounds were fired by shooter.

26 March- Minden, LA: 4 wounded at family event.

26 March- Hempstead, NY: 4 wounded at birthday party.

26 March- Little Rock, AR: 2 killed, 5 wounded.

26 March- Philadelphia, PA: 2 killed, 2 wounded, northside.

27 March- Milwaukee, WI: 5 wounded at restaurant and bar.

27 March- Nashville, TN: Covenant School Massacre; 3 children, 3 adults killed, shooter killed by police.

29 March- Memphis, TN: 2 killed, 5 wounded, restaurant parking lot.

April

1 April- Baltimore, MD: 3 killed, 1 wounded, northeast section.

1 April- Los Angeles, CA: 1 killed, 3 wounded; Trader Joe’s parking lot.

1 April- Oklahoma City, OK: 3 killed, 3 wounded at a bar during a biker firefight.

2 April- Moreno Valley, CA: 2 adults, 2 minors wounded.

2 April- Washington DC: 4 wounded on MLK JR. Ave S.E.

2 April- Fayetteville, NC: 1 killed, 4 wounded at a hookah lounge.

3 April- Pueblo, CO: 1 killed (minor), 3 wounded.

3 April- Atlanta, GA: 1 killed, 3 wounded at a temple.

3 April- Jackson, TN: 5 found in car, 4 wounded.

4 April- Philadelphia, PA: 1 killed, 4 wounded in Kensington.

5 April- Kansas City, KS: 3 police, 3 suspects wounded during fentanyl investigation.

5 April- Virginia Beach, VA: 4 wounded.

6 April- Philadelphia, PA: 4 wounded in northside section.

7 April- Park Forest, IL: 1 killed, 3 wounded at a fan gathering.

7 April- New Orleans, LA: 5 wounded (2 minors) on Interstate 10.

7 April- Isle of Palms, SC: 6 wounded on beach.

8 April- Harris County, TX: 4 wounded at apartment complex.

9 April- Orlando, FL: 3 killed, 2 wounded after Easter egg hunt in a park.

10 April- Louisville, KY: 5 killed, 9 wounded at a bank; employee was the shooter.

Some Notes:

This is a small slice in time. Do not be led to believe that if you count the number of dead, that these shootings aren’t as bad as you would have thought. Every shooting and, of course, every mass shooting, is extremely traumatic even to bystanders. The lives of the wounded, the surviving families of the killed, are forever changed, and their pain should never be minimized by anyone.

Also note that I have made no note of shooting victims who were wounded critically. The reason: they may yet be counted among the dead. It can takes months to die or to walk out of a hospital. Also, of the critically wounded, let us respect their and their family’s privacy. They’re already dealing with too much. No one has the right to make things worse.

One more point, then I’ll let you go: I have made no note of the weapons used. To me, it does not matter. It is too easy to get hand guns and they kill too; although assault rifles and their horrifying accessories are way more than any citizen should be allowed to have in their possession, much less buy so easily. To this author a person murdered is tragic in the extreme. And I will never understand the reasons minors are so often a shooter’s target of choice. Anyone who says they know why these things happened is full of shit. Aren’t there already enough liars defending this national tragedy? To the rest of the world we’re animals.

They’ve got that right.

COPS

The following contains dramatized and controversial material. Some may find it disturbing.

2012

It’s getting further into the Christmas season in New England. You’ll never know what you were doing when the radio crackled a heart-stopping call.

Shots fired. “All units, the individual I have on the line says she’s continuing to hear shots fired.” You roll. It’s the goddamn elementary school! Someone inside is shooting a firearm! This isn’t your worst nightmare come true. No. This is a nightmare you never imagined in the first place. Anyway it doesn’t matter. It’s happening.

There’s an officer on scene, just arrived behind the school. The building is in sight. You arrive 13 seconds after the first unit. Now the troopers are coming too. In all the northeast, there are none so feared as Connecticut state troopers. If you’ve done something wrong, they’re gonna know.

Then the next call comes. The shots have ceased. In minutes, you and other officers evacuate the students, almost none of which could possibly not be in shock. You go easy, but urge them on. Outside, goddamn reporters are already filming, the fucking vultures. The school is searched. Three times. You finally see the shooter. He’s just a kid. You saw the weapons brought out. Fucking AR-15. A handgun. What the fuck?

You may go home later, but when you do, you will be different. You’ve heard about cops who had faced the most terrible of things. They all share a few things. Like PTSD. Heart disease as they feed the depression or drink the pain away. Suicides. Early death.

You saw the bodies. Twenty wee children. Six adults. You saw them. Smelled the powder still in the hallway. No. Though you have a job to do, you turn away from everyone else while your eyes fill with tears. You know you’ll see those poor kids for the rest of your days. You wonder how you’ll ever endure it. You wipe your eyes, take a deep breath and get back to work. Then you remember the bathroom. What you saw there is going to haunt everyone who saw it for the rest of their lives. And no civilians except for the parents will ever know. You know their lives are all but destroyed. You know it. But you can’t think about it now. That is for later…

2016

You serve the people in the city of Orlando, Florida. And during the winter tourist season, you can be pretty busy, but the summer is a whole different matter. There are high crime areas. There are drunks at parties. There are traffic accidents and moving violations everywhere. You think some days are the worst you’ve ever had. That every day on the beat after this day is bound to be gravy; nothing could be as bad as the watch you just pulled.

And then you get a call you’re never, ever going to get over. You hear the dispatcher, but you can’t feel anything but adrenaline. SWAT is on its way, but you’re called, too. For all you know, so was the fucking entire force. There’s a shooting going on, a bad one. You hit the light bar and the siren, and maybe, as you drive, you get this feeling. Like, fear mixing all too slowly, as if time slowed down, like in the movies. It’s a terrible feeling. It’s nothing compared to what you’re about to see, and hear, and feel.

Twenty four hours later, you’ve returned. The bodies are still there, still being processed by the crime scene people. Fifty bodies. All victims of the same lone shooter armed with an assault rifle. The cell phones still ring. On the bodies. Some are quiet, some probably have dead batteries. They were ringing constantly last night. But the ones that rang intermittently are ringing again, now, and you think you’ve never heard a worse sound in your life. Some of the fallen have not been identified. You know that you will never have another traffic violation, drunk and disorderly, or any other call that will make you think you have it bad. Because this…

This

This will always be with you. The victims’ faces are different. By now, their eyes have clouded completely over. The stench is powerful, a familiar odor but one that you’ve never dealt with on a level like this.

Some will have closed-casket viewings and funerals. Some things, even a skilled mortician can’t fix. And it’s so senseless. This was a celebration. It was innocent, there was dancing, music, drinks, fun… These people never knew that when they walked into this room, they would not be leaving it alive. That they weren’t going home that night.

There were other victims. Last night you helped get them out. It was madness. In all, 102 people were shot. Forty nine dead, fifty three wounded, and some of the critically wounded will die. Because being wounded by a bullet isn’t like stories or Hollywood crap. You can linger for months, and then just die.

Someone in the locker room told you that it was the worst mass shooting in the country’s history. To you, it seems an odd thing to say. Because now, the outrage is sinking in. The shooter had an Sig Sauer MCX assault rifle. And a handgun,. Glock 17, which will prove to be the backup weapon of choice common to lots of mass shooters. He left his brass everywhere. Like a war zone. He’d emptied one magazine with the rifle and loaded another. Not because he hated LGBTs. Because he wanted to avenge the deaths of Islamic people at the hands of military forces in the United States piloting drones, among other reasons.

Reports by cable and network news are already saying it was a targeted hate crime against LGBTs. Later, you’ll learn that Omar Mateen was Googling “Orlando night clubs” earlier last night. An investigation will reveal all were protected by armed guards. It’s likely that the man found that out, ending up at the Pulse not because it was a gay nightclub but because he found it agreeably defenseless. None of it will ever matter to you. It’s death, mass death. It’s a horror. It shouldn’t happen. Not here, not anywhere.

You listen to the ringtones. And you wonder… and after a few seconds, you know… there will be another, a worse, a bigger body count, somewhere, probably not too far in the future. As you think about it, you begin to ask yourself one question… and it will go unanswered, because it’s a shitty, unfair world and you know it. The question comes to you without words as you look around at bodies on the floor and the place where last night music played and drinks were served and it was pleasant in here, but now it’s silent except for police radios and the dying cell phones ringing, soon to never ring again. You’ve seen some shit in your time. Stuff you thought was bad. Stuff you knew was bad. And you’ve lived with the nightmares ever since. But as you look for your supervisor, wondering just what the fuck you’re doing here, that question comes back to you and this time it has words: how the fuck do I live with this?

2017

You didn’t see this coming. Typical for early October, the temperature that day had reached about 90, but after sunset it slowly began to drop. Cruising with your window open, you thought it was still in the upper 70s but it felt pleasant under a clear sky. A decent Sunday night. You hoped it would be quiet in the last hour of your tour of duty. Nothing much had happened on this early fall night. You know about the festival going on at the grounds beside McCarran, but it’s Sunday, and people have to be at work and school in the morning. It’s almost over and you just hope for nothing but a peaceful exit from the grounds when it ended.

On the radio, dispatch is talking to another officer about someone’s history. Something about a person having a hernia surgery. Then there’s a response about a silver vehicle and a silver jeep. Generic chatter, stuff you as a veteran can tune out but still register. It’s not your call, and nobody’s going to need backup.

The chatter is as subdued and unintelligible as every other law enforcement channel in the whole fucking United States. Yet like every cop, you can understand it even though no one else can. You relax and yawn, because the night is almost over. It’s actually called Paradise, the area you’re cruising your beat in. You may think all the jokes in the locker room are funny as shit, but in exactly fifteen seconds, nothing about it will ever be funny again.

“We’ve got shots fired! Shots fired, sounds like automatic fire!” It’s rare for a brother or sister officer to sound like that: the guy is frantic. You can’t even tell who it is.

Some garbled sounds from the radio. But you’re not yawning anymore. You’re upright like a statue of a Greek god on a throne in your seat, hairs on your arms raised. You’ve heard shouting on the radio before, but no matter what hairy shit was going down, you have never heard another cop sound like that.

You haven’t been dispatched. You don’t know who that was or where he is. You have a few seconds of merciless uselessness that you can’t tolerate. No cop enjoys that feeling.

“He’s at Mandalay Bay, he’s about halfway up! I see the shots! He’s at Mandalay Bay! About halfway up!”

And you ain’t far away. Now you know where to go. But you don’t really, because like a lot of Vegas hotels, Mandalay Bay had a fucking weirdo for a chief architect. What side is this sniper on?

Wait, what the fuck? A sniper with an automatic weapon that high? This can’t be happening! But your training and experience kick in. You don’t need a dispatch call for this. You just need to hear where the shooter is and where he’s shooting.

“Control, that is correct. Active shooter, many people down stage left.”

Another officer: “Do we have anyone covering the southwest corner between Mandalay Bay and the venue?”

Another: “Can anyone in the CP tell me where it’s coming from?”

Response (female, officer or dispatcher unknown): “It’s coming from Mandalay Bay!”

Then: “719, I’m gonna form a strike force, I need five officers on me.”

You know what to do now. A strike team is going in after the shooter. For the “many people down at the venue,” you have to go. Good God, how many people are at that concert?

The shooter is loosing hundred-round bursts. They’re right over your head as you go into the fenced open-air venue. You get into a bent position and press on. It’s like nothing you’ve ever seen. Bodies lying on the ground everywhere. Some have to be dead. You hope not all. One woman is in tears, she and her friends trying to get out and you look around carefully. “You’re good from where you are. If you can’t see Mandalay Bay, he can’t see you.”

Then calls about other shooters come in. And it could be true. The sounds of the shots are so close together. The rounds are hitting a larger area now. Adrenaline alone is keeping you from collapsing. You begin to check bodies. One woman who’s hit in the leg is bleeding. You need to get a tourniquet on it. If she’s left here, she’ll die. You get another officer to help get her to your cruiser. Paramedic units can’t enter an active shooting scene. Your trip to the hospital is fast. Doctors and triage nurses are waiting outside. The wounded started coming in a few minutes ago. They get the young woman out of your vehicle. “That’s been on for fifteen minutes, that tourniquet,” you say.

You have to go back. The shooting has stopped. A radio call reports a strike team forced the door to one of the shooter’s two suites open. Their horror is clear. The man had shot himself. Around him lay an arsenal. A fucking arsenal of AR-15 rifles, one AR-10, and more. Hundred-round magazines were everywhere, and some 50-round mags as well. The whole thing lasted ten goddamn minutes, and when you get back to the Harvest festival grounds, the lights have been off since the shooter was still firing when someone killed the power. Even with flashlight in hand, you are stunned by the carnage. The dead are everywhere. The wounded moan and scream but dare not move because they’re in shock and still terrified that to do so will get them shot again. Even if unable to silence their pain, they’re playing dead.

You’re not going end-of-watch. This will be the longest night of your life. And not one detail can ever be forgotten. You’ll have nightmares for the rest of your life. Your wife won’t understand. Same as husbands won’t. They’re going to beg their boyfriends, girlfriends and fiancees to quit. They sat in front of the TV and were scared shitless that their loved ones were dead.

During the massacre, bedlam: one officer shouted, “We can’t worry about the victims! We have to get the sniper before we have more victims!”

“Be advised I can hear automatic fire from one floor above us.”

“I’m at the end of the 32nd floor. We have a security guard shot in the hallway. He’s down!”

“He’s shooting at the medical tent! We have one vic shot in the head!”

At the end. The casualties were staggering. 59 people were dead. 869 wounded. One Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department officer is among them. For whatever reason, Stephen Paddock had become the most lethal shooter in domestic criminal history. And you will never be that same cop you were at 22:00 local time on 1 October 2017, and  there’s nothing that will ever change that. Still, you ask yourself: how am I going to live with this?

Four days later, a candlelight service is held in honor of Charleston Heartfield. He’s the brother officer slain by a fucking madman. Among members of the department, that night brings a respite from the shock. For a moment, the emotional reaction can bleed through. Some cry. One is hugged by another officer. The crowd genuinely grieves for the fallen hero, hurt for his son and widow. Las Vegas cries. You cry with them. And you don’t know how you can go on.

2018

You’re having the nightmares you feared. This country is sick and getting worse every day. But in a little over four months, something will happen 2, 500 miles away that will shock you, sicken and make you seethe with anger. Unlike other historic events, you’re not going to remember where you were when the news broke. But the evil and vile details, you won’t forget. And they’re going to change you again. And the Mandalay Bay shooting won’t make any more sense because of it, but finally you will have that answer your wife asks for still: why do you insist on keeping “The Job”?

Because on Valentine’s Day, at just after 14:00 local time, a former student of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida walked in with a Smith & Wesson Ar-15 style semiautomatic assault rifle and proceeded to shoot students and staff on three floors in ice-cold blood. It would eclipse the Columbine Massacre and Sandy Hook and take its place as the worst school shooting, and you watch in disbelief as you learn a deputy on duty at the school remained outside even as he heard shots fired. There’s no greater dishonor than to stand by as an officer of the law and allow kids to be killed. One school staff member hid in a closet. It’s not just deputies that failed the kids, you’ll tell your wife. But teachers have died protecting kids, like at Sandy Hook. These staff members were garbage as far as you’re concerned. You’d like to have a minute alone with that chickenshit deputy.

You point to the TV. “That,” you tell your wife, “is why we do it. We’re supposed to mean something. Stand for something, help people. We know what the risks are, but unlike that pissy deputy, we go in.”

And cops do go in. They save lives. They die doing it. To most police officers, that shield means something. Something bigger than civilians know.

In Dallas, they ran toward the shots.

In Manhattan on 11 September, 2001, they surged into the twin towers. They had no time to think they may not come back out. Even if they did, they went in anyway. Most didn’t come back out and some were never found.

We mourned those intrepid souls, our fallen heroes. Not just New York. The whole country. We cried for them all, the first responders who died that awful, ugly, horrible day. Firefighters. Police. Paramedics. Everyone who was visiting. Everyone who worked there.

Before the towers fell, anyone a block away heard a sound that made some of them throw up. Others would scream. People above the burning impact areas where the planes had gone in were seen with their heads outside broken windows. Smoke, thick and black, belched from those windows. They still could not breathe.

The cameras on the ground recorded what made people scream and vomit. Bodies of the jumpers hitting the pavement from such heights made a sound Hollywood couldn’t reproduce on a multi billion dollar budget. There would be no forgetting it. If you were unfortunate enough to see those bodies land? That trauma was only a part of that unbearable day, and yet it’s one that affected people around the world.

Like so many disasters before, the police were mourned as heroes. Survivors got hugged. But now… that’s all over.

There are shouts of threats. Name calling. Curses. Cries to defund police departments.  A blanket condemnation of every cop in America, a thing no different than bigotry against all blacks, whites, Latinos and American Indians. And it has sobered me and I’m not one of those cursing cops.

What happened to George Floyd was heinous. There’s no argument there, and anyone who tries is purely wicked to the core. But although I want justice for the man, I don’t like what’s been going on since he died. I liked Al Sharpton’s eulogy. I wept. But then it was exploited by cable news shamelessly while other major news had never gone away. Reporters were in positions where they knew goddamn well they should not be. The coverage sickened me. I honestly got sick.

When corporate owned news bashes the police and puts cameras in crowds waiting for cops to do the slightest thing so they can show the video a million times, something is fucked up.

I will never call for the police to be defunded. They get extra training. They carry extra equipment. They are often first on the scene, before medics and firemen. They have to negotiate intense situations medics can’t even get near, and they do it, every day. They don’t hesitate. You’ve heard that 99% of cops are good. It’s more than that. You’re going to have to use decimals and no fair counting an honest mistake as the actions of a bad cop. You’ve done it as have I. We’re like that, harsh, reactionary, judgemental creatures. Well, I wish we weren’t. I will never hate cops nor lump them all together as bad. They’re not. They’re human. They have feelings and carry scars. They have families to take care of along with taking care of you and me. And you throw shit at them. Try to provoke them so you can use your cellphone camera.

Shame on you all. Then you’ll need a cop. You’ll call 911 one day. If they’re not there in ten seconds, you’ll complain. Try to hire a lawyer. Post negative shit on Twitter and Facebook. Because I know you. And that’s just how you are.