..And here's one more
thing I was wrong about: I originally was very uncomfortable with the way the
protesters were focusing on the NYPD as symbols of the system. After all, I
thought, these are just working-class guys from the Bronx and Staten Island who
have never seen the inside of a Wall Street investment firm, much less had
anything to do with the corruption of our financial system.
But I was wrong. The
police in their own way are symbols of the problem. All over the country,
thousands of armed cops have been deployed to stand around and surveil and even
assault the polite crowds of Occupy protesters. This deployment of
law-enforcement resources already dwarfs the amount of money and manpower that
the government "committed" to fighting crime and corruption during
the financial crisis. One OWS protester steps in the wrong place, and she
immediately has police roping her off like wayward cattle. But in the
skyscrapers above the protests, anything goes.
This is a profound
statement about who law enforcement works for in this country. What happened on
Wall Street over the past decade was an unparalleled crime wave. Yet at most,
maybe 1,500 federal agents were policing that beat – and that little group of financial
cops barely made any cases at all.
Yet when thousands of ordinary people hit
the streets with the express purpose of obeying the law and demonstrating their
patriotism through peaceful protest, the police response is immediate and
massive. There have already been hundreds of arrests, which is hundreds more
than we ever saw during the years when Wall Street bankers were stealing
billions of dollars from retirees and mutual-fund holders and carpenters unions
through the mass sales of fraudulent mortgage-backed securities.
It's not that the cops outside the protests are
doing wrong, per se, by patrolling the parks and sidewalks. It's that they
should be somewhere else. They should be heading up into those skyscrapers and
going through the file cabinets to figure out who stole what, and from whom.
They should be helping people get their money back. Instead, they're out on the
street, helping the Blankfeins of the world avoid having to answer to the
people they ripped off.
Read the entire piece.
http://m.rollingstone.com/entry/view/id/19309/pn/all/p/0/?KSID=8774e77e79439eb2a20d60d91adc97c5
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