Daily Kos: Is NYC Police Slowdown ‘An Extended Period of Unofficial Pouting’ By Anti-de Blasio Cops?

January 6th, 2015 12:31 AM

The New York Times reported on Monday that “for two straight weeks, New York City police officers have sharply cut back on making arrests and issuing summonses,” and that “parking and traffic tickets [have] also dropped by more than 90 percent.”

In a Monday post, Daily Kos blogger Hunter wondered whether the apparent work slowdown might be “an extended period of unofficial pouting by” NYPD officers dissatisfied with mayor Bill de Blasio. Hunter also blasted the union representing Baltimore city police for its statement that politicians should provide “unequivocal support [for] law enforcement.”

“Americans are still free,” wrote Hunter, “to criticize overaggressive police actions which repeatedly and systemically end up killing black men and boys for no discernible reason—even your mayors and your attorney general and your president may pipe up with thoughts on that, from time to time—so put on your goddamn big-boy uniforms and deal with it.”

From Hunter’s post (bolding added):

Is [the slowdown] merely an extended period of unofficial pouting by New York City Police officers, or is there a specific something being requested? The closest we've come to an explanation of demands comes not from New York but from the Baltimore police union, which used the December murder of two New York officers to demand law enforcement receive the "unequivocal support" of national leaders.

Once again, we need to be reminded that the men and women of law enforcement are absolutely the only entity standing between a civilized society and one of anarchy and chaos. In that position, we should be supported in our efforts, with continuous diligence, by a strong political leadership. Unfortunately, recently, that has not been the case. Politicians and community leaders from President Obama, to Attorney General Holder, New York Mayor de Blasio, and Al Sharpton have, as the result of their lack of proper guidance, created the atmosphere of unnecessary hostility and peril that police officers now find added to the ordinary danger of their profession. Sadly, the bloodshed will most likely continue until those in positions of power realize that the unequivocal support of law enforcement is required to preserve our nation.

…The shootings of these two New York officers are being used as explicit counter to the repeated police killings of unarmed black men and children in America, the premise being that so long as police officers can be or are killed, all other officers should have "unequivocal support" in being able to summarily execute whichever Americans any individual one of them wants to, whether they be children holding toy guns, men in Walmart holding pellet guns, or asthmatic men selling loose cigarettes. This is a premise that can only be entertained by children or morons, none of whom ought to be police officers in the first place. It is a demand that the debate over police brutality, or corruption, or shootings simply not happen.

If members of the police departments demanding "unambiguous" fealty for the actions of every officer and every department want to explain how this required cult-like devotion to police authority squares with a national law enforcement framework that is not by definition a police state, they ought to pipe up with that. Until then we are all very sorry, but Americans are still free to criticize overaggressive police actions which repeatedly and systemically end up killing black men and boys for no discernible reason—even your mayors and your attorney general and your president may pipe up with thoughts on that, from time to time—so put on your goddamn big-boy uniforms and deal with it.