I posted this topic in another forum where it was deleted before I saw any response. If it stirred up something, I didn't see it, and I'm not trying to repeat that here, but to get honest feedback.
Activism proposing the defunding of police is beginning to be covered by the media and gaining more widespread attention. I am not claiming how widespread the support for this idea is, but the discussion on it is increasing. Today, the city council members of Minneapolis announced a "veto-proof" resolution to defund and dissolve the police department. Activists have painted a "Defund the Police" mural in Washington DC.
Can defunding or abolishing police further the cause of gun rights and firearms-related individual liberties?
I can't help but suspect I'll face backlash for even mentioning the idea because I get the impression that the "gun community" is homogeneously "pro-police." Let me be clear that I'm not proposing a sentiment of "cop-hating." It seems ironic to me that because individual gun ownership and the exercise of gun-rights is inherently anti-statist, a libertarian ideology permeates the community of gun-culture people, and yet their support for the institutions of the police state seem to be unrelenting.
State institutions of police are a modern concept and one that came about against substantial resistance. First created by King Louis XIV in 1667, the Paris police force endured the French Revolution and persisted under Napoleon into the 19th century. Around that time is when the British began experimenting with the Thames River Police, primarily to protect property (cargo) on the docks from theft. As the city grew from the onset of the Industrial Revolution, the Metropolitan Police Service was established on September 29, 1829 in London as the first modern and professional police force in the world. There was much opposition to the spread of this concept, both as an undesirable foreign import and as an over-reach of big-Statism into the affairs of citizens. The police have, ever since then, been the enforcement arm of the big State. It was the "Gestapo" after all that the citizens of Germany would come to fear when their nation was taken over by a tyrant.
Why is it that gun-owners are quick to point out the impotency of the police in providing for their security when justifying their gun-ownership, while the liberals seem to be hell-bent on depending on the police and the state for everything? And yet the supporters of gun rights seem to promote the power of police institutions, while it is the liberals that appear to be taking the lead in calling for them to be abolished? The liberals so doing undoubtedly do not envision a smaller government, but simply hope to take funds for the police-state and divert them to welfare-statism.
We understand that the police don't "make the laws," they just "enforce them." Because of this, most gun-rights activism has focused on State and Federal legislatures and on elections of governors and presidents. But it has not been lost on gun-rights advocates that whatever laws and orders those parts of the government make, it is ultimately the police and Sheriffs that enforce them. Because of this, we've seen support for "sanctuary" cities and counties where laws and orders of the state that deny citizens their rights and liberties will not be enforced by the police or Sheriff. Indeed if there were no police, who would fear being arrested for carrying a concealed weapon without a permission slip?
Now I know some people just can't imagine anything but anarchy without the police -- as if civilization itself wasn't possible until the big police state came upon us. Let me be clear that I am not discussing a state of lawlessness or anarchy. We know that there is less freedom and there is no liberty in a state of lawlessness where the most basic property rights and the security of one's life and the live's of one's family must be constantly guarded. In the streets of our cities today we see this scenario, carried out through looting and rioting, pitted against the big militarized police state in riot gear. Are those two extremes really the only options?
Are police institutions really the only thing that keep our society together and from falling into hopeless anarchy and chaos? If the institutions of policing were substantially weakened or many of them dissolved, would our civilization turn into some crime-infested dystopia riddled with vigilantism? Or would people enjoy more liberty, free from the oppression of the big state's enforcers?
The institutions of the police state are likely to be defunded even without an ideological shift. Tax revenues have gone off a cliff. Will libertarian-minded gun rights advocates and 2A supporters hope for a Federal bailout of the police through even greater deficit-spending and debt-monetization? Or will the defunding of the police be embraced as a fiscal necessity or even a welcome curtailment of state power?
How will the defunding of the police affect you personally? Will you feel less secure? Will you take concrete actions out of concern that a crime wave or destructive anarchy will touch you personally? Or will you feel relieved of some concern about state and police abuse of power and the runaway growth of executive power and the expansion of bureaucracy?
Activism proposing the defunding of police is beginning to be covered by the media and gaining more widespread attention. I am not claiming how widespread the support for this idea is, but the discussion on it is increasing. Today, the city council members of Minneapolis announced a "veto-proof" resolution to defund and dissolve the police department. Activists have painted a "Defund the Police" mural in Washington DC.
Can defunding or abolishing police further the cause of gun rights and firearms-related individual liberties?
I can't help but suspect I'll face backlash for even mentioning the idea because I get the impression that the "gun community" is homogeneously "pro-police." Let me be clear that I'm not proposing a sentiment of "cop-hating." It seems ironic to me that because individual gun ownership and the exercise of gun-rights is inherently anti-statist, a libertarian ideology permeates the community of gun-culture people, and yet their support for the institutions of the police state seem to be unrelenting.
State institutions of police are a modern concept and one that came about against substantial resistance. First created by King Louis XIV in 1667, the Paris police force endured the French Revolution and persisted under Napoleon into the 19th century. Around that time is when the British began experimenting with the Thames River Police, primarily to protect property (cargo) on the docks from theft. As the city grew from the onset of the Industrial Revolution, the Metropolitan Police Service was established on September 29, 1829 in London as the first modern and professional police force in the world. There was much opposition to the spread of this concept, both as an undesirable foreign import and as an over-reach of big-Statism into the affairs of citizens. The police have, ever since then, been the enforcement arm of the big State. It was the "Gestapo" after all that the citizens of Germany would come to fear when their nation was taken over by a tyrant.
Why is it that gun-owners are quick to point out the impotency of the police in providing for their security when justifying their gun-ownership, while the liberals seem to be hell-bent on depending on the police and the state for everything? And yet the supporters of gun rights seem to promote the power of police institutions, while it is the liberals that appear to be taking the lead in calling for them to be abolished? The liberals so doing undoubtedly do not envision a smaller government, but simply hope to take funds for the police-state and divert them to welfare-statism.
We understand that the police don't "make the laws," they just "enforce them." Because of this, most gun-rights activism has focused on State and Federal legislatures and on elections of governors and presidents. But it has not been lost on gun-rights advocates that whatever laws and orders those parts of the government make, it is ultimately the police and Sheriffs that enforce them. Because of this, we've seen support for "sanctuary" cities and counties where laws and orders of the state that deny citizens their rights and liberties will not be enforced by the police or Sheriff. Indeed if there were no police, who would fear being arrested for carrying a concealed weapon without a permission slip?
Now I know some people just can't imagine anything but anarchy without the police -- as if civilization itself wasn't possible until the big police state came upon us. Let me be clear that I am not discussing a state of lawlessness or anarchy. We know that there is less freedom and there is no liberty in a state of lawlessness where the most basic property rights and the security of one's life and the live's of one's family must be constantly guarded. In the streets of our cities today we see this scenario, carried out through looting and rioting, pitted against the big militarized police state in riot gear. Are those two extremes really the only options?
Are police institutions really the only thing that keep our society together and from falling into hopeless anarchy and chaos? If the institutions of policing were substantially weakened or many of them dissolved, would our civilization turn into some crime-infested dystopia riddled with vigilantism? Or would people enjoy more liberty, free from the oppression of the big state's enforcers?
The institutions of the police state are likely to be defunded even without an ideological shift. Tax revenues have gone off a cliff. Will libertarian-minded gun rights advocates and 2A supporters hope for a Federal bailout of the police through even greater deficit-spending and debt-monetization? Or will the defunding of the police be embraced as a fiscal necessity or even a welcome curtailment of state power?
How will the defunding of the police affect you personally? Will you feel less secure? Will you take concrete actions out of concern that a crime wave or destructive anarchy will touch you personally? Or will you feel relieved of some concern about state and police abuse of power and the runaway growth of executive power and the expansion of bureaucracy?