Militarized Policing Is at the Root of the Minneapolis Mayhem
Thanks to a lack of hiring standards, purposeful federal policy, poor training, and a lack of accountability for bad behavior, ICE is eroding safety and liberty for all Americans.
When I wrote regularly about police use-of-force issues for this newspaper, I encountered two types of officers: those admirable ones who de-escalated situations and those who escalated them. Thanks to a lack of hiring standards, purposeful federal policy, poor training, and a lack of accountability or punishment for bad behavior, ICE is going all in on the second approach. This bodes ill for the safety and liberty of all Americans.
The administration no doubt is doing this because it believes most Americans will instinctively back law and order. Notice all those blue-striped flags and bumper stickers. I have experienced escalation before. I made a minor jaywalking mistake and was non-threatening, but the officer shouted in my face with the apparent goal of prompting me to lose my cool and give her an excuse to pummel me.
It should not surprise any American that some officials like to act aggressively. That's a defining observation of an American revolution that broke the yokes of a British king who "sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people, and eat out their substance." Those officers had legal standing, by the way, but the colonists—unlike modern conservatives—didn't argue that we should blindly obey.
I'm not getting into the details of the ICE shootings in Minneapolis of Renee Good and Alex Pretti. Everyone who is interested has seen the video footage and the step-by-step analysis by experts and commentators. In my view, both killings were unjustified, but people's opinions on the specifics are highly dependent on whether they are sympathetic to the administration or the protesters.
But in all the discussions of whether any use of force is legally justified—and they usually are given the rules are tilted heavily in favor of the officer—police/ICE defenders rarely discuss the multiple choices officers made that unnecessarily led to the violent encounter. Then they lecture the public on the importance of simply complying. They never lecture officers and their departments on the importance of following a de-escalation playbook, which prioritizes police behaviors that reduce tensions, calm emotions, and lessen aggression.
A decade ago, Americans were building a bipartisan consensus on police reform. Groups on the left and right recognized that police officers have a tough job—and one that's crucial to a safe society. However, they also recognized that holding life-and-death authority comes with great responsibility. I saw broad agreement for the conservative group Right on Crime's observation: "The militarization of our police, whereby their outward appearance and display of weapons, uniforms and equipment (and the accompanying preference for force over other options to solve problems) breaks the necessary bonds between the community and its police officers."
President Donald Trump made some nods toward criminal justice reform in his first term, but that noteworthy consensus collapsed as he embraced crass culture-war rhetoric after protests over the death of George Floyd turned into riots. It's been downhill since then, as progressives embraced defund-the-police nonsense and conservatives defended even the most appalling uses of force. The recent federal siege of Minneapolis is the predictable endpoint of a policing strategy that incorporates the opposite of that sensible Right on Crime principle.
As my R Street Institute colleague Jillian Snider, a retired New York City police officer, recently wrote, "Federal officials are correct in describing Minneapolis as a challenging operating environment…But that reality strengthens—not weakens—the arguments for disciplined tactics and specialized training." Indeed.
In my experience, poorly run police agencies and law-and-order politicians will exaggerate police dangers to justify heavy-handed tactics rather than—yes, that word again—de-escalation techniques. For what it's worth, the Cato Institute reports that 2025 was the second safest year in history for ICE and Border Patrol agents.
Another key component of good policing: Thorough, even-handed investigations after police force incidents. Agencies that refuse such oversight or complete only pro forma investigations can send an angry public into a rage. That's why California passed a law a few years ago that requires outside investigations, given the obvious conflict when an agency investigates itself. Yet, the Trump Department of Justice said it will not perform a review of the Good shooting, and a Trump-appointed judge has enjoined the department from destroying evidence in the Pretti case.
The government's response to the Good killing is far different from what agencies typically do after police-involved shootings, according to Radley Balko, a journalist who has spent his career covering police issues. The administration "made no…concessions. There were no promises of an impartial investigation. There was no regret or remorse." Its statements were meant to "show you can get away with anything" and were "a projection of power," he wrote in The New York Times.
In other words, this tinderbox has been ignited by design. If we want to get past this madness, we need a new design that tries to de-escalate such situations.
This column was first published in The Orange County Register.
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Please to post comments
Well no.
It is organized insurrectionists groups funded by foreign groups that promote useful idiots to assault and impede legal execution of the law.
You see reason. We have evidence of this fact as violence only occurs where the above happens. Where it doesnt there isn't violence. See 45 states with zero violence.
The actual impetus of violence is the left. As they seek to create the new red guard.
The funny thing is, almost exactly the time Reason split from the call to demilitarize, these groups actually started demilitarizing of their own accord and/or according to good/better tactics and policies. Overall, it's a bit of an argument that passed Reason by.
Look at the "weapons" carried in the photograph. I was 12 when I bought my first paintball marker. Moreover, I was 18 before I saw my first M4. Now "everybody" owns at least one AR-15. Nobody owned "bulletproof vests", Kevlar was exotic. Now, you can order AR500 (and better) steel plates with carriers off of over a dozen distributors on the internet. Obama was giving police departments MRAPs. Alex Pretti kicked the tail light off a truck I could mistake for my own.
There are still plenty of things and places where it's illegal for citizens to own, buy, or carry (e.g. collapsible batons) and, of course, Reason doesn't give a shit about those places... unless, of course, illegal immigrants get arrested for possessing them and then, of course, Reason turns to "Why aren't the citizens/2A advocates defending these immigrants' rights to carry weapons they themselves can't carry?" like a bunch of detached dumbfucks.
according to good/better tactics and policies
As I pointed out at the time, going in to ensure the peace by killing Eric Garner, even accidentally, is a fail. People on both/all sides of "Boston Strong" claim look like idiots when Federal Agents are going house to house kicking in peoples' doors (to say nothing of the later, abjectly cowardly, galaxy-level flop of "We're all in this together"). Even "the officers got home safely" criticism implies or assumes that officers have a safe place to return home to as opposed to rampant unrest of violent mobs who can dox anyone, anywhere, at any time.
Fuck you, Greenhut. You asshats dropped this fight as soon as you thought "It's not enough to be passively non-racist. We must be actively anti-racist." was convenient.
You just don't want the law to be militarized so that your stochastic martyrs and militant brownshirts can be the dominant force, dispensing your preferred brand of street justice. Fuck you.
i.e., "it's the protestors' fault we've gone all militarized and don't give a shit about proper policing and the Constitution".
The lack of logic by loswr leftists like yourself remains.
Where and why is the violence occurring shrike?
"They never lecture officers and their departments on the importance of following a de-escalation playbook, which prioritizes police behaviors that reduce tensions, calm emotions, and lessen aggression."
They are up against ideologically driven agitators who are deliberately and recklessly trying to escalate the situation. It seems because the leaders of these groups were trying to get their followers killed in order to create martyrs for propaganda purposes.
Under those circumstances, even with the best training, it is on a knife's edge whether things will go badly. It has less to do with policing than with the radical left deciding that it is not going to allow immigration law to be enforced.
I can't believe he wrote that sentence. It's a flat out lie.
You can see the de-escalation at work in dozens of arrest videos every day. Good's wife was talking shit and Ross didn't say two words.
What Greenhut really means is that they don't teach officers to keep their hands at their sides while people take a swing at them. That they won't simply allow themselves to be crucified like the Savior Greenhut doesn't even believe in.
They aren't there to practice whatever bastardized religion Greenhut is inventing in opposition to them on the fly, they're the de-escalators when people violently refuse de-escalation.
Sic pacum para bellum.
Gox had a deep dive on these funded groups. It literally includes how to get violent responses through their own violent demonstrations.
https://www.foxnews.com/us/anti-ice-digital-minutemen-use-military-grade-surveillance-tactics-against-feds
You fuckwits who support the false narrative about Renee Good refuse to acknowledge that she had been blocking traffic for 10 minutes. The agents were deescalating by getting her out of the road. She escalated by trying to escape after it had gone on for far too long.
Pretti was the same way. He was in the street when they confronted him. He was in the street when they took him down. He never retreated and got right back in their way after being shoved. That is escalation on his part.
Stop gaslighting, Greenhut, you fucking hack.
police/ICE defenders rarely discuss the multiple choices officers made that unnecessarily led to the violent encounter.
And idiots like you refuse to discuss the multiple choices Pretti and Good made that unnecessarily led to the violent encounters.
* Good was cosplaying, and paid more attention to her partner yelling "Drive, baby, drive" than the cops right around her.
* Pretti asserted his right to bear arms, but then interfered with police and fought with them while armed. It was as sensible as insisting on your right-of-way at an intersection when someone else jumps in ahead of you.
Dead right is the result. That's what Drivers Ed used to teach: it does no good to be dead right.
More of this. Less of emulating sarc.
icewatch in minneapolis is being astroturfed by sunflower/arabella
https://www.city-journal.org/article/minneapolis-ice-watch-protests-defend-612
protestors are being instructed to escalate, taunt and obstruct
https://www.public.news/p/this-is-all-very-planned-they-know
The "Meet The Team" section at https://www.stacup.org/ is almost comedic:
JILL V. GARVEY
CO-DIRECTOR
No photo. No link. No statement.
Now, of course, you can find out a bit more about Ms. Garvey at https://www.westernstatesstrategies.org/jillgarvey
Jill Garvey
Chief of Staff
Jill has devoted much of her career to responding to attacks on civil rights and other serious threats to disenfranchised American communities. Much of her expertise was developed working with Center for New Community, where she served as the Center’s Associate Director and then the Executive Director until 2015. In 2017, Jill joined Protect RP - a community defense network in Chicago’s Rogers Park neighborhood - and with fellow community leaders created a rapid response and community alert system that allows members to rapidly respond to ICE raids and to racist and xenophobic harassment or violence. From 2017 to 2018, this leadership team trained over 150 residents in non-violent direct action and law enforcement documentation techniques, and helped to build a 500-member community network. Jill joined WSC in 2018 as a consultant on the Momentum Project.
Still, no photo, no link, no personal information the way, e.g. you can find Greenhut's bio above or find out about any given corporate officer on their legitimate business' "about" page.
There is, of course, more information about her out there on the web but, very little of it looks "superficially credible" and, if she exists at all, is purely a social activist parading as a "community organizer" who doesn't actually build anything within a community.
Lack of cooperation with Immigration control is at the Root of the Minneapolis Mayhem.
Militarized PolicingIllegal Immigration and Corruption Is at the Root of the Minneapolis MayhemNo doubt.
Well, maybe we should consider the fact that this "problem" only exists in one city, run by a massively corrupt government, populated by a hugely criminal population, funded by those who want to destroy America.
When you start with a ridiculous premise, you produce a ridiculous article. For instance, in California, Greenhut is considered a 'moderate', but that's only because the Overton window there is skewed so far left. Everywhere else, he's a deep blue leftist.
The 'mayhem' only happened in Minneapolis, but the police / ICE / Border Patrol are militarized to the same extent (more or less) pretty much everywhere. So, what made the situation in Minneapolis different?
Look people. Just comply or die. It's that simple. Don't assert your rights, that just makes the police mad at you, and then you die.
Libertarians for compliance. Protesters have to be completely peaceful and take what's coming to them, even when it's illegal assault. They have to comply with illegal orders. Otherwise they get what's coming for them.
Meanwhile, Homan and other criminals get pardons. Because they're on our side so the law doesn't apply to them.
Law for thee but not for me. It's the libertarian position.
Protesters have to be completely peaceful
You got this part right. The rest of your comment is strawman.
Furthermore, people asserting their rights and trying to hold police accountable most definitely are a part of a secret plan to undermine America. I mean, who does that sort of thing? Normal patriotic Americans obey the police and do what they are told. Isn't that right?
How are the things we witnessed 'protesters' and 'legal observers' do in Minneapolis 'asserting their rights' or 'trying to hold police accountable'?
Kicking out tail lights?
Blocking traffic?
Breaking in hotel windows?
Assaulting journalists?
Setting up checkpoints? (Ironic)
Harassing pedestrians passing by?
Physically attacking officers?
Please pick up your straw on the way out, shit-for-brains.