Reaction to George Floyd murder a moral panic?
ASPartOfMe
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The Backlash Against Cop Shows Is a Moral Panic
And yet, a consensus has emerged in recent months around the need to reform police practices, particularly those governing the application of potentially lethal force. What’s more, Americans are also of the mind that the intolerable disparity in the way police approach interactions with minorities can no longer be ignored. These two conditions can exist simultaneously. Americans can respect, admire, and rely upon law enforcement and believe that the institution would benefit from reform.
But as the conversation around those necessary reforms to policing tactics has evolved, we have succumbed to what can only be described as a moral panic. For evidence of this, look no further than the national spasm concerning the very existence of depictions of police in entertainment and media.
“As the protests against racist police violence enter their third week, the charges are mounting against fictional cops, too,” the New York Times reported on Wednesday. “The effort to publicize police brutality also means banishing the good-cop archetype, which reigns on both television and in viral videos of the protests themselves.” In other words, to propagate the notion that uniformed police officers are capable of being upstanding public servants disseminates a falsehood and does a disservice to the cause of reform.
Remarkably, these sentences graced an article detailing the cultural backlash against the animated Nickelodeon show “Paw Patrol,” which centers on a troop of cartoon dogs who also serve as their community’s first responders. “It’s a joke,” the Times admitted, “but it’s also not.”
This reaction is not limited to over-caffeinated bloggers intuiting societal prejudices from the overwrought deconstruction of cartoons. The show “Cops,” which had run for 33 consecutive years and which, according to the Times matter-of-factly headline, “glorified police,” has been canceled. Some critical observers have had issues with this program for years, many of which are not unreasonable. The program effectively monetized what were, in many cases, the lowest moments of a person’s life. Other critics of the program claimed that the show failed to depict police violence in ways that reflected their realities. Indeed, an average episode was dominated by the mundane day-to-day that is life in law enforcement. But this show wasn’t canceled for any of these reasons. It was canceled in this moment because of this moment.
Likewise, A&E made the decision to cancel its most popular program, “Live P.D.,” and for the same reasons. “This is a critical time in our nation’s history and we have made the decision to cease production on Live PD,” read a statement from the network. “Going forward, we will determine if there is a clear pathway to tell the stories of both the community and the police officers whose role it is to serve them.” This program also depicted police in unedited circumstances, some of which were dramatic but most involved banal community policing and investigative work. Indeed, the program is credited with helping to solve missing-children cases and find at-large suspects. The idea that this program did more harm than good is theoretical. The good is tangible, the harm is conjectural. But to make the conjectural more concrete, this program’s mitigating virtues must be disregarded.
The panic is not limited to unscripted programs. Scripted television shows involving law enforcement are struggling to navigate a new normal in which any and every depiction of police work is suspect. Now, with so many “people questioning the wisdom of framing so many stories with law enforcement as heroic figures,” the entertainment website Collider reported, the comedy series “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” is struggling to reimagine how police should be portrayed—if they are portrayed at all. Warren Leight, the showrunner of “Law & Order: SVU,” recently agreed with the notion that his program portrayed police “too positively” and affirmed that, “collectively” such programs are “miscontributing to society.” This is surely only the beginning of a trend.
The Washington Post observed that the volume of highly rated procedural dramas on America’s major networks, most of which depict police as “good guys” and are written by primarily white writers, suggests America is being spoon-fed a diet of propaganda. “With such a volume of crime series on air, one wonders what messages they’re disseminating,” wrote the Post’s Sonia Rao. The L.A. Times singled out “Law & Order” executive producer Dick Wolf for producing a show that critics allege “contributes to all the things that are killing us.”
Others contend that the casual depiction of police in fictional settings using extraordinary interrogation techniques, violating civil liberties, and securing evidence without judicial imprimatur gives people the impression that these are common, even desirable, phenomena. According to an essay by Mother Jones writer P.E. Moskowitz, in fact, the true-crime genre itself was a ghastly mistake. It is “the most dangerous kind of propaganda,” she wrote. Episodic procedurals convey the notion that the “bad cops” are “the fascinating exceptions to the normal workings of the system,” and it teaches women that “evil is out there. It’s okay to call the police.”
These are worthy subjects of reflection. It is incumbent on the producers of cultural products to critically examine the effects their work could be having on society—particularly in a moment of national introspection like this one. The project of striving toward the establishment of a more perfect Union will never be complete, but just because that noble goal is unattainable does not give us license to abandon that pursuit. And yet, what these activists have given voice to—the notion that positive depictions of police are dangerous because it gives people the impression that police are a force for good—is destructive in its own right.
Paring back excessive and violent police practices is vital. Deeming every tactic employed by law-enforcement menacing and nefarious is a wild overreaction. Demonizing our public servants because they are public servants is obscene. This is not a difficult balance to strike. The fact that society is struggling to find the distinctions between these positions is not a display of seriousness. It’s a stampede.
Bolding=mine
Autistics should know better than anyone that doing things based on the emotions of the moment and due to societal pressure(a larger version of peer pressure) often leads to bad outcomes.
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The situation has been iverheating for years, and it was just a question of time which incident would finally become a seed for condensation. Now it's all boiling over, but if the worst collateral is cops, the tv-show, then so be it.
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techstepgenr8tion
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Somehow what's screamed the loudest to me has been the disconnect between the problems raised and the resulting actions. This makes me want to check into Guy Debord and situationism more because it seems like the chattering classes have been experts at turning protests of this sort into lots of advertising money, cartoonish behavior, and t-shirts that say 'I survived the riots of 2020' or 'I took a knee in 2020 and all I got was this crumby t-shirt'. If you can't take issues to legislature and you can't take them to the streets without it drawing in every parasitic element of the system and populace to make it a proper party with rocks, teargas, and burning police cars - what's the third option?
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The only moral panic is among those who think that millions of people demanding police accountability and reform is a sign that eeeeeevil atheist socio-anarchists are about to destroy God's Christian America.
As someone who is autistic, I recognize the importance of emotion in determining what is just. In my experience, the purely "logical" response that ppl advocate mainly just involves reiterating the narratives that those in power use to rationalize oppression. Conventional social beliefs are treated as logical by default, because people who support the status quo do not like to believe that the status quo is illogical. It was not just logic that makes me demand respect and dignity as an autistic person, it is my anger and sorrow that so many like me endure hardship for what so many neurotypicals consider to be logical reasons.
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Conservatism discourages thought, discussion, consensus, empathy, and hope.
Last edited by roronoa79 on 11 Jun 2020, 10:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.
ASPartOfMe
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Somewhat related
Berklee College of Music apologizes for allowing Boston police to use restrooms during protest
The decision by Berklee Public Safety staff to allow officers staged at Massachusetts Avenue and Boylston Street to use the Berklee Performance Center’s restrooms was “not a formal decision by the institution, but an informal one, made on the spot,” Berklee President Roger H. Brown, Senior Vice President for Administration and Finance Mac Hisey, and Police Chief David Ransom said in a statement posted to Facebook Wednesday night.
“Some have asked if the campus was used to house or stage activity of the Boston Police; it was not,” they added.
Representatives for the college did not immediately respond to a request for further comment Wednesday evening.
The officials said members of the campus community have expressed anger, pain, and a feeling of betrayal because police were given access to the building, particularly because the concert hall is closed to students due to the coronavirus pandemic.
“Allowing police officers into the space was in no way meant to undermine Berklee’s support for Black Lives Matter,” Brown, Hisey, and Ransom said in the statement.
They said the officers should not have been allowed to use the restrooms, and that police would not be permitted to do so in the future.
“We are deeply sorry for the impact this had on our community and for perpetuating feelings of oppression, silencing, and marginalization,” they said. “We will make a more concerted effort to consider the effects of our actions.”
The source for this story was The Boston Globe, not The Onion
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It should help Trump out that people on left want to get rid of police.
Trump Uses ‘Defund Police’ as Weapon Against Biden
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... inst-biden
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Bradleigh
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Berklee College of Music apologizes for allowing Boston police to use restrooms during protest
What if you heard that a local school decided to let a controversial gang that was currently notorious for causing violence around the country right now, they have even killed people, use the school's restrooms while students could not go there due to the virus. Or maybe Antifa, some people actually think that they are terrorists.
If you are actually being surprised by all this, I am not sure if you have actually been paying attention, too distracted by the people playing basketball to notice the guy in a gorilla costume.
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ASPartOfMe
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Trump Uses ‘Defund Police’ as Weapon Against Biden
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... inst-biden
Biden is against defunding the police. The democratic voters voted for him in large part they believe he would not espouse "woke" policies that would make him in their view vulnerable.
If you are actually being surprised by all this, I am not sure if you have actually been paying attention, too distracted by the people playing basketball to notice the guy in a gorilla costume.
The use of restrooms is if not a right close to one. This is not a situation of students not being allowed to use the facilities while cops are. There are no students in school because classes are cancelled.
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Bradleigh
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To be real, I agree that people need to use restrooms, I don't think there is any good reason to say cops should not be allowed to use them. But I totally understand why people would be pissed why the facilities of their school would just openly passed over to cops who are out there to crack heads and intimidate people out of bringing reform for their accountability. A lot of anger is around that people really want no nonsense support to end things like brutality, and it really should be up to the police at the moment to show good faith that they will accept change, not an institute like a school if they want their students to be happy with them.
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I thought the article would be conservative handwringing. I found it to be measured and balanced.
There is certainly need for serious, comprehensive police reform in, at the very least, much of America.
The article identifies some moments of low-level moral panic. I’m not particularly concerned about them (and I don’t think the article is either) but we should be aware of those impulses and keep them in check.
I support the police marching at Pride and other such events, and don’t think denying a police officer access to public bathrooms is appropriate.
The radicals who say they want to completely shut down the police force aren’t really mentioned here. I can see why some people might feel that way but it is a useless sentiment that would make things worse. We need police forces to be doing more low-level stuff, like community relations, as well as responding when anyone reports a crime, not just people in rich white neighbourhoods.
techstepgenr8tion
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CockneyRebel
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Well I am not American, so I am looking at this issue from a foreign point of view. I don't mean to sound insensitive when I say this, because I do believe George Floyd's death is a tragedy. However, without trying to sound insensitive about it, what is about his death that caused this tragedy as oppose to other people murdered by police officers?
Christopher Dorner for example, went on a murder spree and his crimes do not spur this big of an outrage in comparison. Is it because Dorner was fired from the force and he was an ex-cop, so his crimes therefore, are not quite as outrageous as the officer who murder Floyd who did it while on duty?
Bradleigh
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Christopher Dorner for example, went on a murder spree and his crimes do not spur this big of an outrage in comparison. Is it because Dorner was fired from the force and he was an ex-cop, so his crimes therefore, are not quite as outrageous as the officer who murder Floyd who did it while on duty?
I imagine that it has been because it is so obvious on camera how much of an awful thing it is, and yet you still had them try and cover for themselves. These things have happened before, but you are looking at a point in time where you have so many people with their attention away from working to live due to the virus, and this was the thing that was so clear cut to bring unity, that you would have to be outing yourself to say that there is no problem. Thus the people complaining about being censored for having a different opinion on this circumstance.
You had on camera active duty police, that acted dangerously violent entirely unnecessarily, none of them stopped it, nor listened to the onlookers saying that they were killing him as he said "I can't breathe" and called out for his dead mother as he joined her. How does that not make anyone absolutely furious?
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I think murder of George Floyd was a trigger that released a lot of energy that has been building up for centuries, never properly adressed.
Slavery was ablished in the 1860s but formal laws against discrimination had to wait another 100 years. Then, the way from formal anti-discrimination to real non-discrimination can be long and bumpy.
Moral panic is a sign that something big has been released, some long-living taboo got ripe to be tackled. The question is, where will this enormous energy get directed.
I hope for a police reform.
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