PROTESTORS
AS TARGETS
by Belden Fields
It has come to my attention that
early this year a training class for law enforcement
officers was held in our community. The instructor
was Lt. Colonel Dave Grossman. His biographical statement
modestly describes him as one of the foremost
experts in the field of human aggression, the roots
of violence and violent crime. The Lt. Col.
is a former Airborn Ranger and Infantry officer. He
was a psychology Professor at West Point and a former
professor of military science at Arkansas State University.
He has written a book called On Killing: the Psychological
Cost of Learning to Kill in War. It is described
in his biographical statements as a study of
the societal implications of escalating violence and
the techniques used by the military to overcome our
natural reluctance to kill. He has written a second
book called Stop Teaching our Kids to Kill: A
Call to Action Against TV, Movie, and Video Game Violence.
The titles of his books, which I
have not read, sound good to me. They seem to indicate
that the Lt. Colonel, who is an expert on war and
violence, is against killing. But it has come back
to me that he delivered an ominous message before
out law enforcement officers. The message was that
the police would most likely find the next domestic
terrorists among those of us who are protesting the
violent war policies of the Bush administration. This
sort of message to local officers, combined with the
administrations unleashing of the
FBI from previous controls due to its past practices
of infiltrating and fomenting violence within opposition
groups and framing political dissidents for violent
acts they did not commit (see, for an example, Sandra
Ahtens article in the September 2002 Public
i that tells how the FBI and Oakland police framed
environmental activists for supposedly planting a
bomb), is not a very promising one for people who
use their constitutional right to protest against
the violence that the Lt. Colonel claims to abhor.
Is it possible that our pacific military man is suffering
from cognitive dissonance--at the expense of our civil
rights? |