[Excerpt:] Measure of Justice in the Chauvin Trial

The jury got it right. Now the country has to get the broader questions right.


From: Peggy Noonan, The Wall Street Journal, April 22, 2021 6:46 pm ET [on the Chauvin trial, see.] 

Excerpt:

Some of our policing problem is connected to a problem that affects everything: They came from us. Our police come from modern America, that jittery, jacked-up, broken place. They don’t really come from health and stability but from families that are fractured and a culture that is crude and violent, from hypermedia and videogames, from a society that doesn’t cohere. They don’t come from something boring and solid like the cop on the beat 50 and 100 years ago did; they don’t come from a world that went out of its way to teach them manners, morals, faith. How to act. 

All the cops, and the perps, they came from us.

image (not from article) from


Comments

  1. So America was different 50 years ago? In many ways, yes, but maybe just as jacked up and jittery. That's what the shooting at Kent State in 1970 suggests. Four students (among the peaceful protestors?) were killed, perhaps others injured. The story in the Washington Post Magazine, dated 25 Apr (I read it today, 24 April, since I get the insert on Saturday rather than Sunday), does not say anything about wounded persons, but it states that 60 shots were fired. The story focuses on the 14 year old girl who had just spoken to one of those killed and became a symbol of the protest against the war in Vietnam.

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