Monday, August 18, 2014

FERGUSON, MISSOURI -- THE TRAGEDY OF THE TIMES THAT KEEPS ON REPEATING ITSELF!

FERGUSON, MISSOURI – THE TRAGEDY OF THE TIMES
THAT KEEPS REPEATING ITSELF

James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© August 18, 2014

REFERENCE:

Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager, was shot to death by a white police officer with at least six bullets entering his body, including two to his head.  

Riots, looting, police tear gas, and the State’s National Guard entered the fray to restore order, but without much success. 

In the twinkling of an eye, Ferguson, Missouri became a war zone with National Guard armor vehicles, police and National Guard in riot gear cordoning off mainly black protesters, while the world watched in stunned horror.  

This was not supposed to happen in the United States of America.  But it does, only too often.

Predictably, the rhetorical righteous rushed in to express their moral outrage, point fingers and make wild accusations that served no interest other than their own.  Instead, these talking heads gave tacit approval to the looting and burning by these otherwise law abiding citizens, people caught up in the heat and confusion of the moment. 

Once quiet is restored, nothing changes.  That has proven to be an absolute.  The series of cosmetic interventions that are likely to follow are proposed by those programmed to lead from behind because they know no other way.  I have some acquaintance with this disposition and leaders so inclined.


A READER WRITES:   

Dr. Fisher,

Missouri has resulted in what I fear is going to result in the loss of reason.  This sad event, following the results of the Florida trial that left feelings of unfairness, I fear will result in possible unfairness to the police officer. 

I could say more about how I felt the jury verdict was wrong in Florida, but now the police officer has been declared completely wrong and with no defense.  

Sad situation, but just wanted to tweak you on your thoughts in the matter.  

How can the officer defend himself in this climate?  Or is there no defense?  Seems they are not waiting for any explanation, right or wrong! 

C.


DR. FISHER RESPONDS:

Dear C,

Yes, the death of the teenager in Ferguson, Missouri cut down by the bullets of a police officer, on the surface, is hard to understand.  

While you are worried about justice for the police officer, I would imagine the victim’s family wonders why this police officer has not been arrested as they are being told that six bullets shot by the police officer were lodged in Michael Brown’s body, two of which entered his head and proved fatal. 

The circumstances are murky at this point, but if the teenager was unarmed, no matter what the nature of the criminal act or violence against the police officer may have been, I have trouble understanding why deadly force was used in any case.  

I have seen many instances where police officers used considerable restrain under intense and threatening circumstances, and never fired a shot.  

I have also known police officers with the reputation of “cowboys” who, given the opportunity, may have not demonstrated that restrain.

That said police behavior is highly correlated with community standards.  Often communities play Russian roulette with people's lives when racial undercurrents are not addressed but instead are allowed to fester.  

This makes it practically inevitable for eventual spontaneous emotional combustion. 

*     *     *
If you will permit me, in the spontaneous combustion of coal dust in a stockpile, following the mathematics of a differential equation, gradients of temperature, oxygen concentration, and pressure variations in a coal bed can contribute to this unstable state. 

I learned this in my work in South Africa in 1968 when I had to acquaint myself with the coking process, used by South Africa to generate oil from coal.  

At the time, many nations boycotted South Africa for its apartheid policy, and with no natural oil deposits, but with an abundance of coal, South Africa had no choice but to convert coal to coke, and then to oil.

By a curious projection, I could see the same formula applying, in a relative sense, to human combustibles, going from safe, unsafe, or conditionally safe, to spontaneous combustion. 

Returning to the United States in 1969, I would spend the 1970s going to graduate school to earn my Ph.D., while consulting on the side. 

My consultancy was mainly with police organizations along the eastern coast of the United States from Stanford, Connecticut to Miami, Florida.  

Police organizations became my laboratory writing my M.A. thesis (A Social Psychological Study of the Police Organization, the Anatomy of a Riot, 1976) and my Ph.D. dissertation (The Police Paradox: Systematic Exploration in the Paradoxical Dilemma of the Police and the Policed, 1978). 

For my master's thesis, I spent nine months in Fairfax County, Virginia unraveling a riot in the black section in a largely upscale white suburb.  

There a white police officer unloaded his service revolver on an unarmed 27-year-old African American in a Seven/Eleven store after the young man attempted to defend himself with the officer's nightstick.  A riot followed.  

The American Management Association was given the contract to find out what happened, why it happened, and what could be done to avoid it happening again.  I was hired to be embedded in the Fairfax County Police Department to study how they discharged their duties in an attempt to find answers to these questions.  

Commuting back and forth between Fairfax, Virginia and Tampa, Florida every week to attend classes at the University of South Florida was an arrangement some of my professors didn’t favor but tolerated.  

This was all before the Information Age and laptops and smart phones.    

My Ph.D. dissertation was based on studies of several communities.  These data revealed a consistent trend showing communities essentially get the police they deserve, as police appear to be a mirror image of the community they serve.

One of the interventions in this study was that of the police force of Raleigh, North Carolina.  I was brought in when the police force of some 550 officers essentially mutinied by refusing to protect and serve the community because of grievances against the chief.

The Free Press Publishing Company showed an interest in publishing my master's thesis as a book, but a reviewer said it read too much like a novel and not like social research. 

The possibility of publishing was shelved when I joined Honeywell, Inc. in 1980.  But I have bounded copies of these studies, and they are housed in my library.

This is all offered as preface to your remarks and my comments, which follow.

*     *     *

From what I have read, and I am privy only to that, Ferguson, Missouri was a perfect differential equation to have a spontaneous combustible episode.  

In the Ferguson City Police Force of some fifty officers, 90 percent are white and 10 percent are African American.  

Complicating the matter further, nearly 70 percent of the community is non-white with job opportunities for young people far below the national average, adding to the festering mix, a high percentage of black youngsters, especially young men are grade and high school drop outs.

I have no data on the educational level of members of the Ferguson City Police Department, but I know from experience that the higher percentage of college graduates on a police force the higher the flexibility and tolerance of the officers to execute their duties in a nonviolent and non-confrontational manner.  

Conversely, the lower the educational level, the greater the potential for untoward police behavior and therefore the potential for human combustibles. 

As for the Trayvon Martin case, that was a tragedy not unlike what happened in Herndon, Virginia those many years ago when I was brought in to study the cause of the riot.  

The officer who killed that 27-year-old man served no jail time, but left the police force.  I would imagine in the minds of many in Herndon today of African American descent that was not right or just or appropriate to the action.  There is no palliative for that kind of pain.

A theory in psychology called “reaction formation” has much in common with theories on, or relating to physical combustion.  

What triggers an act, an unconscionable act, an act inconsistent with the general timbre and temper of the person, can have been festering in the subconscious for a long, long time.  

Then something happens, which can be totally unrelated to the precipitous behavior, and emotional control is lost and restrain is snapped!

Something said or done, or experienced triggered this spontaneous release of pent up emotions.
  
A life can change in a single instant.  

Here in Tampa, a man was using his cell phone in a movie theater and a 77-year old former police officer, told him to turn it off.  The man threw popcorn at the old man.  The old man unloaded his revolver on him and killed the young husband and father of three children.  

The 77-year-old man is out on bail as this is being written, and is using the same defense as George Zimmerman used in the Trayvon Martin case to receive his acquittal, the Florida “stand your ground law.” 

How popcorn was life threatening is beyond me, but we all live in an insane age which has a lot in common with the novel of Anthony Burgess, “A Clockwork Orange” (1962), where the criminals become the police.  Read it and you will see my point.

*     *     *



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