The cop who tasered Andrew Meyer LAUGHED as Meyer screamed in pain. I’ve looked at several versions of the video and saw this frame in every one.
If this cop laughing as 50,000 volt electric shock hits Meyer — who is handcuffed and on the ground — doesn’t turn your stomach, tell me: what will?
Is Meyer guilty of being a obnoxious, and maybe a jerk? Yes. But when he was tasered, it was your freedom of speech, and mine, that took the hit.
Our country seems to prefer Reality TV to actual reality. Now the Internet makes everything a little distant. We’re not so much participants as we are observers.
But by doing nothing while over-zealous campus cops violently attacked Meyer, the people in that room who accepted the use of force against Meyer opened the door to the same type of force being used against them.
There’s always a price to pay for complacency. If not now, soon.
Cop Who Tasered Andrew Meyer LAUGHED, and Kerry is a Wimp
BL Ochman | September 21, 2007 | Permanent Link | Comments (5) | TrackBack (
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Categories: Commentary
Tags: , Andrew Meyer, Bill of Rights, First Amendment, Meyer taser cop laughed
Tags: , Andrew Meyer, Bill of Rights, First Amendment, Meyer taser cop laughed
I agree completely. You nailed it, as usual. Thanks dear friend!
“Don’t taze me Bro” I’m not sure but did he say a racial slur.
Thank you for saying what needed to be said.
Sure, the cops were the worst offenders, but Kerry and much of the audience (not all) sat there like sheep, made jokes and laughed like Beavis and Butthead.
This really bothered me, so I posted all over the place. And it became apparent on Tuesday and Wendesday that John Kerry’s office put out the word that Andrew Meyer was to be, in a manner of speaking, swiftboated.
Most disappointing was the commentary of the Kerryites at Daily Kos.
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2007/9/19/94751/6844?detail=f
Check out the juvenile replies by the idiot who calls him/her self bam bam.
Repulsive.
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Your outrage is understandable, and I think you highlight an interesting point related to the actions of the audience. Don’t feel too disheartened about the general response that people in that room showed. This is a well-documented phenomenon that Robert Cialdini talked about in his book Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion. In the book he talks about six factors that influence the actions of individuals as well as groups. I believe that two of those factors were at play here:
1) Authority
It is well documented that the mere presence of authority figures like police officers makes if very unlikely that anyone in the crowd will question what is going on. We are programmed from childhood to take a certain sense of comfort from having an authority figure or figures present to “take charge.” In this case the multiple police officers had to know what they were doing – they were in uniform, right? As ridiculous as that may sound, it is simply a conditioned social response amplified by the actions of the group.
2) Social Proof
Cialdini makes reference to the Genovese murder case which took place in 1964. During that event, 38 bystanders sat by as a killer stalked and stabbed Catherine Genovese 3 times over a 90 minute period. Not a single person even called the police. After the New York Times published an article about it, there was great outrage about how all these people could have let this happen. The point that Cialdini makes in the book is that the reason nobody acted was precisely because there were so many other people and none of them acted.
My point is that the events of the Kerry tasering incident reflect very poorly on the police in charge, and I believe on John Kerry himself for not taking charge of the situation. The actions of the crowd are exactly what most sociologists would predict in that situation. So don’t feel too bad about the inaction of the crowd in that room as a commentary on the state of society. Feel heartened by the healthy sense of outrage that our modern YouTube, blogging media is capable of engendering in the days following such an incident.
Amir – interesting points. Logical too, sadly.
Nonetheless it is impossible for me to accept that complacency could be the response in this situation. Have we actually learned nothing from history?
Complacency never led to anything good.