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University Of California Campus Police Have History Of Excessive Force Against Protesters

First Posted: 12/ 9/2011 7:01 am Updated: 12/ 9/2011 2:10 pm

When students at the University of California, Berkeley, attempted to set up an Occupy Wall Street encampment, campus police answered on Nov. 9 with their batons. But witnesses captured the beating of students on video, and the violent response to a peaceful protest sparked a national outcry.

For nearly an hour last week, UC Berkeley faculty grilled Chancellor Robert Birgeneau and administration officials about the incident. Executive Vice-Chancellor George Breslauer admitted that, in retrospect, "tactically, it would've been better to wait, to wait perhaps until the middle of the night to minimize the number of encounters between police and protesters and observers."

But it wasn't just the recent heavy-handed response by campus police that outraged the faculty members. It was the fact that University of California police have been aggressively attacking students for years. And, despite independent commissions telling them repeatedly to clean up their act, seemingly nothing has changed.

"[Birgeneau's comments] do not negate the repeated pattern of the use of excessive force against non-violent protests," Berkeley sociology professor Barrie Thorne said at the Monday meeting.

Professor Anaya Roy criticized the administration for ordering police to clear out the protesters, and for blaming students for the clashes.

"The chancellor has apologized and I appreciate that apology, but an apology is appropriate for an isolated episode," Roy said. "What were the lessons learned two years ago?"

The November Occupy Cal protests, though aligned with the national Occupy Wall Street movement, are more a part of a series of protests that began several years ago, rallying against tuition hikes and the privatization of California's higher education institutions. Tuition and fees for UC students may rise as much as 82 percent in the next four years.

On Nov. 20, 2009, 40 students occupied UC Berkeley's Wheeler Hall, protesting impending custodial firings and a 32 percent tuition hike, while some 2,000 supporters gathered outside. In the confrontation that followed, campus police beat protesters with batons and shot them at point-blank range with rubber bullets. At least 100 students and faculty members were arrested over the course of three days.

It was one of the biggest clashes on campus before last month's, but the University of California has seen numerous others over the years. In 2005, a protest against tuition and fee increases called "Tent University" -- which originally began at Rutgers University in New Jersey -- led to multiple arrests at UC Santa Cruz. Critics accused the campus police of being too aggressive and using "pain compliance" measures to subdue demonstrators. Faculty members asked the administration to halt the arrests and not pursue disciplinary action against the student protesters, but their requests were ignored.

The next year, UCLA police tased a student in a library for refusing to show his student ID. Hundreds of students gathered in protest following the incident, demanding an investigation. It turned out the officer involved had been criticized for previous incidents of excessive force. UCLA and the student eventually settled a lawsuit, for $220,000.

In 2007, UC Berkeley students occupied trees to prevent them from being destroyed to make room for new construction. In an attempt to force the students down, campus police cut the ropes being used to transport food and water to them.

The move angered protesters and led to physical altercations on the ground, students gathering in the street to block traffic and eventually, arrests. Berkeley's mayor, Tom Bates, said there was "no justification" for police to cut the tree-sitters off from food and water.

Protests and clashes with police ramped up even more in 2009 and 2010, as students began dealing with dramatic tuition hikes and the university's labor unions, whose members bore the brunt of layoffs and furloughs, began joining the demonstrations.

The same month as the 2009 Wheeler Hall confrontation in Berkeley, campus police at UCLA used tasers and batons on students who disrupted a UC Board of Regents meeting about fee increases.

During a protest on March 4, 2010, student demonstrators occupied a portion of California's Interstate 80, leading to the tasing of at least one, and arrests of dozens more.

When 300 people showed up at a Board of Regents meeting in San Francisco to protest against tuition hikes in November 2010, authorities pepper sprayed at least 15 students and arrested 13. Reportedly, students trying to stop an officer from using his baton struck him in the head. During the melee he pulled a loaded gun on a crowd of protesters surrounding him in a parking garage.

Despite the documented use of force at other campuses, protesters were surprised when it reached UC Davis last month in the form of an officer in riot gear casually pepper-spraying students sitting on the ground. The video of the officer, Lt. John Pike, has gone viral on the internet.

"When all of a sudden we heard there were 30 riot-geared police officers standing on the quad, that was something that have never been heard of at UC Davis," Tatiana Bush, a former senator of the University of California student government, said. "It sent chills down spines."

Bush was on the Chancellor's Undergraduate Advisory Board last year. She said Davis students often support the bigger protests at Berkeley and San Francisco, but to see police confronting protesters on their own campus was shocking. "We didn't know what we were doing, we'd never had a protest like that."

"I've worked with Lt. Pike, I don't believe he's the devil reincarnated," Bush said. "He just made a stupid decision."

Bush gave UC Davis Chancellor Linda Katehi credit for speaking directly to students within days of the incident, but she said there still needs to be accountability for what happened. Bush will be serving on one of the task forces that will review the UC Davis police response.

Yet, there have been a number of such reviews in the wake of the clashes between students and campus police over the years.

A report commissioned by a special university task force following the 2005 Tent University incident at Berkeley included condemnations of the UCPD as well as a number of recommendations about how to avoid conflicts with student protesters in the future.

"We believe the use of police was unwarranted and seriously endangered the safety of the students at Tent University and threatened to escalate into a wider conflagration," the report stated.

After the 2009 Wheeler Hall protests, a review board released an extensive report known as the "Brazil Report." The 2010 report recommended that campus police "look for alternative means to [control protests] that would require the least intrusive or provocative interaction with the crowd." It also chastised the Berkeley administration for not speaking with students ahead of time, despite the fact that major protests were widely publicized in advance.

In the wake of the clashes last month, however, critics say it's hard to see that any progress has been made. Catherine Cole, a professor in the UC Berkeley theater department, said she's found no evidence that the administration has heeded the Brazil Report's advice. "No one's even claimed that anything has been done in response to the report," Cole said.

Claire Holmes, a spokesperson for UC Berkeley, told The Huffington Post that the school has been following through on the recommendations for several months. A report from September shows that about half of the reforms remain listed as "ongoing."

"The incidents of Nov. 9 are not a reflection of our best efforts," Holmes admitted. "The next review of that incident will help us to continue to improve. Were we perfect? Absolutely not. Can we improve? Yes."

The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education has flagged eight of the 10 UC campuses for maintaining unconstitutional policies against free speech. This is because the campuses have not made changes, despite a 2009 memo by UC President Mark Yudof directing campus police and administration officials to fix the problems.

Greg Lukianoff, president of FIRE, said it seemed to him that campus police have been increasingly overreacting during incidents.

The Huffington Post has obtained a draft memo from one UC campus outlining plans to impose stricter rules regulating who can protest, and requiring students interested in holding demonstrations on campus to obtain approval weeks ahead of time.

University of California officials tell HuffPost they'll be evaluating the entire UC system's handling of protests for all 10 campuses around the state.

Lynn Tierney, vice-president of communications at the University of California, said there would be four investigations to produce an overall look at the policies throughout the system.

"While some may choose to prejudge good-faith efforts to take a fair and uncompromising look at recent events involving police and protests, we think it’s prudent to await the outcomes of fact finding and multiple reviews," said Steve Montiel, media relations director for Yudof's office.

But Andrea Barrera, a UC Berkeley undergrad involved in the protests, said another review just won't cut it. "It is not enough, we are saying this is repeated behavior and we want the UCPD off campus," Barrera said.

Students and professors alike are questioning why the campus police are even armed in the first place. At this point, Barrera said, they have little faith left in what the administration promises it will or won't do.

Cole said the pepper-spray incident at UC Davis has been a galvanizing event, forcing people to take note of a systemic problem.

"I think it has really shifted people who maybe before chose to look the other way," Cole said.

The UCPD did not respond to multiple requests for comment by The Huffington Post. However, UC police Capt. Margo Bennett defended the use of batons against Berkeley students, telling the San Francisco Chronicle recently, "The individuals who linked arms and actively resisted, that in itself is an act of violence."

Berkeley Councilmember Kriss Worthington said that given the area's long history of protest, the campus police should have a better crowd-control plan by now.

"It may take a little longer to arrest them than to hit them, but it's pretty much what we expect in the United States and in Berkeley," Worthington said.

Every public college handles campus security differently. The University of California Police Department has jurisdiction over the UC campuses around the state. The city police can come onto campus at any time, and the UCPD can request aid from city cops. But the UCPD is ultimately responsible to the university administration, who ordered them to control the protesters at almost every demonstration in question.

Faculty throughout the UC system have been speaking out widely in opposition to the administration and the UCPD. At least 1,700 faculty members signed a petition expressing no confidence in the Berkeley administration following the Nov. 9 incident.

Robert Meister, president of the Council of University of California Faculty Associations, said the current investigations are just to determine who UC President Yudof can pin the blame on -- other than himself.

"The office of the president was trying to figure out whether to scapegoat the chancellor or the police chief," Meister said.

Meister, who is a political science professor at UC Santa Cruz, insisted the university would prefer the students to protest against budget cuts by the state government, rather than direct their ire at the school over tuition hikes. "The universities always wanted them to direct their anger against Sacramento and not the university," Meister said.

Meister said he believed the increased number of aggressive encounters between campus police and students has been an attempt to quell the protests, which he said have more power now that there's a national Occupy movement.

But despite the heavy-handed response by campus police, and the threat of future arrests, students have continued their protests across the UC system.

Holmes, the UC Berkeley spokesperson, could not speak for the UCPD but insisted the university is improving its response to student protests.

"We tried to respond to [past protests] and we are still improving and learning and committed to doing that, and have more investigation to do," Holmes said. "At this point we're 100 percent committed to not having this happen again."


An earlier version of this article attributed George Breslauer's quote to Robert Birgeneau. It has been changed for correction.

Loading Slideshow...
  • 2005 - UCLA campus police tase student in a library -- protests and demonstrations follow

    Students and others march across campus to protest outside the University of California, Los Angeles police department after a rally on the Westwood campus Friday, Nov. 17, 2006 to protest police use of a taser on UCLA student Mostafa Tabatabainejad in a campus library Tuesday, Nov. 14.

  • 2007 - UC Berkeley students occupy trees

    Authorities negotiate with two tree-sitters at a tree on the campus of the University of California in Berkeley, Calif., Tuesday, Sept. 9, 2008. UC Berkeley officials are preparing to remove the last remaining tree-sitters protesting a planned sports center next to Memorial Stadium, where the football team plays. The university has refused to meet the protesters' demand that it donate $6 million to environmental and Native American groups as part of an agreement for the tree-sitters to come down voluntarily.

  • 2009 - UCLA cops taser student protesters, protesting tuition hikes.

    A student protester is tazered by a police officer during a protest against an increase in student fees at the UCLA campus in Los Angeles on Nov. 19, 2009. The University of California Board of Regents approved a 32 percent tuition increase during a meeting which at the campus today.

  • 2009 - November incident at Wheeler hall, students clash with police outside of Wheeler while students barricaded themselves in the building.

    Demonstrators protest in front of a closed off University of California, Berkeley building on the Berkeley, Calif., campus, Friday,. Nov. 20, 2009, during a demonstration against university fee hikes and layoffs.

  • 2009-2010 - student protesters start using "Occupy Everything" tag

    Students occupy the hallway outside the office of the university chancellor at University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) to protest education funding cuts and rising tuition on March 4, 2010 in Los Angeles, California. Thousands of students and educators from elementary, middle and high schools, and colleges and universities are holding marches, rallies and class walkouts across California today as part of a nationwide effort calling for no more cuts to education. University of California system student fees have increased 61 percent over the past five years and costs have gone up for students of California community colleges which, until the property tax rollback of 1978, provided tuition-free to all high school graduates.

  • March 2010 - at least one student tased when students "occupy" a portion of interstate 80/880

    Oakland police officers take down a splinter group of protestors who attempted to block Interstate 880 following a rally for the national day of action against school funding cuts and tuition increases March 4, 2010 in Oakland, Calif. Dozens of protestors were arrested after they stormed the 880 freeway as students across the country were walking out of classes and holding demonstrations against massive tuition increases and funding cuts to college universities.

  • 2011 - students beat with batons at UC Berkeley

  • 2011 - UC Davis students pepper sprayed

    In this image made from video, a police officer uses pepper spray as he walks down a line of Occupy demonstrators sitting on the ground at the University of California, Davis on Friday, Nov. 18, 2011. The video - posted on YouTube - was shot Friday as police moved in on more than a dozen tents erected on campus and arrested 10 people, nine of them students.

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When students at the University of California, Berkeley, attempted to set up an Occupy Wall Street encampment, campus police answered on Nov. 9 with their batons. But witnesses captured the beating of...
When students at the University of California, Berkeley, attempted to set up an Occupy Wall Street encampment, campus police answered on Nov. 9 with their batons. But witnesses captured the beating of...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Geral Sosbee
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Moravecglobal
08:50 PM on 12/12/2011
University of California Berkeley Chancellors have a history of employing their campus police on students protesting increases in tuition. Like Coaches, University of California campus Chancellors Who Do Not Measure Up Must Go. UC Berkeley Chancellor Birgeneau’s campus police use brutal baton jabs on students protesting increases in tuition. UC Berkeley Chancellor Birgeneau ($450,000 salary) is in dereliction of his duties.

UC Berkeley Chancellor Birgeneau’s campus police report to the chancellor and the campus police take direction from the chancellor. University of California (UC) campus chancellors vet their campus police protocols. Birgeneau allowed pepper spray and use of batons to be included in his campus police protocols.

Birgeneau needs to quit or be fired for permitting the brutal outrages on students protesting tuition increases.

Opinions? Email the UC Board of Regents marsha.kelman@ucop.edu
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
11:46 PM on 12/15/2011
This is true. The use of force policy is backwards. Instead of allowing physical force to deal with passively resistant subjects, the policy bans it and only allows chemical agents.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
R2D2-51
Flower Power Forever
06:56 PM on 12/12/2011
Although this nation has had it's long history of labor strife with terrible violence when the same ruling merchant class elites of the founding is still with us today in the 1%, there came a much more insidious and all too familiar WWII Jackboot that US forces help defeat hit the scene were invented in California when Reagan unleashed them on us when he was Governor during the Free Speech movement in the early 60's, as a severe head & broken rib(s) injury I can attest to always reminds me when thumped by State & campus police in 63 at Berkeley.

They radgeted up their violence & police state tactics from that era forward, except now they can simply classify you as a non-combatant enemy of the USA, lock you up & throw the key away.
Sound familiar?

It should. Download a copy of the History Channel's long standing documentary set called, "The NAZI's: A Warning from History" and you'll soon realize from first hand accounts from the film by German citizens in the film who survived the period and you'll find its been imported.
06:47 PM on 12/10/2011
I'm confused. How can students sitting and locking arms is an act of violence??

I still don't understand the reason behind their NEED to disband peaceful protests? So far all of the so called violence had come from the police or other power authority. When has the act of accepting pepper spray in the face and eyes while sitting has become an act of violence???

I've not heard on the media where a police officer has been injured from the protestors.
08:00 PM on 12/10/2011
If the students are locking arms in an attempt to prevent the police from departing the scene of an arrest with their prisoners, that is a crime. (California Penal Code 148(a)(1) PC)

Watch the video of the entire incident at UC Davis

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhPdH3wE0_Y&sns=fb&noredirect=1
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12:38 PM on 12/12/2011
Yes, resisting arrest is a crime. BUT in this case, it's not violent, and so the violence used upon the students is absolutely despicable.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
R2D2-51
Flower Power Forever
07:06 PM on 12/12/2011
It does not matter.

They do whatever they want because they know they can, and they know there is not one thing you can do about it in any meaningful way, short of bringing to bear in WA DC a movement & general strike across the United States the likes of which has never before been seen in man's history, that will dwarf the one's we had in the mid 60's to protest the war in Viet Nam & MLK's march to the Lincoln memorial for the " I have a Dream Speech".

10 Million to start with who come to WA DC to occupy the US Capitol to demand the necessary legislative remedies starting with the repeal of the Federal Reserve Act for starters & not leave until the job is done.
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dbrett480
10:29 AM on 12/10/2011
"Students and professors alike are questioning why the campus police are even armed in the first place."

Clearly these students and professors have forgotten about the many campus shootings that have occurred throughout the nation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Godweiser
The eyes have it.
08:44 AM on 12/10/2011
I find the "Oh, they have such a hard job" line amusing. I know a bunch of guys on multiple deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan and guys that do narcotics, warrants enforcement, vehicle theft and vice in the Baltimore City Police Department. Color me unimpressed with the University of California, Davis Police, who ought to have a clue on how to wrangle students without resorting to excessive force, since that is their only job besides making sure that traffic works on a game day.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
10:24 AM on 12/10/2011
The issue with working for university police departments is you are subject to use of force policies that are set up by the chancellor of each university. It was my impression that the UC Davis policy allowed chemical agents to deal with passively resistant subjects because the university "leadership" didn't want officers using physical force.

Obviously working at Baltimore PD, NYPD, LAPD, etc. is going to be a harder job, but these departments have use of force policies that actually make sense and don't have to go through a chancellor with no background in law enforcement.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Godweiser
The eyes have it.
10:30 AM on 12/10/2011
The point of a professional working for a non-professional is that the professional is supposed to advise and control the situation on the ground and tell the non-professional what's going on and why something won't work. They are like the NCO that has done twelve years of infantry service advising a brand new lieutenant in the niceties of tactics and command. If their chief couldn't do this and is just following Katehi's orders mindlessly, then she is failing at her job and the duties it entails.
09:15 PM on 12/09/2011
Don't they know that Santa Claus is watching?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pu-vAjOohF8

Be nice to students and elves.
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09:13 PM on 12/09/2011
These ARE NOT POLICE. These are part of a PRIVATE SECURITY FORCE. I repeat, they are NOT police. In the nearby town of Davis, there were NO problems with the actual police (who answer to the *community* via elected officials).
04:57 AM on 12/10/2011
They are California State Troopers, not a private security force. UCPD has the power to arrest you even in your nearby town.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Godweiser
The eyes have it.
08:31 AM on 12/10/2011
That clearly needs to be reconsidered. Looking at Pike, one can see that the standards are something along the lines of "Chief Wiggum" in that force.
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01:14 PM on 12/12/2011
Actually, they are their own police force. They aren't private, but "state troopers" usually refers to a section of the CHP for state building and capitol/governor protection.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Godweiser
The eyes have it.
08:46 AM on 12/10/2011
They are police, but they are the Springfield Police Department, basically. I suppose I'm jaded, but I know real cops. I've seen cops getting backtalked and dealing with attitude that don't flip out and start spraying. I suppose you can say that I've seen good cops, so I know what an incompetent cop looks like.
04:04 PM on 12/09/2011
As a former UC Davis student and parent of a current UC Davis student, I have more than a passing interest in the pepper spraying incident that occurred there. In order to understand the UC Davis incident, people need to watch the 15 minute video of the incident.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhPdH3wE0_Y&sns=fb&noredirect=1

The Campus PD had been instructed to remove an “Occupy” camp that had been set up on the Quad. Some of the “campers” obstructed the officers and were arrested. The protestors then completely surrounded the Officers, attempting to force them to release the prisoners, chanting "IF YOU LET THEM GO, WE WILL LET YOU LEAVE" (07:10 on the video). The officers then explained to each student, individually, that if they would be pepper sprayed if they continued to obstruct when the police car arrived (presumably to transport the prisoners).

The police car then arrives and it is clear in the video that the students sitting on the walkway are part of the larger group that have surrounded the officers who have the prisoners and are separating them from the police car which has arrived to transport the prisoners. We all know what happened next.

Afterwards, the crowd chants.."WE WILL GIVE YOU A BRIEF MOMENT OF PEACE SO THAT YOU CAN GO"...so it is clear that the students had surrounded the police, were preventing them from leaving, and after being pepper sprayed, reconsidered and "allowed the officers to leave"
03:37 AM on 12/10/2011
in order to understand the incident you do not factor in the cause of the demonstration nor why an order should not be given to remove them with force
05:01 AM on 12/10/2011
The implicit value you place on student obedience to police and administrative authority on a UC campus is utterly disturbing. It would be less disturbing if it were explicit, because that would mean you at least imagine that people need to be told what you think, that "if police and school bureaucrats tell students to stop their political activity they should comply and if not should have violence enacted upon them to exact that compliance." But apparently you thought that this point of view is so self-evident that merely stating that students disobeyed police commands was enough. How does it feel to put such a premium on obedience and authority? Do you live your life in fear?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Godweiser
The eyes have it.
08:33 AM on 12/10/2011
This bares the fundamental issue involved. Are we a society that is now relatively receptive to being ruled by decree when a badge is doing the decreeing or are we still a society that recognizes the limitations of authority and the need for such limitations?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Moravecglobal
03:32 PM on 12/09/2011
University of California Berkeley Chancellor Birgeneau and his senior management have a history of excessive force on students protesting increases in tuition. UC Berkeley Chancellor Birgeneau’s campus police report to the chancellor and the campus police take direction from the chancellor. University of California (UC) campus chancellors vet their campus police protocols. Birgeneau allowed pepper spray and use of batons to be included in his campus police protocols.

Chancellor Birgeneau’s campus police use brutal baton jabs on students protesting increases in tuition. UC Berkeley Chancellor Birgeneau and UC Davis Chancellor Katehi are in dereliction of their duties.

Birgeneau and UC Davis Chancellor need to quit or be fired for permitting the brutal outrages on students protesting tuition increases.

Opinions? Email the UC Board of Regents marsha.kelman@ucop.edu
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blabberator
Who cut the cheese?
01:46 PM on 12/09/2011
Are the campus cops tested for steroids?
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01:41 PM on 12/09/2011
I'm not sure why the moderators are censoring my views (since it would be obviously hypocritical for them to do so), but I'll try again: The police protect and serve. Sure, some of them probably shouldn't be cops, but the VAST majority of them would give their lives to save yours. It's their job, and yet, somehow you still manage to hate them. Too bad some of you can't do their (thankless) job for a week. You might decide you've been wrong in your thinking. I know some people who, if protesting, may very well incite violence...just because they can. Can you imagine the sort of terror you may realize if you were outnumbered 50 to One? ...even with weaponry? What about 100 to One? Being a riot cop has got to be one of the most stressful, scariest moments of one's life. You have no idea what will happen. You just want to go home, but you have a job to do. Cops aren’t cowards...far from it. This is a society of rules, and police officers enforce those rules. You would weep like children if you were granted the lawlessness that some of you think you want. If it’s “Progressive” to denigrate an entire group of people (because of a few foolish decisions) whose sole purpose is to protect us, then I want NOTHING to do with it. Grow up, and give our police officers your respect. One day, you may need them.
02:08 PM on 12/09/2011
Granted. But a few bad apples will spoil the whole bushel. Problem is, these bad apples carry pepper spray and guns and have bad egos. Then that blue wall of silence that separates cops from citizens starts looking like a fortress from which cops like to squash the citizens.
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02:32 PM on 12/09/2011
We might have bad egos, too, if we thought we were ostracized by most everybody in the country who doesn't share our vocation...even if it weren't so. Perception is key, just as in your well-made point. Some people in powerful positions will always abuse their power, whether they are policemen, judges, soldiers, probably some who even work at the DMV. There could never be a system in place that would absolutely guarantee abuse-free power (though more kindness, and respect on our *civilians'* part toward the job might be a good start). With that in mind, the questions remain: Are we better off with them, or without them? Would it not be best to treat them all with the respect they deserve? Thank you for your post.
05:40 AM on 12/10/2011
Your belief that we need a militarized police force to hold society together is pathetic. I respect you, but I pity you. Our ability to interact peacefully with each other is not predicated on the violent suppression of student protesters. Police are being used here to eliminate political behavior that UC Admin finds inconvenient. You should be worried about students and authoritarianism, not whether we are sufficiently grateful. This degree of suppression for minor infractions is new, not the foundation of civilization, and this is to appeal for gratitude to the police. It is a problem that we see sights like these on campuses: http://cdn.theatlantic.com/static/mt/assets/national/uc-cops.jpg

What I will say is this: The cops were following orders. That's the excuse they get to use. UCPD doesn’t roam around in riot gear, they are called in and their actions are authorized by UC Administration.

The police raided OccupyUCLA our first night at 4:30AM. 60 riot cops did the job. We negotiated with Administration and were told that the use of force was authorized should we link arms prior to arrest. This was hours before Davis students were attacked for linking arms and 9 days after Berkeley students were beaten for linking arms. This was UC policy. The only defense you can produce for these officers is that they were following orders. But then again, the worst crimes in history have been committed by men in uniforms who were just following orders.
01:25 PM on 12/09/2011
I like how my school - UC Irvine - isn't even mentioned. Lol we fail at protesting.
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01:35 PM on 12/12/2011
No, you've got a crazy local DA who wants to superimpose himself on university discipline. I'm thinking in particular of the (otherwise knucklehead) Muslim Student Assoc. members who decided to protest IN the auditorium, instead of outside, and admittedly did disturb the speaker (Israeli consul general, if memory serves). The university could have handled it exclusively, but no, the anti-muslim DA wanted to make a statement. It could be the reason Irvine's been so quiet in this regard.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tom Hn
American liberty with unconventional wisdom
01:15 PM on 12/09/2011
The school should put more academic pressure on the students so that they don't have time to protest.
06:04 PM on 12/09/2011
Clearly you have never attended Cal. They have academic pressure on lock.
05:11 AM on 12/10/2011
Attention. Attention. Message from High Command to UCPD, senior administrators and education bureaucrats.

We have an emergency! Small pockets of UC students are freely engaging in autonomous political activity and failing to comply with accepted protest norms clearly delineated in permits #A738B009 and A738B009.

We advise swift and efficient response. On the ground handlers are authorized to violence to exact compliance from students found acting outside of preapproved political behavior standards. Bureaucrats are instructed to engage with the Academic Senate to increase program requirements to make organizing more difficult.

We must not allow the UC system to become a bastion for human bodies that are immune to fear-based management. Attack them with pepper spray and threaten them with failure until their motivations conform to those of the general population. Repeat. We cannot allow these students to escape fear before they replace us as managers. The results would be catastrophic for the entire social order of the US.

End communication.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tom Hn
American liberty with unconventional wisdom
01:13 PM on 12/09/2011
You can't believe how easily these students can be manipulated into protest. Its their first time to live without parents and learn the Bill of Rights, so protesting is sort of like a social experiment. Notice how many colored students in the protest in the photo.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
albinoG
01:18 PM on 12/09/2011
Is this the best you can do?
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iamyourknight
Imagine a boot stamping on a human face--for ever
08:55 AM on 12/10/2011
Stupid and racist go hand in hand. Small point though: aren't these idiots usually calling this a "white kids movement" or something?
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01:40 PM on 12/12/2011
As issues go, the wealth disparity and continued accelleration of the same is a very worthy topic for protest.

They're not protesting overcooked spaghetti.