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by Gormo
4302 days ago
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The problem with using a per-capita dollar figure as a metric of police militarization is that, when you look at the list of the actual items provided, you discover that most of it is pretty innocuous stuff: flashlights, first-aid kits, tool kits, hazmat suits, canteens, etc. The kind of stuff that's available in any army/navy store in the country. A lot of the counties that appear to receive a high dollar value of military equipment are getting entirely this sort of stuff. Conversely, some of the comparatively low-dollar-value counties have items like grenade launchers, APCs, full-auto machine guns, etc. in their lists. This is the worrying stuff, and the map doesn't offer a good way to distinguish it from the harmless equipment. |
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If you let the cops dress up like soldiers, train like soldiers, and equip them like soldiers to the extent that we currently do in the US, eventually they start to believe they are in a war.
But yes, I do agree that the ratio of seemingly mundane items to the big ticket MRAP's and APC's is skewed toward stuff you can get at REI or OfficeMax, which sort of muffles the message. There's interestingness and insight buried in this 1033 program data, I believe. This probably isn't quite it, yet.
Thanks for the feedback. I really appreciate it.