As if we had not heard enough stories recently about taser-happy cops, this evening brought me three new stories. I got in from work this evening and logged on to my new favorite internet forum and read the following stories:
- In early 2005, 13-year-old Llahsmin Lynn Kallead of Jacksonville was tasered twice by police in the back seat of a police car after she refused to cooperate with them. Miss Kallead weighed all of 65 pounds. Evidently, her upper body strength was just too much for Jacksonvilles finest.
The Jacksonville Times-Union reported the following:
One officer used a hold on her jaw and twisted her arm in a move designed to subdue a person but wrote in the report, "I feared further force on the suspect's arm would cause her harm, [due to her small size] so I disengaged the suspect."
That's when Officer G.A. Nelson used the Taser, according to the report.
- This story came just a few days after Miami-Dade police tasered a 6-year-old boy who was waving around a piece of glass in the school principals office. Police said they tasered the boy to keep him from harming himself with the glass.
- Also, near Miami, Sylvana Gomez, 12, was caught skipping school, drinking Olde Demon Rum and smoking hippy lettuce. While she is probably not a candidate for early admission to Yale, she did not deserve what happened to her.
When a Miami-Dade police officer tried to take Sylvan back to school, she ran into traffic. At that point, the officer tasered her. Later, he said that this was for both his and her safety.
Sylvana Gomez must have been one awfully big and ornery 12-year-old.
Is it the Florida water, or the legacy of Janet Reno, the former state attorney general? (More on her in just a minute.)
Tasering is harsh and extremely painful. In each of the above cases, tasering constituted cruel and unusual punishment. Tasering is a form of pain compliance, which is just a euphemism for torture. Tasering has killed people.
In each case, police claimed they tasered these kids for their own good. This is all too reminiscent of the army officer during Vietnam who claimed that it was necessary to destroy a village in order to save it.
The word village got me thinking. Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton (1) wrote a bestselling book titled It Takes a Village to Raise a Child. Hillary and her husband, Kim Jong-Bill, had very interesting ideas about how children not Chelsea, but less privileged children -- ought to be raised. Consider the 20-plus innocent children who were incinerated at Waco. Consider the machine gun pointed at little Elian Gonzalez.
Last fall, I stated that, The same folks who laughed convulsively when Hillary Clinton stated that It Takes a Village to Raise a Child evidently have no problem with the idea that it takes a police state to raise a child.
I dont want to give Hillary any ideas, but just imagine her coauthoring a book with her husbands Waco Willies attorney general, Jackboot Janet Reno. The book would be called It Takes a Taser to Raise a Child.
(1) There is only one presidential contender who is unequivocally opposed to such police state measures. His name is RON PAUL. If we don't elect him, this whole election will be absolutely meaningless.
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