Confessions of a Former Bastard Cop

By Officer A. Cab

I was a police officer for nearly ten years and I was a bastard. We all were.

This essay has been kicking around in my head for years now and I’ve never felt 
confident enough to write it. It’s a time in my life I’m ashamed of. It’s a 
time that I hurt people and, through inaction, allowed others to be hurt. It’s 
a time that I acted as a violent agent of capitalism and white supremacy. Under 
the guise of public safety, I personally ruined people’s lives but in so doing, 
made the public no safer…so did the family members and close friends of mine 
who also bore the badge alongside me.

But enough is enough.

The reforms aren’t working. Incrementalism isn’t happening. Unarmed Black, 
indigenous, and people of color are being killed by cops in the streets and the 
police are savagely attacking the people protesting these murders.

American policing is a thick blue tumor strangling the life from our 
communities and if you don’t believe it when the poor and the marginalized say 
it, if you don’t believe it when you see cops across the country shooting 
journalists with less-lethal bullets and caustic chemicals, maybe you’ll 
believe it when you hear it straight from the pig’s mouth.

Why am i writing this

As someone who went through the training, hiring, and socialization of a career 
in law enforcement, I wanted to give a first-hand account of why I believe 
police officers are the way they are. Not to excuse their behavior, but to 
explain it and to indict the structures that perpetuate it.

I believe that if everyone understood how we’re trained and brought up in the 
profession, it would inform the demands our communities should be making of a 
new way of community safety. If I tell you how we were made, I hope it will 
empower you to unmake us.

One of the other reasons I’ve struggled to write this essay is that I don’t 
want to center the conversation on myself and my big salty boo-hoo feelings 
about my bad choices. It’s a toxic white impulse to see atrocities and think 
“How can I make this about me?” So, I hope you’ll take me at my word that this 
account isn’t meant to highlight me, but rather the hundred-thousand of me in 
every city in the country. It’s about the structure that made me (that I chose 
to pollute myself with) and it’s my meager contribution to the cause of radical 
justice.

Yes, all cops are bastards

I was a police officer in a major metropolitan area in California with a 
predominantly poor, non-white population (with a large proportion of 
first-generation immigrants.) One night during briefing, our watch commander 
told us that the city council had requested a new zero tolerance policy. 
Against murderers, drug dealers, or child predators?

No, against homeless people collecting cans from recycling bins.

See, the city had some kickback deal with the waste management company where 
waste management got paid by the government for our expected tonnage of 
recycling. When homeless people “stole” that recycling from the waste 
management company, they were putting that cheaper contract in peril. So, we 
were to arrest as many recyclers as we could find.

Even for me, this was a stupid policy and I promptly blew Sarge off. But a few 
hours later, Sarge called me over to assist him. He was detaining a 70-year-old 
immigrant who spoke no English, who he’d seen picking a coke can out of a trash 
bin. He ordered me to arrest her for stealing trash. I said, “Sarge, c’mon, 
she’s an old lady.” He said, “I don’t give a shit. Hook her up, that’s an 
order.” And…I did. She cried the entire way to the station and all through the 
booking process. I couldn’t even comfort her because I didn’t speak Spanish. I 
felt disgusting but I was ordered to make this arrest and I wasn’t willing to 
lose my job for her.

If you’re tempted to feel sympathy for me, don’t. I used to happily hassle the 
homeless under other circumstances. I researched obscure penal codes so I could 
arrest people in homeless encampments for lesser known crimes like “remaining 
too close to railroad property” (369i of the California Penal Code.) I used to 
call it “planting warrant seeds” since I knew they wouldn’t make their court 
dates and we could arrest them again and again for warrant violations.

We used to have informal contests for who could cite or arrest someone for the 
weirdest law. DUI on a bicycle, non-regulation number of brooms on your tow 
truck (27700(a)(1) of the California Vehicle Code…shit like that. For me, 
police work was a logic puzzle for arresting people, regardless of their actual 
threat to the community. As ashamed as I am to admit it, it needs to be said: 
stripping people of their freedom felt like a game to me for many years.

I know what you’re going to ask: did I ever plant drugs? Did I ever plant a gun 
on someone? Did I ever make a false arrest or file a false report? Believe it 
or not, the answer is no. Cheating was no fun, I liked to get my stats the 
“legitimate” way. But I knew officers who kept a little baggie of whatever or 
maybe a pocket knife that was a little too big in their war bags (yeah, we 
called our dufflebags “war bags….) Did I ever tell anybody about it? No, I did 
not. Did I ever confess my suspicions when cocaine suddenly showed up in a gang 
member’s jacket? No, I did not.

In fact, let me tell you about an extremely formative experience: in my police 
academy class, we had a clique of around six trainees who routinely bullied and 
harassed other students: intentionally scuffing another trainee’s shoes to get 
them in trouble during inspection, sexually harassing female trainees, cracking 
racist jokes, and so on. Every quarter, we were to write anonymous evaluations 
of our squadmates. I wrote scathing accounts of their behavior, thinking I was 
helping keep bad apples out of law enforcement and believing I would be 
protected. Instead, the academy staff read my complaints to them out loud and 
outed me to them and never punished them, causing me to get harassed for the 
rest of my academy class. That’s how I learned that even police leadership 
hates rats. That’s why no one is “changing things from the inside.” They can’t, 
the structure won’t allow it.

And that’s the point of what I’m telling you. Whether you were my sergeant, 
legally harassing an old woman, me, legally harassing our residents, my fellow 
trainees bullying the rest of us, or “the bad apples” illegally harassing 
“shitbags,” we were all in it together. I knew cops that pulled women over to 
flirt with them. I knew cops who would pepper spray sleeping bags so that 
homeless people would have to throw them away. I knew cops that intentionally 
provoked anger in suspects so they could claim they were assaulted. I was 
particularly good at winding people up verbally until they lashed out so I 
could fight them. Nobody spoke out. Nobody stood up. Nobody betrayed the code.

None of us protected the people (you) from bad cops.

This is why “All cops are bastards.” Even your uncle, even your cousin, even 
your mom, even your brother, even your best friend, even your spouse, even me. 
Because even if they wouldn’t Do The Thing themselves, they will almost never 
rat out another officer who Does The Thing, much less stop it from happening.

Bastard 101

I could write an entire book of the awful things I’ve done, seen done, and 
heard others bragging about doing. But, to me, the bigger question is “How did 
it get this way?” While I was a police officer in a city 30 miles from where I 
lived, many of my fellow officers were from the community and treated their 
neighbors just as badly as I did. While every cop’s individual biases come into 
play, it’s the profession itself that is toxic, and it starts from day-one of 
training.

Every police academy is different but all of them share certain features—taught 
by old cops, run like a paramilitary bootcamp, strong emphasis on protecting 
yourself more than anyone else. The majority of my time in the academy was 
spent doing aggressive physical training and watching video after video after 
video of police officers being murdered on duty.

I want to highlight this: nearly everyone coming into law enforcement is 
bombarded with dash cam footage of police officers being ambushed and killed. 
Over and over and over. Colorless VHS mortality plays, cops screaming for help 
over their radios, their bodies going limp as a pair of taillights speed away 
into a grainy black horizon. In my case, with commentary from an old racist cop 
who used to brag about assaulting Black Panthers.

To understand why all cops are bastards, you need to understand one of the 
things almost every training officer told me when it came to using force:

“I’d rather be judged by 12 than carried by six.”

Meaning, “I’ll take my chances in court rather than risk getting hurt.” We’re 
able to think that way because police unions are extremely overpowered and 
because of the generous concept of Qualified Immunity, a legal theory which 
says a cop generally can’t be held personally liable for mistakes they make 
doing their job in an official capacity.

When you look at the actions of the officers who killed George Floyd, Breonna 
Taylor, David McAtee, Mike Brown, Tamir Rice, Philando Castile, Eric Garner, or 
Freddie Gray, remember that they, like me, were trained to recite “I’d rather 
be judged by 12” as a mantra. Even if Mistakes Were Made™, the city (meaning 
the taxpayers, meaning you) pays the settlement, not the officer.

Once police training has—through repetition, indoctrination, and violent 
spectacle—promised officers that everyone in the world is out to kill them, the 
next lesson is that your partners are the only people protecting you. 
Occasionally, this is even true: I’ve had encounters turn on me rapidly to the 
point I legitimately thought I was going to die, only to have other officers 
come and turn the tables.

One of the most important thought leaders in law enforcement is Colonel Dave 
Grossman, a “killologist” who wrote an essay called “Sheep, Wolves, and 
Sheepdogs.” Cops are the sheepdogs, bad guys are the wolves, and the citizens 
are the sheep (!). Colonel Grossman makes sure to mention that to a stupid 
sheep, sheepdogs look more like wolves than sheep, and that’s why they dislike 
you.

This “they hate you for protecting them and only I love you, only I can protect 
you” tactic is familiar to students of abuse. It’s what abusers do to coerce 
their victims into isolation, pulling them away from friends and family and 
ensnaring them in the abuser’s toxic web. Law enforcement does this too, 
pitting the officer against civilians. “They don’t understand what you do, they 
don’t respect your sacrifice, they just want to get away with crimes. You’re 
only safe with us.”

I think the Wolves vs. Sheepdogs dynamic is one of the most important elements 
as to why officers behave the way they do. Every single second of my training, 
I was told that criminals were not a legitimate part of their community, that 
they were individual bad actors, and that their bad actions were solely the 
result of their inherent criminality. Any concept of systemic trauma, 
generational poverty, or white supremacist oppression was either never 
mentioned or simply dismissed. After all, most people don’t steal, so anyone 
who does isn’t “most people,” right? To us, anyone committing a crime deserved 
anything that happened to them because they broke the “social contract.” And 
yet, it was never even a question as to whether the power structure above them 
was honoring any sort of contract back.

Understand: Police officers are part of the state monopoly on violence and all 
police training reinforces this monopoly as a cornerstone of police work, a 
source of honor and pride. Many cops fantasize about getting to kill someone in 
the line of duty, egged on by others that have. One of my training officers 
told me about the time he shot and killed a mentally ill homeless man wielding 
a big stick. He bragged that he “slept like a baby” that night. Official 
training teaches you how to be violent effectively and when you’re legally 
allowed to deploy that violence, but “unofficial training” teaches you to 
desire violence, to expand the breadth of your violence without getting caught, 
and to erode your own compassion for desperate people so you can justify 
punitive violence against them.

How to be a bastard

I have participated in some of these activities personally, others are ones I 
either witnessed personally or heard officers brag about openly. Very, very 
occasionally, I knew an officer who was disciplined or fired for one of these 
things.

·      Police officers will lie about the law, about what’s illegal, or about 
what they can legally do to you in order to manipulate you into doing what they 
want.

·      Police officers will lie about feeling afraid for their life to justify 
a use of force after the fact.

·      Police officers will lie and tell you they’ll file a police report just 
to get you off their back.

·      Police officers will lie that your cooperation will “look good for you” 
in court, or that they will “put in a good word for you with the DA.” The 
police will never help you look good in court.

·      Police officers will lie about what they see and hear to access private 
property to conduct unlawful searches.

·      Police officers will lie and say your friend already ratted you out, so 
you might as well rat them back out. This is almost never true.

·      Police officers will lie and say you’re not in trouble in order to get 
you to exit a location or otherwise make an arrest more convenient for them.

·      Police officers will lie and say that they won’t arrest you if you’ll 
just “be honest with them” so they know what really happened.

·      Police officers will lie about their ability to seize the property of 
friends and family members to coerce a confession.

·      Police officers will write obviously bullshit tickets so that they get 
time-and-a-half overtime fighting them in court.

·      Police officers will search places and containers you didn’t consent to 
and later claim they were open or “smelled like marijuana.”

·      Police officers will threaten you with a more serious crime they can’t 
prove in order to convince you to confess to the lesser crime they really want 
you for.

·      Police officers will employ zero tolerance on races and ethnicities they 
dislike and show favor and lenience to members of their own group.

·      Police officers will use intentionally extra-painful maneuvers and holds 
during an arrest to provoke “resistance” so they can further assault the 
suspect.

·      Some police officers will plant drugs and weapons on you, sometimes to 
teach you a lesson, sometimes if they kill you somewhere away from public view.

·      Some police officers will assault you to intimidate you and threaten to 
arrest you if you tell anyone.

·      A non-trivial number of police officers will steal from your house or 
vehicle during a search.

·      A non-trivial number of police officers commit intimate partner violence 
and use their status to get away with it.

·      A non-trivial number of police officers use their position to entice, 
coerce, or force sexual favors from vulnerable people.

If you take nothing else away from this essay, I want you to tattoo this onto 
your brain forever: if a police officer is telling you something, it is 
probably a lie designed to gain your compliance.

Do not talk to cops and never, ever believe them. Do not “try to be helpful” 
with cops. Do not assume they are trying to catch someone else instead of you. 
Do not assume what they are doing is “important” or even legal. Under no 
circumstances assume any police officer is acting in good faith.

Also, and this is important, do not talk to cops.

I just remembered something, do not talk to cops.

Checking my notes real quick, something jumped out at me:

Do not fucking talk to cops. Ever.

Say, “I don’t answer questions,” and ask if you’re free to leave; if so, leave. 
If not, tell them you want your lawyer and that, per the Supreme Court, they 
must terminate questioning. If they don’t, file a complaint and collect some 
badges for your mantle.

Do the bastards ever help?

Reading the above, you may be tempted to ask whether cops ever do anything 
good. And the answer is, sure, sometimes. In fact, most officers I worked with 
thought they were usually helping the helpless and protecting the safety of 
innocent people.

During my tenure in law enforcement, I protected women from domestic abusers, 
arrested cold-blooded murderers and child molesters, and comforted families who 
lost children to car accidents and other tragedies. I helped connect struggling 
people in my community with local resources for food, shelter, and counseling. 
I deescalated situations that could have turned violent and talked a lot of 
people down from making the biggest mistake of their lives. I worked with 
plenty of officers who were individually kind, bought food for homeless 
residents, or otherwise showed care for their community.

The question is this: did I need a gun and sweeping police powers to help the 
average person on the average night? The answer is no. When I was doing my best 
work as a cop, I was doing mediocre work as a therapist or a social worker. My 
good deeds were listening to people failed by the system and trying to unite 
them with any crumbs of resources the structure was currently denying them.

It’s also important to note that well over 90 percent of the calls for service 
I handled were reactive, showing up well after a crime had taken place. We 
would arrive, take a statement, collect evidence (if any), file the report, and 
onto the next caper. Most “active” crimes we stopped were someone harmless 
possessing or selling a small amount of drugs. Very, very rarely would we stop 
something dangerous in progress or stop something from happening entirely. The 
closest we could usually get was seeing someone running away from the scene of 
a crime, but the damage was still done.

And consider this: my job as a police officer required me to be a marriage 
counselor, a mental health crisis professional, a conflict negotiator, a social 
worker, a child advocate, a traffic safety expert, a sexual assault specialist, 
and, every once in awhile, a public safety officer authorized to use force, all 
after only a 1000 hours of training at a police academy. Does the person we 
send to catch a robber also need to be the person we send to interview a rape 
victim or document a fender bender? Should one profession be expected to do all 
that important community care (with very little training) all at the same time?

To put this another way: I made double the salary most social workers made to 
do a fraction of what they could do to mitigate the causes of crimes and 
desperation. I can count very few times my monopoly on state violence actually 
made our citizens safer, and even then, it’s hard to say better-funded social 
safety nets and dozens of other community care specialists wouldn’t have 
prevented a problem before it started.

Armed, indoctrinated (and dare I say, traumatized) cops do not make you safer; 
community mutual aid networks who can unite other people with the resources 
they need to stay fed, clothed, and housed make you safer. I really want to 
hammer this home: every cop in your neighborhood is damaged by their training, 
emboldened by their immunity, and they have a gun and the ability to take your 
life with near-impunity. This does not make you safer, even if you’re white.

How do you solve a problem like a bastard?

So, what do we do about it? Even though I’m an expert on bastardism, I am not a 
public policy expert nor an expert in organizing a post-police society. So, 
before I give some suggestions, let me tell you what probably won’t solve the 
problem of bastard cops:

·      Increased “bias” training. A quarterly or even monthly training session 
is not capable of covering over years of trauma-based camaraderie in police 
forces. I can tell you from experience, we don’t take it seriously, the 
proctors let us cheat on whatever “tests” there are, and we all made fun of it 
later over coffee.

·      Tougher laws. I hope you understand by now, cops do not follow the law 
and will not hold each other accountable to the law. Tougher laws are all the 
more reason to circle the wagons and protect your brothers and sisters.

·      More community policing programs. Yes, there is a marginal effect when a 
few cops get to know members of the community, but look at the protests of 
2020: many of the cops pepper-spraying journalists were probably the nice 
school cop a month ago.

Police officers do not protect and serve people, they protect and serve the 
status quo, “polite society,” and private property. Using the incremental 
mechanisms of the status quo will never reform the police because the status 
quo relies on police violence to exist. Capitalism requires a permanent 
underclass to exploit for cheap labor and it requires the cops to bring that 
underclass to heel.

Instead of wasting time with minor tweaks, I recommend exploring the following 
ideas:

·      No more qualified immunity. Police officers should be personally liable 
for all decisions they make in the line of duty.

·      No more civil asset forfeiture. Did you know that every year, citizens 
like you lose more cash and property to unaccountable civil asset forfeiture 
than to all burglaries combined? The police can steal your stuff without 
charging you with a crime and it makes some police departments very rich.

·      Break the power of police unions. Police unions make it nearly 
impossible to fire bad cops and incentivize protecting them to protect the 
power of the union. A police union is not a labor union; police officers are 
powerful state agents, not exploited workers.

·      Require malpractice insurance. Doctors must pay for insurance in case 
they botch a surgery, police officers should do the same for botching a police 
raid or other use of force. If human decency won’t motivate police to respect 
human life, perhaps hitting their wallet might.

·      Defund, demilitarize, and disarm cops. Thousands of police departments 
own assault rifles, armored personnel carriers, and stuff you’d see in a 
warzone. Police officers have grants and huge budgets to spend on guns, ammo, 
body armor, and combat training. 99 percent of calls for service require no 
armed response, yet when all you have is a gun, every problem feels like target 
practice. Cities are not safer when unaccountable bullies have a monopoly on 
state violence and the equipment to execute that monopoly.

One final idea: consider abolishing the police.

I know what you’re thinking, “What? We need the police! They protect us!” As 
someone who did it for nearly a decade, I need you to understand that by and 
large, police protection is marginal, incidental. It’s an illusion created by 
decades of copaganda designed to fool you into thinking these brave men and 
women are holding back the barbarians at the gates.

I alluded to this above: the vast majority of calls for service I handled were 
theft reports, burglary reports, domestic arguments that hadn’t escalated into 
violence, loud parties, (houseless) people loitering, traffic collisions, very 
minor drug possession, and arguments between neighbors. Mostly the mundane ups 
and downs of life in the community, with little inherent danger. And, like I 
mentioned, the vast majority of crimes I responded to (even violent ones) had 
already happened; my unaccountable license to kill was irrelevant.

What I mainly provided was an “objective” third party with the authority to 
document property damage, ask people to chill out or disperse, or counsel 
people not to beat each other up. A trained counselor or conflict resolution 
specialist would be ten-times more effective than someone with a gun strapped 
to his hip wondering if anyone would try to kill him when he showed up. There 
are many models for community safety that can be explored if we get away from 
the idea that the only way to be safe is to have a man with a M4 rifle prowling 
your neighborhood ready at a moment’s notice to write down your name and 
birthday after you’ve been robbed and beaten.

You might be asking, “What about the armed robbers, the gangsters, the drug 
dealers, the serial killers?” And yes, in the city I worked, I regularly broke 
up gang parties, found gang members carrying guns, and handled homicides. I’ve 
seen some tragic things, from a reformed gangster shot in the head with his 
brains oozing out to a fifteen-year-old boy taking his last breath in his 
screaming mother’s arms thanks to a gang member’s bullet. I know the wages of 
violence.

This is where we have to have the courage to ask: why do people rob? Why do 
they join gangs? Why do they get addicted to drugs or sell them? It’s not 
because they are inherently evil. I submit to you that these are the results of 
living in a capitalist system that grinds people down and denies them housing, 
medical care, human dignity, and a say in their government. These are the 
results of white supremacy pushing people to the margins, excluding them, 
disrespecting them, and treating their bodies as disposable.

Equally important to remember—disabled and mentally ill people are frequently 
killed by police officers not trained to recognize and react to disabilities or 
mental health crises. Some of the people we picture as “violent offenders” are 
often people struggling with untreated mental illness, often due to economic 
hardships. Very frequently, the officers sent to “protect the community” 
escalate this crisis and ultimately wound or kill the person. Your community 
was not made safer by police violence; a sick member of your community was 
killed because it was cheaper than treating them. Are you extremely confident 
you’ll never get sick one day too?

Wrestle with this for a minute: if all of someone’s material needs were met and 
all the members of their community were fed, clothed, housed, and dignified, 
why would they need to join a gang? Why would they need to risk their lives 
selling drugs or breaking into buildings? If mental healthcare was free and was 
not stigmatized, how many lives would that save?

Would there still be a few bad actors in the world? Sure, probably. What’s my 
solution for them, you’re no doubt asking. I’ll tell you what: generational 
poverty, food insecurity, houselessness, and for-profit medical care are all 
problems that can be solved in our lifetimes by rejecting the dehumanizing meat 
grinder of capitalism and white supremacy. Once that’s done, we can work on the 
edge cases together, with clearer hearts not clouded by a corrupt system.

Police abolition is closely related to the idea of prison abolition and the 
entire concept of banishing the carceral state, meaning, creating a society 
focused on reconciliation and restorative justice instead of punishment, pain, 
and suffering—a system that sees people in crisis as humans, not monsters. 
People who want to abolish the police typically also want to abolish prisons, 
and the same questions get asked: “What about the bad guys? Where do we put 
them?” I bring this up because abolitionists don’t want to simply replace cops 
with armed social workers or prisons with casual detention centers full of 
puffy leather couches and Playstations. We imagine a world not divided into 
good guys and bad guys, but rather a world where people’s needs are met and 
those in crisis receive care, not dehumanization.

Here’s legendary activist and thinker Angela Y. Davis putting it better than I 
ever could:

“An abolitionist approach that seeks to answer questions such as these would 
require us to imagine a constellation of alternative strategies and 
institutions, with the ultimate aim of removing the prison from the social and 
ideological landscapes of our society. In other words, we would not be looking 
for prisonlike substitutes for the prison, such as house arrest safeguarded by 
electronic surveillance bracelets. Rather, positing decarceration as our 
overarching strategy, we would try to envision a continuum of alternatives to 
imprisonment—demilitarization of schools, revitalization of education at all 
levels, a health system that provides free physical and mental care to all, and 
a justice system based on reparation and reconciliation rather than retribution 
and vengeance.” (Are Prisons Obsolete, pg. 107)

I’m not telling you I have the blueprint for a beautiful new world. What I’m 
telling you is that the system we have right now is broken beyond repair and 
that it’s time to consider new ways of doing community together. Those new ways 
need to be negotiated by members of those communities, particularly Black, 
indigenous, disabled, houseless, and citizens of color historically shoved into 
the margins of society. Instead of letting Fox News fill your head with 
nightmares about Hispanic gangs, ask the Hispanic community what they need to 
thrive. Instead of letting racist politicians scaremonger about pro-Black 
demonstrators, ask the Black community what they need to meet the needs of the 
most vulnerable. If you truly desire safety, ask not what your most vulnerable 
can do for the community, ask what the community can do for the most vulnerable.

A world with fewer bastards is possible

If you take only one thing away from this essay, I hope it’s this: do not talk 
to cops. But if you only take two things away, I hope the second one is that 
it’s possible to imagine a different world where unarmed Black people, 
indigenous people, poor people, disabled people, and people of color are not 
routinely gunned down by unaccountable police officers. It doesn’t have to be 
this way. Yes, this requires a leap of faith into community models that might 
feel unfamiliar, but I ask you:

When you see a man dying in the street begging for breath, don’t you want to 
leap away from that world?

When you see a mother or a daughter shot to death sleeping in their beds, don’t 
you want to leap away from that world?

When you see a twelve-year-old boy executed in a public park for the crime of 
playing with a toy, Jesus fucking Christ, can you really just stand there and 
think “This is normal?”

And to any cops who made it this far down, is this really the world you want to 
live in? Aren’t you tired of the trauma? Aren’t you tired of the soul sickness 
inherent to the badge? Aren’t you tired of looking the other way when your 
partners break the law? Are you really willing to kill the next George Floyd, 
the next Breonna Taylor, the next Tamir Rice? How confident are you that your 
next use of force will be something you’re proud of? I’m writing this for you 
too: it’s wrong what our training did to us, it’s wrong that they hardened our 
hearts to our communities, and it’s wrong to pretend this is normal.

Look, I wouldn’t have been able to hear any of this for much of my life. You, 
reading this now, may not be able to hear this yet either. But do me this one 
favor: just think about it. Just turn it over in your mind for a couple 
minutes. “Yes, And” me for a minute. Look around you and think about the kind 
of world you want to live in. Is it one where an all-powerful stranger with a 
gun keeps you and your neighbors in line with the fear of death, or can you 
picture a world where, as a community, we embrace our most vulnerable, meet 
their needs, heal their wounds, honor their dignity, and make them family 
instead of desperate outsiders?

If you take only three things away from this essay, I hope the third is this: 
you and your community don’t need bastards to thrive.

—Medium, June 6, 2020

https://medium.com/@OfcrACab/confessions-of-a-former-bastard-cop-bb14d17bc759

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