Also, at: http://www.counterpunch.org/krassner10122008.html

[See URL for embedded links.]

A T-shirt Says It All.

Denver Cops Commemorate Their DNC '08 Pro-Violence Strategy And Now 
You Can Too!

http://new.music.yahoo.com/blogs/arthur/411/a-t-shirt-says-it-all-denver-cops-commemorate-their-dnc-08-pro-violence-strategy-and-now-you-can-too/

Oct 10, 2008
by Paul Krassner

The Denver Police Department is facing several lawsuits over 
confrontations with protesters at the Democratic National Convention. 
The officers had conducted mass arrests and detentions of 154 
individuals before and during the convention. One cop, for example, 
was videotaped pushing a woman to the ground with his baton as he 
yelled, "Back up, b*tch!" The police are being charged with 
systematically condoning violence against antiwar demonstrators, and 
now, a commemorative T-shirt created and distributed by their union, 
the Denver Police Protective Association, could be offered as 
evidence of the cops state of mind.

The T-shirt features a menacing depiction of a gigantic, 
nightstick-wielding cop with a malevolent grin, towering over 
Denver's downtown skyline and boasting, We Get Up Early, to BEAT the 
Crowds, along with the slogan, 2008 DNC. The cop's hat has the image 
of number 68 inside a circle with a slash going through it, an 
obvious reference to Re-create 68, a protest group which staged 
several demonstrations.

Shirt producer Nick Rogers said that each of the 1,400 Denver 
officers was given a free T-shirt, and that they're being sold for 
$10. He said that the police union predicts sales of about 2,000 
shirts. Rogers stated that he hadn't received any complaints about 
the shirt. But Glenn Spagnuolo, co-founder of Re-create 68, did in 
fact complain that the members of Denver's police union clearly have 
no respect for the rights guaranteed by the United States Constitution.

Re-create 68 has demanded an investigation by officials, including 
the mayor and the safety manager. Spagnuolo says that the people of 
Denver were assured by the city that it would respect First Amendment 
rights during the convention, and that the police officers were being 
trained to do so. The actions of police during the convention, which 
involved numerous violations of people's right to freedom of speech 
and assembly, put the lie to those promises. And now this appalling, 
tasteless T-shirt shows why.

The Denver Police Department Operations Manual includes a Law 
Enforcement Code of Ethics, which begins, "As a Law Enforcement 
Officer, my fundamental duty is to serve mankind, to safeguard lives 
and property, to protect the innocent against deception, the weak 
against oppression or intimidation, and the peaceful against violence 
or disorder; and to respect the Constitutional rights of all men to 
liberty, equality and justice."

Aside from the sexist wording in that opening credo, the T-shirt 
makes a mockery of the mission statement. Spagnuolo insists that 
members of his group saw those shirts before the convention, and that 
they reflect the brutality exhibited by Denver police officers during 
the convention. We feel like police should not be celebrating 
violating people's rights, he says. These shirts set the tone for the 
beating that our members took.

Martin Vigil, president of the Denver Police Protective Association, 
insists that nothing really happened. It wasn't the event that the 
anti-government groups anticipated, and the T-shirts are a satirical 
comment on that, given to officers after the event as a thank you for 
a perfect convention. The police group contends, those activists just 
don't get the joke.

Count us among those who don't find it very funny, stated a Denver 
Post editorial. The T-shirt was supposedly a joke. We get up early to 
beat the crowds. Get it? Beat the crowds. The shirt undermines the 
efforts the Denver Police Department has made to boost its 
credibility in the community....Denver police leadership has been 
working hard in recent years to improve both its use-of-force 
practices and its image within the community after several 
controversial shootings.

In any case, there's a certain meta-irony about the name Re-create 
68. Not only did the crossed-out 68 on the hat of the cop on the 
T-shirt refer to Re-create 68, but also Re-create 68 itself was a 
reference to the 1968 Democratic convention in Chicago where 
protesters were severely beaten by police.

Moreover, at the 1996 Democratic convention in Chicago, there were 
T-shirts with the logo of the Chicago Police Department and the 
legend Democratic National Convention Chicago--1996--We Kicked Your 
Fathers Ass in 1968--Wait Til You See What We Do to You!

Thats the trouble with a police state. The cops think it's a good thing.
--

Investigative satirist Paul Krassner was present for the beatings of 
anti-war demonstrators by police and the National Guard in Chicago 
during the 1968 Democratic National Convention. His experience, along 
with those of his Yippie brethren Jerry Rubin and Abbie Hoffman, is 
recounted in the 2007 film, Chicago 10. More info on Paul is 
available at paulkrassner.com

.


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