À se moquer de la vie des autres, on dévalue la notre

Un billet intéressant, relevé par John Gruber, sur la considération de la vie des hommes « ennemis » de l’Amerique et de ce que ça engendre sur les rapports entre la police et les citoyens classiques sur le territoire américain. L’idée étant que l’armée américaine reçoit un plein support de la population quand elle tue des hommes ennemis de façon arbitraire, mais pas du tout lorsque c’est la police qui le fait dans les rues des villes américaines.

This is a huge disconnect, and we let it happen. The problem isn’t with the NYPD, the problem is with the blanket total support we give our military when it fights in Afghanistan and Iraq. The price of placing zero value on the lives of the people of these countries is that our lives in turn become worthless. What goes around comes around. You reap what you sow. There are dozens of adages and fables that explain this phenomenon. The lives of the people of the foreign countries are worth exactly as much as ours. We overlooked the behavior of American soldiers in these countries. Now the cops want to know why we treat them differently.

And they’re right to ask. Why? If the army can arbitrarily kill thousands in Iraq, why can’t they kill a few people in Staten Island, Missouri, or Ohio? You “support the troops” why don’t you support us, they ask.