“Look how many police are here, just for elderly people holding placards. It's a joke. The state is a joke.”
https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/over-arrested-hundreds-gather-defy-palestine-action-ban-london
“Look how many police are here, just for elderly people holding placards. It's a joke. The state is a joke.”
https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/over-arrested-hundreds-gather-defy-palestine-action-ban-london
@wood5y It's bureaucracy. The golden rule of Bureaucrats is: they need to justify their paycheck, whilst doing as little work as possible.
It's much easier for them to deal with a threat of grannies holding up signs than it is for them to deal with a threat like ISIS. They justify their paycheck either way. So they always choose to deal with the easiest job. As a result, the grannies are the job that gets dealt with.
Bureaucracy is why we have #brokenbritain
@rmblaber1956 @wood5y Metpol are flush with resources compared to other provincial constabularies - they can do this *and* nick the real criminals (for instance the same weekend they nicked the two lads who stabbed the rap video cameraman in Primrose hill)
Maybe the protestors should change tactics and hold the demos in provincial towns? Alas, I'm not sure though if the same level of support for them exists outside the big cities...
@rmblaber1956 @wood5y Met have something like 33 000 officers compared to about 5 000 in Essex, so dealing with protest (or something like Notting Hill Carnival) isn't much of an immediate drain on officer numbers.
If we don't believe rightwing press paranoia and assume the bulk of Londoners *aren't* criminals, that means there are way more officers per average person in London than anywhere else.
What protest clampdowns do do is create a decline in trust between the Police and much of the general public (at least those they are targeting), which means that especially younger and working class folk aren't exactly going to dial 999 if they see someone robbing a house or trying to mug someone.
They might even try to sort things out themselves, which leads to more violence..
there is an opportunity cost but its more subtle - Met by and large do seem to manage to balance demands by central govt for policing protests (and even mass arrests) with everything else, but in doing so create a climate where they have less public support and criminals can take advantage of that.
Also protestors are an easy nick - they are all in one place - whereas burglars and muggers are more spread out and tend not to look that obvious, in some cases leading to racial profiling by more ignorant officers, and if someone has been robbed for their mobile phone whilst trying to buy drugs they don't always want to co-operate with the Police (but they might get their own peers to "do something", which leads to more stabbings)