Waco Call
The trend of increasing militancy in civil government isn't new.
Once a upon a time, most ATF agents were guys who wore business suits and stopped by the local gun shops now and then to check their records. If they
encountered a problem that needed the use of force, they would normally hand it off to an appropriate law enforcement agency for action. During the
'80s they became more and more focused on paramilitary enforcement operations, becoming more aggressive in tactics and expanding their purview.
Eventually, in moves that appear to have been motivated more by politics (i.e., justifying increased funding from Congress by garnering publicity)
than legitimate law enforcement concerns, they ultimately worked up to the botched Waco raid that left 86 people dead and a nation horrified by what
it was witnessing.
Although that got a lot of attention and galvanized a great deal of opposition to heavy-handedness in law enforcement, many other agencies quietly
stepped up their militarization initiatives, all wrangling for tax dollars to expand what were effectively political fiefdoms. Though I cannot know
the thinking of the officials behind these moves, I have to imagine that there has been a long running sentiment that the more dramatic and aggressive
an agency is, the bigger the budget it can command.
Under the pretext of the War on Drugs and various perceived threats to public safety, real or imagined, more and more warrants that had previously
been served peacefully by local sheriffs and police officers became "no-knock" warrants, initially confined by court oversight to special cases, and
continually expanded to ever more implausible situations. Always under the guise of protecting the safety of officers and civilians alike. Federal
agencies that had previously worked with local law enforcement became more "proactive" and independent, pushing their way into various jurisdictions
with often disastrous results.
More recently, the formation of the Department of Homeland Security introduced an approach to terrorism defense that effectively categorizes everyone
in the world, including every man, woman and child in the U.S., as a terrorist until proven otherwise. What was previously viewable as a dispersed
trend across various agencies became codified under federal law with caution thrown to the winds. Under the new regime, almost any measure, no matter
how questionable or excessive, could be justified in the name of "fighting terror".
As things currently stand, the prevailing sentiment on the part of many law enforcement agencies, particularly at the federal level, toward the public
has taken on alarming and threatening undertones. As pointed out in the OP, even agencies that are not commonly associated with law enforcement, such
as the Department of Education, are now outfitted with paramilitary units that are looking for something to do -- or someone to shoot.
As sinister as the process may seem, and as dangerous to a free society as it is proving to be, I nonetheless think the main reason we're seeing this
trend is human nature, and in more cases than not a sincere desire to do good that gets lost along the way. It is somewhat instinctive for bureaucrats
to seek more power, and being in charge of civil servants bearing firearms gives them more power. I don't doubt there are other forces at work, but
at the end of the day, it's best not to underestimate the cumulative effect of blind ambition and good intentions gone bad.
What is particularly disturbing about all this is the apparent lack of perspective it exposes. People in positions of responsibility are, by not
maintaining sensible control of deadly force, acting irresponsibly, and in many cases irrationally. In the absence of good judgment and reason,
anything is possible.
Indeed, at the rate we're going, it's just a matter of time before we see this:
Fig. 1: Agents of the Jefferson Elementary School Crossing Guard
Detachment prepare to escort students with extreme prejudice.
Absurd? Absolutely.
Impossible? That remains to be seen.