May 10, 2005
Police Murdered By Illegals, Insulted By Media
By
Michelle Malkin
When was the last time you thanked
a cop?
And wouldn't it be nice if, for
just a brief moment, the mainstream media would hold a
ceasefire in its incessant cop-bashing crusades?
There are good cops, and there are
bad cops. But national press outlets, predisposed to
harp on law enforcement as an
inherently racist and
reckless institution, hype the hellions at the
expense of the heroes.
Case in point: the hysterical
feeding frenzy this week over reports of a cop shootout
gone awry in
Compton, Calif., and of a Seattle officer who
reportedly Tasered a pregnant woman over a speeding
ticket.
As Jan Golab writes in a cover
story for The American Enterprise magazine this
month on how political correctness undermines policing:
"Today,
cops all across the United States battle a foe as
destructive as crime itself: the
presumption of common prejudice… This view has been
fanned by a media elite which has made 'diversity' its
virtual religion."
The anti-cop bias, Golab notes,
comes through the national mainstream media's "sins
of omission -- the stories never told. Propaganda, as
Orwell said, is in what gets left out." [How
Racial P.C. Corrupted the LAPD]
Thus, we'll be subjected to
wall-to-wall coverage of the Tasered pregnant lady and
the shot-out SUV. But you won't see Peter Jennings
reporting on the tragic loss of
Denver Detective Donald R. Young.
The married father of two and a
recipient of the police Medal of Honor was shot three
times from behind last weekend in a cold-blooded ambush.
Police believe the tattooed young assailant, a
suspected illegal alien, has
fled to Mexico. Det. Young had received numerous
awards during his 12 years on the Denver police force.
He was awarded the police department's Medal of Honor
and a distinguished service cross.
And you won't see Larry King
talking about the murder of undercover vice
Sgt. Gerald Vick in St. Paul, Minn., at the hands of
a reputed gang member of the Vice Lords. Sgt. Vick was a
Medal of Valor winner who had rescued two children in a
raging house fire in 1990. The local St. Paul Pioneer
Press recounted his heroism:
“In
1990, Vick pulled [Rachel] Patterson's 3-year-old
son clear of a fatal house fire on Sherburne Avenue in
St. Paul. Then he broke through a window, crawled
beneath the smoke and took her unconscious 15-month-old
daughter out. He went back in to rescue her husband and
5-year-old son, but it was too late.”
For his efforts, Vick won the
department's highest honor:
the Medal of Valor.
"Officer Vick saved my life,"
said Patterson's daughter, Kacheala Willis, now 15 and
in the 10th grade at a high school in Houston. "I
hope he makes it into heaven."
Sgt. Vick leaves behind a wife and
two children. [A
Decorated Cop, Lifesaver, and Hero]
Det. Young and Sgt. Vick may not be
on the media's radar screen, but they will undoubtedly
be on the minds of those gathering in Washington, D.C.,
this week to commemorate
National Police Week.
The event kicks off on Friday with
a much-needed reminder of the grossly underappreciated
sacrifices American men and women in blue have made to
protect us. At the
National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial, the
names of
415 fallen officers will be read and added to the
memorial.
The sponsors of the memorial
reminds us that since the first recorded police death in
1792, there have been more than 16,500 law enforcement
officers killed in the line of duty. There were 153 law
enforcement officers killed in 2004. New York City has
lost more officers in the line of duty than any other
department, with more than 580 deaths. California has
lost over 1,350 officers, more than any other state.
Daniel Felten, a former cop,
soldier, and blogger (http://schadenfreude.cogitox.com),
reflected on the strength of character required to do
the job the rest of us too often take for granted:
"Some
people reach a point where they can't face another dead
body, another senseless murder, another grieving family
member. Or another dead police officer. Then there are
some who can do the job every day, for 20 or 30 years. I
thank God for people like that."
Me, too. Thank you, officers.
From the bottom of the heart: Thank
you.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.