Pubdate: Fri, 14 May 2010 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Dan Gardner, The Ottawa Citizen SUDDENLY THE COPS AREN'T THE EXPERTS Canadians like and respect police officers. They value what cops have to say. They support police funding and can usually be counted on to applaud when a politician promises to hire more cops and "give them the tools to do the job." All of which is particularly true of conservatives. Except when it comes to the gun registry. As the mostly urban and centre-left defenders of the registry never tire of pointing out, all the major police organizations back the registry. They say it makes policing safer and more effective and it's good value for the money. This drives the mainly rural and centre-right opponents of the registry crazy. Grassroots officers are against it, they insist. The police brass and official organizations all have vested interests. Their arguments are bogus. Their statistics are nonsense. What few on either side of the debate seem to have noticed is that both sides are contradicting themselves. Name the issue. Drugs, prostitution, pornography, whatever. If the police line up in support of an initiative, you can be sure of two things. One, the police think it's essential that we take a harder line. And two, conservatives insist that the police are the real experts we should listen to, not the eggheads from universities who say that cracking down will do more harm than good. The response from liberal opponents is that the police have vested interests, their arguments are bogus, and their statistics nonsense. Social scientists are the real experts and their research should guide policy. But mention the gun registry and the polarity flips. "Presumably Conservative MPs know more about fighting crime than the men in uniform," mocked Jeffrey Simpson in the Globe and Mail. "After all this is also a government that has scorned the expert advice of almost every criminologist, judge, and lawyers' group in Canada, even as they say how ineffective, useless and even dangerously counterproductive are most of the Conservatives' 'tough on crime' proposals." But the "men in uniform" generally support those "tough on crime" proposals. If police are the experts when it comes to the gun registry, why aren't they the experts when it comes to the other stuff? The contradictions are even more stark among conservatives, who are as savagely critical of the police when it comes to the gun registry as they are uncritical when it comes to every other issue. On conservative blogs, right-wing crazies tear into police claims about the registry with the zeal of Christopher Hitchens taking on the Vatican -- all without the slightest recognition that the cardinals they are accusing of ignorance and corruption are the same cardinals whose every other utterance they treat like Scripture. Funny thing is, I'm with the right-wing crazies on the matter of the registry. The police are certainly self-interested and I find their arguments bogus and their statistics nonsense. But unlike the right-wing crazies, I recognize that this is not only true in the matter of the gun registry. I know that sounds like a terrible slam at the police, but it's really not. The police are not social scientists. They are not policy wonks. They are the police. They are experts on policing, but nothing more. I once spent a night on patrol with a Vancouver vice cop who was smart and thoughtful. He knew everything about his streets and the people on them. When things were quiet, I asked him what he thought of legalizing prostitution. He was against it, he said, because he'd met a detective from Las Vegas at a conference once and the detective told him about the terrible problems in his city. But prostitution isn't legal in Las Vegas, I said. He looked confused. So I explained that while prostitution is legal under certain conditions in Nevada's rural counties, it is completely criminal in Las Vegas. He didn't know that. Why would he? It's not his job. I've had lots of conversations like that. Even police chiefs and other senior officers who testify before parliamentary committees are -- for all their indisputable expertise -- often ignorant of basic policy facts and have little ability to conduct research and assess evidence about the effectiveness of policy choices. Case in point: A very high-ranking RCMP officer once told me that a record seizure of heroin in Vancouver caused a significant decline in the city's overdose deaths. Very interesting, I said. Do you have evidence? Oh, yes, he said, but he'd have to dig it up. A couple of days later I was faxed a copy of a newspaper article which claimed the seizure would reduce overdose deaths -- a claim supported with a quote from an RCMP officer saying so. Everyone says they support evidence-based public policy. And everyone claims their opponents ignore the evidence. But the truth is most people think almost anything that supports their existing beliefs is valid evidence while almost anything that contradicts those beliefs is flawed and should be dismissed. That, unfortunately, is human nature. Psychologists call it "confirmation bias." Police officers have lots of important insights to offer but they are not social scientists or public policy experts and their opinions about policy are, in most circumstances, very weak evidence. That's true and easy to accept when the police contradict what we believe. It's much harder to accept when they confirm our beliefs. But it's just as true. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake