Pubdate: Mon, 04 Aug 2014 Source: Philadelphia Daily News (PA) Copyright: 2014 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.philly.com/dailynews/about/feedback/ Website: http://www.philly.com/dailynews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/339 Author: Will Bunch Page: 6 The Best From Our Blogs Attytood HARD TRUTHS OF SHRINKING RESPECT FOR THE LAW Unfortunately, the people who have the power to change things still don't get it. Last week, Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey lashed out in anger . . . not at corrupt cops as much as at the Daily News. To Ramsey, it was a "slap in the face" that this newspaper on Thursday ran a front-page illustration of police headquarters wrapped in yellow crime-scene tape. I don't know: With 146 police officers fired for misconduct during the time of Ramsey and his boss Mayor Nutter, including 88 who were arrested and 48 convicted of crimes including murder, rape and extortion, it seems like the crime-scene picture reeked . . . of understatement. But then, the fish stinks from the head. Just Friday, you had this remarkable moment in which the president of the United States stood up and acknowledged that "we tortured some folks" - a clear, major violation of law - and yet President Obama also made it plain that the American "folks" who ordered and committed that torture will not be punished. That's outrageous. But then, there's been no punishment for the intelligence chief who committed blatant perjury before Congress, for the current CIA chief whose minions spied on Congress, the securities scammers and inside traders who helped trigger the 2008 fiscal collapse . . . or the Philadelphia lawmakers who allegedly accepted cash and gifts from a lobbyist. I could go on, but the bottom line is this: Don't be shocked by people's lack of respect for authority, when people in authority are doing so little to earn our respect. But we are not powerless. There are many things we can start doing, large and small. Here at home, with the police-corruption scandal, the Daily News took a break from our "face-slapping" to publish a strong and sober list of recommendations, including stepped-up monitoring of police activity (by both humans and cameras) and a more-powerful civilian-oversight agency. More broadly, America - once a world leader in promoting equal justice for all - needs a serious do-over in that department. It starts with admitting the utter failure of the so-called war on drugs, which has had exactly the same disastrous impacts as the alcohol prohibition of the 20th century, including the encouragement of police corruption among rogue narcotics cops who'd rather steal the massive profits of drug dealers than execute smarter community policing to help curb addiction to harder narcotics on the street. But then we also need to end our separate-but-unequal system of justice - in which you can go to jail for walking down the street for a joint but get rewarded with a bonus for a million-dollar mortgage rip-off, or get re-elected after stuffing cash gifts in your back pocket. We don't need to send more people to prison. We should be sending fewer, but with a much clearer perspective on what is right and what is wrong, and what is fair. Anything less is, dare I say it, a real slap in the face. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom