Hot News!


Open and Transparent Government? GASP Slideshow

DeWine Statement on the Government Accountability in Spending Program "GASP"

Contact Us

v mail, fax: (214) 481-6464
e mail: click here



Online Promotion








Events

Monday, May 19th, 6-7pm

Cincinnati Progressive United’s 1st planning meeting, Clifton Recreation Center, 320 McAlpin Ave. (corner of Clifton Ave. and McAlpin Ave - parking in rear)


June 28, 9am - 5pm

Nonviolent Peacemaking Workshop, Presented by the Michigan Peace Team, Peaslee Neighborhood Center, call 579-8547 to sign up



Wednesday, May 07, 2008


We Demand a Vote:  Down with the red-light cameras!

Posted by The Dean of Cincinnati

Photo courtesy of here.

Law enforcement officers are charged with a simple, but noble, assignment:  protect and serve.  And while people may debate the degree to which red-light cameras protect motorists, the fact remains that City Hall wishes to implement these cameras downtown—not because they hope to make our streets more safe, but because they hope to generate revenue for the struggling budget.  This is a violation of that simple assignment with which our law enforcement officers are charged.  Instead of protecting, and serving, the red-light cameras are just a scam for ticketing people at a distance for profit.

That’s why The Cincinnati Beacon proudly endorses the NAACP petition drive and the ”We Demand a Vote” coalition.

What happens when law enforcement becomes a means for making money? 

I wholeheartedly reject the premise, because that same premise logically supports absurdities—like a ”jay walking vortex.”

I remember, at the victory party to defeat the jail tax, talking with Christopher Finney (who had been a long-time political adversary).  He said he had learned, through collaborating with “liberal” groups like the Green Party and the NAACP that there was actually a shocking philosophical overlap with his own “conservative” group COAST.  He said COAST opposed government spending because it viewed taxation as a means of government oppression.  Then he said he realized that groups like the NAACP also oppose government oppression—and that such oppression can manifest in a variety of ways.  That touchstone, he hypothesized, could serve as a starting-point for future collaboration.

And it seems, to me anyway, that the idea of “oppression” is a great lens through which to interpret the red-light camera proposal.  By altering the basic premise of law enforcement—from protecting and serving to making money for government—City Hall has taken a small step towards implementing an oppressive police state where the interests of government take precedent over the interests of the people they are supposed to serve.


Share This Article!
Listen to this article Listen to this article

Help The Cincinnati Beacon Grow! Participate in Social Networking!

Members



Auto-login on future visits

Show my name in the online users list

Forgot your password?

Register

Tell us what you think!

Anonymous comments are allowed, but you can log in above to stamp your name and to avoid typing the anti-spam code.

If you are not familiar with our rules for leaving comments, click here!

  1. JFD says:

    Sounds to me like this will free up police manpower; to better respond to your alarm issues.

  2. Who Cares? says:

    I’m not going to even begin harping on the idiocy of opposing this any longer.  I will comment on the photo that you included.  Those sprays and all the other internet techniques out there do not work.  Mythbusters on the Discovery Channel, tested them all and none work.

  3. Freedom Fighters says:

    .
    Anyone who supports this ‘China Syndrome’ monitoring deserves to have their freedoms stripped !

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Smileys

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Submit the word you see below: