Constitutional Enforcement Pre-Study Materials - Part 8
So you may be asking --- why is a peacekeeping official higher in rank than a peacekeeping officer? And why
are both higher on the totem pole than law enforcement officers?
It’s because, in the first case, peacekeeping officials are elected. A whole bunch of people examined a man’s
(or woman’s) credentials and their attitude and their understanding of the job, and they approved of him or her
to do the job. When you’ve got a beef with an elected Sheriff or Justice of the Peace, you’ve got a beef with all
the people who did the electing.
And as for the second question, why do all peacekeeping officers outrank all law enforcement officers?
It’s because peacekeepers are public officers and LEOs are private officers.
The focus of peacekeepers is to protect people and their property and to enforce the Public Law. The focus of
law enforcement officers is to protect the corporation they work for and enforce private laws.
About now a lot of the LEOs out there are bristling. They go out there everyday and risk their lives as much as
any peacekeeping officer, and many LEOs think of themselves as caring for people and protecting their
communities, and to the extent that that is true, that’s wonderful.
However, the fundamental fact is that peacekeeping officers work for the Public directly and are tasked to
protect the Public Good and to enforce the Public Law. LEOs may work for the public indirectly as
subcontractors, but there’s a foreign, for-profit corporation acting as a middleman, and that corporation directs
their actions and priorities. It protects itself and its self-interest first.
Like the Supreme Court told Sheriff Mack --- well, you can enforce the Public Law if you want to. And it’s
left for Sheriff Mack and men like him to hear the rest of the unspoken part of that message: you can enforce
the Public Law if you want to, but it’s not going to advance your career. It’s not going to win you Brownie
Points from the corporation you are working for. It’s not a mandatory part of your job.
When a LEO is working on a public contract, say, working as a State of State Trooper in a typical Public
Safety Office----enforcing the Public Law surely should be a mandatory part of the job. The corporation he is
working for is receiving public funds to do what appears to be a public job, so Joe Public is his ultimate
employer, right? And Joe certainly intends for him to enforce the Public Law. That’s what Joe Public is paying
for and what Joe expects.
Most of us assume that when you receive public money you work for the public and in a public capacity, but
no, that’s not how it works anymore.
Foreign for-profit corporations have taken up a middleman position, inserted themselves in the cash flow
stream, and they now dictate how our public money is spent. So they spend it on protecting themselves first
and plumping up their profit margins second, and devil take the hindmost on all the rest.
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