Re: What would a US "Police State" look like?
Any time you have a government organized or controlled police force that uses it's power to keep order, you have some level of a police state. It's all just a matter of scale, isn't it? Doesn't it just come down to how much control the police force attempts to enforce, and how arbitrary their rules?
Don't we live in a police state? In fact, isn't it apparent that having a police state is actually necessary to be considered a civilized place to live, as opposed to a place like some countries in Africa or the Middle East? I don't think I'd want to live in a place that wasn't at some basic level a police state.People should ask themselves from time to time, what would an American police state look like?
Not to try to fit the current situation to it -- that would be absurd as, for example, we will not be arrested for having this discussion. But what at the core is a police state, and how would an American version be different given our history. Would it be explicit, like Germany, or would it retain the empty trappings of a representative system, like Rome under Augustus? Is there a critical test to decide what side of the line we're on? Is a police state by definition excluded by a democratic political system, or is an "elected police state" -- even, a voluntary police state -- possible?
Any time you have a government organized or controlled police force that uses it's power to keep order, you have some level of a police state. It's all just a matter of scale, isn't it? Doesn't it just come down to how much control the police force attempts to enforce, and how arbitrary their rules?