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2020-06-07 -Land of the Free
Why It's Rational to Fear Cops
[mises.org] In economics, branding serves an important purpose. Brands allow people to economize on knowledge, a scarce resource. We make decisions with imperfect information, and brand labeling and trademarks help us navigate these decisions. As Thomas Sowell writes:

When you drive into a town you have never seen before and want to get some gasoline for your car or to eat a hamburger, you have no direct way of knowing what is in the gasoline that some stranger at the filling station is putting into your tank or what is in the hamburger that another stranger is cooking for you to eat at a roadside stand that you have never seen before. But, if the filling station’s sign says Chevron and the restaurant’s sign says McDonald’s, then you don’t worry about it.

He goes on to add that "brand names are substitutes for specific knowledge."

Continued from Page 3



You don’t know much about the particular bottle of ketchup you may be buying—the quality of the factory it was produced in, the farmer who grew the tomatoes, or the recipe used—but if it says Heinz on the label, you have a good idea of what you’re going to get. The need to economize on knowledge is so important that in the Soviet Union, people began to learn how to read barcodes to know whether or not they were getting products from reliable factories....

In customer service industries, this is also the purpose of a uniform. Customers can quickly identify the person they need to talk to in a retail environment, and the uniform conveys certain expectations. The electronic retailer Best Buy dresses its computer technicians, called the "Geek Squad," in comically cliché "geek" uniforms—white shirts and black clip-on ties—in an attempt to help customers distinguish the employees with specialized computer knowledge from those who sell televisions....

As in the customer service industry, a police officer’s uniform conveys information to civilians. In the idealized vision of police, the uniform should convey security. Most of us were taught as children that if we get separated from our parents, we should avoid strangers but find a police officer. Even though the officer is also a stranger, children are taught to see the police uniform as an indicator of trustworthiness in the potentially dangerous uncertainty of human interaction.

This example also illustrates Sowell’s observation that brands are substitutes for specific knowledge. We do not know whether any individual is trustworthy or not, but, ideally, a police uniform should be a consistent marker of trustworthiness. But the converse may also be true. Just as I avoid the McDonald’s arches because I don’t like their food, the information conveyed by a police uniform is not always consistent with the idealized vision of police.

Any given police officer may be a kind, helpful person who only wants to serve and protect, as the police mantra claims, or he may be a scoundrel who enjoys asserting violent authority over others. This is the uncertainty that people face every time they interact with a police officer. But the uniform does convey some consistent, reliable knowledge that helps people know whether to feel safe or threatened.

For instance, thanks to the doctrine of qualified immunity, all police officers are immune from the consequences of excessive and unnecessary force, even in cases that result in the death of unarmed, nonresisting civilians. Certainly not all police take advantage of this immunity. Social media loves heartwarming stories of cops helping people or simply showing kindness. Many cops are not needlessly violent—in fact, it’s likely that the vast majority of them are not. But the uniform does not inform civilians of whether or not a cop will be gracious or abusive; it merely informs us that if they want to commit violence they can do so without fearing the consequences that the rest of us would face....

The result is that, in contradistinction to what we are taught as children, many people rationally feel unsafe interacting with a police officer than they do with a random civilian stranger. I stress the word "rationally" because their feeling of insecurity is not the product of a delusional prejudice or false propaganda, but rather of the reasonable weighing of possibilities in the face of uncertainty. They do not have knowledge of the specific officer’s temperament and character, but they do have knowledge of the legal immunity that will protect the cop if he abuses his authority.

Similarly, practices such as civil asset forfeiture become attached to the police uniform in the minds of civilians. Many cops, I’m sure, would never steal a person’s life savings or confiscate their legally owned property just because the law allows them to do so—but the law does allow them to. In the face of uncertainty, this is the knowledge that people have....

And just as when a company hurts their brand by consistently providing poor service or a disappointing product, the frequent stories of police brutality and extrajudicial killings re-create the image of police conveyed by the uniform. The lack of accountability in these stories amplifies the effect. The actions of individual officers, even if we accept that they are anecdotal and not representative of the majority, convey information that people rationally attach to the uniform of all cops.

In short, people increasingly feel unsafe around police, because, frankly, it would be irrational to feel otherwise. It is impossible for anybody to know what a given cop will do, but thanks to the perverse incentive structures created by courts and tough-on-crime legislators, as well as the poor behavior of individual officers, who are virtually never brought to justice, people make their judgments of the police based on what officers can do. As long as we live in a world of imperfect information, it would be silly to expect people to make assumptions about police according to any other standard.
Posted by Clem 2020-06-07 11:09|| || Front Page|| [11137 views ]  Top

#1 I am scared of anyone who might shoot me for no reason. As the post By the Numbers says, it's not particularly likely. But it only has to happen once...
Posted by M. Murcek 2020-06-07 12:18||   2020-06-07 12:18|| Front Page Top

#2 Only has to happen to me once, I should have said...
Posted by M. Murcek 2020-06-07 12:18||   2020-06-07 12:18|| Front Page Top

#3  if it says Heinz on the label, you have a good idea of what you’re going to get.

Posted by Skidmark 2020-06-07 14:06||   2020-06-07 14:06|| Front Page Top

#4 In the face of uncertainty, this is the knowledge that people have.... been fed.

What a slanted piece of crap.
Posted by Skidmark 2020-06-07 14:09||   2020-06-07 14:09|| Front Page Top

#5 Only when I'm driving.
Posted by g(r)omgoru 2020-06-07 17:22||   2020-06-07 17:22|| Front Page Top

#6 The reasoning here is strained, but the conclusion is correct. Anyone with a healthy distrust of government should feel at least as cautious about the government's armed enforcers.
Posted by Iblis 2020-06-07 17:29||   2020-06-07 17:29|| Front Page Top

#7 #6 Yes, mixed with some justified contempt.

Always be prudent when dealing with them, but don't fall for the "all cops are heroes" crap to which so many on the Right are susceptible.

If the last few months prove anything, it's that they'll crack down on the law-abiding and allow the zoo animals to do what they want while arresting anyone who dares to defend themselves.

But hey, they're just following orders.

Continue paying your taxes, and please contribute to the fraternal order of the kneelers.

You'll get a medallion!

Posted by charger 2020-06-07 17:48||   2020-06-07 17:48|| Front Page Top

#8 Fear the Cloud. The Cloud, The Cloud. Every one of the rioters, Antifa, BLM members has a smart phone constantly streaming lots of your data to The Cloud.

Holding a secret Antifa meeting? The Cloud, The Cloud KNOWS. Sending out a descrete message to cöordinate the next march? The Cloud just got the message and the recipient list. Your face is covered by a mask as you march taunting the police. The Cĺoud knows exabtly who you are.
Posted by Varmint Splat1454 2020-06-07 21:46||   2020-06-07 21:46|| Front Page Top

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