what's more important, training police officers or toeing the multi-cultural line?
in Fairfax county, Virginia, it's the latter.
Fairfax County, Virginia will not allow police trainees from Herndon, one the county's towns, to attend the Fairfax police academy. And, in high-Orwellian fashion, Fairfax cites its "One Fairfax" policy as the basis for the bar.
Here's the story, as told by the Washington post:
When 61 law enforcement trainees graduated last month from Fairfax county's criminal justice training academy, including county police officers and some from smaller departments in Fairfax, each received a certificate signed by the academy's director, county police maj. Wilson Lee, who is chinese American.
Lee, whose given name is Lee Wai-Shun, signed the certificates in chinese, as he typically does. Among those who received certificates march 7 were three new officers from the Herndon town police force — the first trainees from that department to attend the academy since Lee took command more than a year ago. When Herndon police chief Maggie DeBoard noticed the chinese signature shortly before the graduation ceremony, she was not pleased.
"This is not acceptable for my agency," she told Lee in an email. "I don't want our Herndon officers to receive these."
Not only did Fairfax county refuse to issue new certificates as DeBoard requested, but a top Fairfax official also has notified DeBoard that Herndon police trainees will no longer be welcome at the academy.
Why did the county take such a drastic step?
deputy county executive Thomas Arnold, who oversees public safety, said in an email to the Washington post that [the Herndon police chief's] "comments and actions. . .were inconsistent with the culture of Fairfax county and our one Fairfax policy.
Finally, and inevitably, the Washington post's report leaves something to be desired. It states:
DeBoard, whose department has about 54 officers, declined to comment on why she objected to the signatures.
But just a few paragraphs earlier, we learned that
[A]fter calling the signature "unacceptable," [DeBoard] asked [Lee] to sign new certificates for her officers in English, "the language that they are expected to use as an officer." She said the chinese signature was a change "implemented with zero input from the participating chiefs and sheriffs." (Emphasis added)
But, while telling us little about the future of policing in Herndon, this tale says much about the state of America. In particular, it demonstrates the left's insistence on accentuating our differences in the name of "oneness" and its readiness to punish those who disagree with this program.
3 comments:
"the language that they are expected to use as an officer."
A LEGAL document? In some locales it is only lawful to do official government business in any language other than English.
black cops--oxymoron of the day.
--GRA
It has always angered me that although you are supposed to be literate in English to become a citizen, foreign languages continue to be used for voting. And, I know that some foreigners, such as Chinese, memorize the questions on the immigration test so they can answer them without being able to read English--in other words, they know which questions to mark true or false by position.
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