Wife Of Officer Killed Writes Letter To Professor Who Called For Police Killings
by Sherry Graham-Potter
Law Enforcement Today
March 4, 2019
An open letter to Joshua Clover, Professor of English, UC Davis:
I don’t know you, and truthfully, if today you were to draw your last breath, as a Christian woman, I would struggle greatly with my duty to pray for your soul.
There are moments that I cannot conceive of a heart so black and ugly that you would call for a person’s life to be snuffed out, merely because they chose a career path with which you disagree.
You are a gutless coward as far as I am concerned, not worthy of licking clean the boots of my late husband killed while protecting his community, nor my new husband, twenty-six years into his law enforcement career, where he has served with honor, integrity and character. Not one of those attributes will you EVER have the privilege of claiming in your lifetime.
Here are a few of the words you were giddy to share after the Michael Brown attack on Police Officer Darren Wilson and his justified response. Although these tweets occurred in 2014, they were recently brought to light after the shooting ambush of Davis Police Officer Natalie Corona:
“I am thankful that every living cop will one day be dead, some by their own hand, some by others too, too many of old age”
and
“I mean, it’s easier to shoot cops when their backs are turned, no?”
How many lives have you saved, sir?
How many sobbing, crumbling mothers have you clung to after informing them that their child is no longer of this earth?
How many burning buildings have you run into to save a family pet?
How many lifeless bodies have you breathed into?
How many suicide aftermaths have you witnessed?
How many times have you been spit at?
Confronted with a knife?
Kicked, punched, elbowed, head butted?
How many people have threatened to rape and kill your wife and children after you arrested them?
How many times has your marked vehicle been vandalized in your driveway?
How many times have you been concerned that the food you’ve just been served might be contaminated?
How many people have shot at you?
How many times have you called your spouse to tell them you won’t be home for a while, because you just shot and killed that person who was shooting at you?
How much blood, vomit, urine and feces must you remove from your clothing after work?
How many times are you demonized in the press?
How many co-workers have you seen die?
How many flag draped caskets have you carried?
How many children have you knelt in front of to present a folded flag?
How many doctors have told you that the stress of the job you do will most likely kill you fifteen years sooner than the average civilian?
How many times have the things you’ve witnessed led you to consider putting your own duty weapon in your mouth and pulling the trigger?
How many times have you considered that it’s people like you, and the appalling rhetoric you spew, that drive good men and women to even consider removing themselves from this earth?
How many times have you sat in front of an unsuspecting woman’s home, gathering the courage to inform her that her husband has been killed in the line of duty?
How many times have you been intellectually honest with yourself and considered what your life would look like without these men and women and their willingness to stand between you and the evil in this world?
I am not naïve, and I recognize and acknowledge there are people on the job that shouldn’t be. That become drunk on power, that fall to temptation, that lose their way. However, we are all human, we have failings, we are corruptible, we are flawed, selfish and greedy at times. I’m certain you see that in your own line of work. However, I challenge you to find a less corruptible group of individuals than those who walk the Thin Blue Line.
Sir, I want to hate you. I hate what you stand for, I hate that you are in a position to influence young and developing minds. I hate that you have sycophants who eat up your shameful, vile and dangerous rantings.
But I don’t hate you. No, I pity you.
I pity whatever caused your tainted worldview and your twisted logic. I pray you never have need for law enforcement to intervene on your behalf.
However, if the day arrives that they must, I am certain of one thing. They will.
Regardless of your disdain for them, they will. Because THAT is who they are.
Sincerely,
Sherry Graham-Potter
EDITOR’S NOTE: If I were still a cop today, of course I would respond to a call for help from Professor Clover. But I’d be somewhat slower in coming to his assistance and maybe stop off at a Dunkin Donuts on the way.
Here is a Fox News report on Clover's hateful remarks:
CALIFORNIA PROFESSOR REPRIMANDED FOR SAYING POLICE 'NEED TO BE KILLED,' REPORTS SAY
By Frank Miles
Fox News
February 26, 2019
An English and comparative literature professor in California was reprimanded after an interview quoted him as saying police “need to be killed,” according to reports.
The California Aggie also reported the tweets of UC Davis professor Joshua Clover, who is also a poet:
“I am thankful that every living cop will one day be dead, some by their own hand, some by others, too many of old age #letsnotmakemore” — tweeted on Nov. 27, 2014.
“I mean, it’s easier to shoot cops when their backs are turned, no?” — tweeted on Dec. 27, 2014.
“People think that cops need to be reformed. They need to be killed.” — published in an interview on Jan. 31, 2016.
The university said in a statement: “The UC Davis administration condemns the statement of Professor Clover to which you refer. It does not reflect our institutional values, and we find it unconscionable that anyone would condone much less appear to advocate murder. ... We support law enforcement, and the UC Davis Police Department and Chief Joe Farrow have been and remain critical partners to our community.”
Clover, whose work focuses on critical and political theory, political economy, poetry, poetics and Marxism, wrote to The Aggie, saying, “I think we can all agree that the most effective way to end any violence against officers is the complete and immediate abolition of the police.”
Clover added he would “direct any further questions to the family of Michael Brown.”
Brown, 18, black and unarmed, was fatally shot by white officer Darren Wilson on Aug. 9, 2014 in a St. Louis suburb. Wilson was cleared of wrongdoing and resigned in November 2014.
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