This poem came out of the December 3, 2013 Poetry Fishbowl. It was inspired by prompts from Shirley Barrette and my_partner_doug. It also fills the "violence" square in my 11-26-13 card for the Origfic Bingo fest. This poem has been sponsored by Shirley Barrette. It belongs to the series Walking the Beat.
Holiday traffic brings out
the worst in people --
and the best.
The streets of Jamaica Plain
are filled with cars,
the sidewalks and stores
with busy people.
There have been incidents
of violence, most of it
just pushing and shoving
over cheap sales,
but a few cases involving
knives or guns.
Dale and Kelly are concerned,
but they both know that
the city has survived worse.
Back in the 1990s there was
the Boston Strategy to Prevent Youth Violence,
and then in 2007 came a branch
of the Guardian Angels.
They helped the citizens feel safe again.
As the two women walk --
carefully now, watching for ice
that might threaten Dale's tenuous footing --
they sometimes catch a glimpse
of a red satin cap and matching jacket.
Dale smiles to see that
under the uniform, diversity
is peeking through:
Jamaican and Dominican faces
prevail among this neighborhood's patrol.
They cross paths with Johnny Long
standing in line at a street cart
that sells hot chocolate and mulled cider.
Over his police uniform is wrapped a black scarf
with a stupendous Chinese dragon in red and gold.
"How's the Code 19 today?" Dale asks.
"Cold," he whines, warming his hands
around a cup of hot chocolate.
"I stopped a fight this morning, though."
"Good job," Dale says,
tucking her own scarf a little tighter.
White snowflakes show against the dark blue.
Beside her, Kelly is bundled in green,
the ends of her scarf knitted into little hands.
Kelly signs a greeting to Johnny,
who juggles his cup to sign back.
Dale picks up their order at the counter
and passes Kelly her hot chocolate.
Dale's apple cider is tart and savory with spices.
A startled cry and a burst of motion
snag their attention.
Johnny leaps into pursuit --
Dale's cane flicks out between unwary ankles --
and the purse-snatcher skids facedown on the sidewalk.
Johnny pounces on him.
Kelly goes to the victim.
She helps the young woman to her feet,
signing, "OK?"
The woman nods back, adding,
"That jerk took my purse
with all the Christmas money for the kids."
"Looks like Officer Long got your purse back,"
says the beverage vendor, coming out
with another serving of hot chocolate.
He hands it to the victim. "Here, on the house.
You seem like you could use a cup of comfort."
Officer Long has the purse-snatcher well in hand
when a pair of red-coated watchers arrive.
"Is everything all right?" they ask.
"We thought we saw a scuffle over here."
"Thanks, guys," the vendor says,
tipping his head at Dale and Kelly and Officer Long.
"but not all our guardian angels wear red."
* * *
Notes:
The Guardian Angels are a citizen group aimed at making cities safer. They have been active in Boston.
Code 19 means a neighbood foot patrol, used by the Boston Police Department to improve the relationship between officers and citizens. It works pretty well.
Well...
December 10 2013, 23:21:11 UTC 7 years ago
Re: Well...
December 10 2013, 23:37:32 UTC 7 years ago
Although, the police helicopter is a very obvious presence at least a few times a day, so I suppose that sort of counts in a very 'Big Brother' way. That, and the CCTV cameras on every street corner in the town centre of course. [I kid you not] It's all very hands-off and hi-tech...and usually doesn't involve them until after a crime has happened.
Heck, over here Dale would most likely be cautioned for interfering...and then only avoid being arrested because she was an ex-officer herself. The police here are very against what they call 'have-a-go heroes', and even caution the victims that they should 'leave it to the professionals' and not resist.
Re: Well...
December 10 2013, 23:40:03 UTC 7 years ago
That tends to have the opposite effect, creating a barrier instead of a connection.
>> The police here are very against what they call 'have-a-go heroes', and even caution the victims that they should 'leave it to the professionals' and not resist. <<
Which is great if you want to train sheeple to be good victims for criminals and despots, and shitty if you want to have a healthy populace with good problem-solving skills.
Re: Well...
December 11 2013, 00:01:17 UTC 7 years ago
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December 11 2013, 01:15:36 UTC 7 years ago
Don't know why I didn't realise that before... (No, I'm not, despite my Proper English spelling, just a Yank who had a two-year romance with old Blighty before a New Yorker read him the riot act.... and made him love her.)
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Anonymous
4 years ago
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December 11 2013, 01:44:31 UTC 7 years ago
Too bad some people's parents bought their grades. One doesn't learn much that way.
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7 years ago
Well, yes, but... :-)
December 15 2013, 21:03:52 UTC 7 years ago
I also see the police in a two way bind. You don't want to suggest that non-fighter try to defend against a fighting thug, and you don't want to set up situations in which civilians might escalate an encounter from property loss to violence (in the US, much more so). On the other hand, yes, a populace that looks out for themselves and each other is the best defense against criminal activity.
I'm not sure if there are any *good* answers to that bind.
Re: Well, yes, but... :-)
December 15 2013, 21:21:11 UTC 7 years ago
Conversely if you withhold information and train people to be helpless, minor problems rapidly snowball. During a tornado, people will hide in trailers and die. A treatable injury treated wrong may turn crippling or fatal. A minor fire results in a house burning down, when it could've been put out with a fire extinguisher or even a pot lid. One gunshot creates a panicked mob. This is not good for anyone.
It depends on whether you want your citizens to be capable human beings, or sheep. Sheep are easily led ... but that doesn't necessarily mean you'll always be the leader. Someone else could steal them, or they could just stampede at random.
Many societies right now are training people to be helpless, which is a problem, because the world is getting harsher due to foolish decisions. People need those survival skills. They need a sense of fellowship.
Re: Well...
December 11 2013, 01:19:03 UTC 7 years ago
The sooner the Queen remembers *all* of her powers and sacks b----y Cameron the better.
Re: Well...
December 11 2013, 01:23:22 UTC 7 years ago Edited: December 11 2013, 01:26:51 UTC
Then again, they might finally do something so egregiously evil that she sacks them, despite their pointed reminders of 'remember what happened to Edward'.
Re: Well...
December 11 2013, 01:45:39 UTC 7 years ago
Who knows?
>> [actually, I'd give better than even odds of her out-lasting Charles.] <<
That wouldn't surprise me.
>> Then again, they might finally do something so egregiously evil that she sacks them, despite their pointed reminders of 'remember what happened to Edward'. <<
Nor would this. She really isn't someone you want to piss off.
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December 11 2013, 01:46:59 UTC 7 years ago
Whenever you see someone banning compassionate or valorous behavior, well, that tells you what side they're on, doesn't it?
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December 11 2013, 01:57:50 UTC 7 years ago
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December 11 2013, 02:01:12 UTC 7 years ago
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December 12 2013, 23:23:53 UTC 7 years ago
As Franklin Noted
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