Lee Daniel Crocker wrote:
 >
 > > A police officer is roughly defined as an individual hired by a given city
 > > to provide general protection services and to maintain the jurisdictional
 > > laws.  The Chief of Police in Washington, D.C., proposes placing more
 > > police officers on the night shift, so as to provide a greater presence of
 > > police officers at the time the criminals are more active.  The police
 > > union strongly opposes this new strategy, and Thursday morning our police
 > > officers plan to march on police headquarters to register their strong
 > > disapproval.
 > >
 > > Is this:
 > > a.  circular logic?
 > > b.  false causality?  or
 > > c.  a serious semantic disconnect?
 >
 > Sounds to me like rational people pursuing their self-interest, exactly
 > as we should expect them to do.  The only fallacy is committed by those
 > who expect public officers to act in the public's interest just because
 > some piece of paper says they should.
Ah, but they swear to 'protect and serve', don't they? If they are our servants they should do what we dam# well tell them to do. They get those nice pensions, benefits, etc that a private police officer could only hope for. Heck, even old Cal Coolidge, probably the most libertarian president of the century, said,"nobody has a right to strike against the publics safety" when he broke the Bostom Police Strike back when he was in local politics...
Mike Lorrey