So, in an earlier thread, we were discussing the increasing use of military surplus equipment by police forces in the US, and how it changes the outcome of any police intervention.
Now, we have a horrifying example of just what can go wrong with that.
Last Saturday, a police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, shot an unarmed black kid 8 (EIGHT!) times. Because of the unclear nature of the shooting (there is currently no hard info on what provoked it, and there will likely never be any, since Ferguson PD squad cars are not fitted with cameras or other logging devices), and because this whole case is "racially charged" (Ferguson is a predominantly black town, its police department however is overwhelmingly white), tempers were rising high, and so protests turned into riots.
Ferguson PD, by all accounts, overreacted massively. They deployed APCs, fitted out their patrolling people with gear more commonly associated with combat troops patrolling the worst parts of Iraq or Afghanistan, stopped citizens from going to their homes, fired tear gas into protesters, and went about their business looking like this:

Also seen were scenes like this:

Business Insider writer Paul Szoldra, a former Marine who served in Afghanistan, wrote
a rather cutting piece about this.
When did this become OK? When did "protect and serve" turn into "us versus them"?
"Why do these cops need MARPAT camo pants again," I asked on Twitter this morning. One of the most interesting responses came from a follower who says he served in the Army's 82nd Airborne Division: "We rolled lighter than that in an actual warzone."
Let's be clear: This is not a war zone — even if the FAA banned flights under 3,000 feet. This is a city outside of St. Louis where people on both sides are angry. Protesters have looted and torched a gas station, and shots were fired at police, according to The Washington Post.
The scene is tense, but the presence of what looks like a military force doesn't seem to be helping.
"Bring it. You ****ing animals, bring it," one police officer was caught on video telling protesters. In Ferguson and beyond, it seems that some police officers have shed the blue uniform and have put on the uniform and gear of the military, bringing the attitude along with it.
This, to me, is horrifying and insane. It's a fundamental failure in the relationship between the police force and the civilian population, and as time goes on, we will see more of this. Not because the civilians have become inherently more violent, but because once the menu of response options for the police starts to include "roll up in badass gear to scare the darkies", that option is going to be exercised.