The Rise of Public Health and ‘Green’ Police: Securitization Theory
Policing has come a long way since the days of good ole boy Barney Fife.
Once upon a time, cops were tasked primarily with things like catching murderers and rapists and protecting property.
They were always used, of course, whenever necessary, to protect state interests – but, then again, the state’s interests weren’t always so obviously nefarious and illegitimate as they are today.
Law enforcement’s purview expansion is explained in large part by securitization theory.
As a result of the this process, peculiar new breeds of law enforcement – Public Health© officers and green police – have sprung up throughout the West.
Securitization theory: the advent of new security threats
The basic premise of securitization theory in political science is that, given the opportunity, a state will endlessly concoct new security “threats” as a justification to exercise greater power outside of the constraints of the normal political process:
“Securitisation theory shows us that national security policy is not a natural given, but carefully designated by politicians and decision-makers. According to securitisation theory, political issues are constituted as extreme security issues to be dealt with urgently when they have been labelled as ‘dangerous’… by a ‘securitising actor’ who has the social and institutional power to move the issue ‘beyond politics’.”
The process, in a nutshell, works like this:
The government identifies a new existential “threat,” either legitimate or overblown, either naturally occurring or cynically engineered by the state itself.The corporate media and corporate state stoke fear about the threat into the hearts and minds of a gullible publicIn the fog of panic, the state slyly provisions itself with new authority and resources to combat the threat, thereby increasing its powerThe threats change, but whether “domestic terrorism,” COVID-19, or climate change, the process largely remains the same.
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