Date: Tue, 23 Jul 91 12:20:22 PDT From: nelson@BOLYARD.WPD.SGI.COM(Nelson Bolyard) Subject: File 2--Response to "The Terminus of Len Rose" In article <1991Jul19.033544.11623@chinacat.unicom.com> "Craig Neidorf" wrote one of the first articles I've read that actually gave facts about what happened to Len Rose after he moved to Illinois. I appreciate that. But then he wrote (about the law enforcement folks who were involved): >A Few Words About Law Enforcement and the Len Rose case... >[...] These people are decent folks just like you and me. Despite the >highly publicized incidents of the past couple of years, the vast >majority of these people are not out there trying to destroy someone's >life just to make a name for themselves or to put a notch on their >desk. They believe in their work like a sacred religious mission. At >the same time they have families, hobbies, like to go to the movies, >play video games, take vacations during the holidays, and everything >else. > [...] I believe that the prosecutors >acted in the way they thought best and were not out to deny Rose of >his constitutional rights, [...] > While I believe that the prosecutors involved with his case are >honest, hardworking, and highly motivated people, [...] >As a group in general, the law enforcement community has >earned my respect and appreciation. This is sad. During World War II, millions of innocent and less-than-innocent people were put to death in concentration camps by "decent folks" who "believe in their work like a sacred religious mission", who "have families, hobbies, like to go to the movies, play video games, take vacations during the holidays, and everything else." They were just soldiers in a war, who did what they believed their superiors expected of them, without questioning the morality of their actions. Some of them actually believed the pseudo-religious Nazi doctrines that the jews were the cause of all their people's problems. The lesson we and all the world's inhabitants should have learned from WW2 is that each of us is responsible for the consequences of his actions, and it is up to each of us to be sure that our actions are moral and just. None of us can hide his actions behind the excuse that his superiors, or some recent and hastily-enacted law, justifies an immoral act. If the law enforcement community of the US has failed to learn this lesson, then we are doomed to repeat an awful history. ------------------------------