Bound to the results of selfishness?

flautistnaturist
Bound to the results of selfishness?

It seems like almost any matter a police officer may find himself/herself/God help us, whoever-self, doing in the line of duty, in most regards, is violation of either or both natural and enforced law for common citizens to be engaging in, whether it be killing, stalking, involuntary restraint, assault, disturbing the peace, harassment, speeding, extortion, just off the top of the head.

The only reason the populace in general of which we are contributing part as individuals, allows such treatment as normal expected behavior, is that we are all so addicted to our own selfishness that we are unwilling to simply live for the wellbeing of the experiences of others rather than of ourselves. So we choose collectively to opt in to submission to these often thought of as inexcusable acts being done to us, simply for our own therein earned privilege of casting off expectation of unselfish living, and insomuch, therein lies the false "necessity" of the police: in that as a species, collectively, we are of such poor character that we refuse simply having broadly aware kindness as our regulating inner force, as normal societal standard. So the next time someone complains about discomfort at the police, it might be good for all involved to realize that what we are really uncomfortable with is the uncomfortable effect of our own ungodly group character as a collective superorganism.

It has been said that the human organism is free at the moment such an organism chooses to be. Wouldn't it be such a drastic improvement, if our entire superorganism, together, chose to be free at once and in one accord, of both the individual and societally contractual selfishness currently enslaving us all to the mercies of these overseers as though competence to act soundly is beyond us all . . . it certainly seems so.

By the unusual person willing to stand up for decency, county-wide pushback against conduct unfit for the police has been successful when peaceably pursued, news of which does get around. But with even so many of us turning our backs on the needs of even the least fortunate, from where are we to collect worldchangers of such character en mass? Half of "properly" enforced laws are even in themselves violations of true decency, publicly agreed upon. Is there any help for us short of banding together to entirely voluntarily stray from selfishness collectively?

Bound to the results of selfishness?
2 Opinion