This picture isn’t from urban fighting in Iraq a few years back. It’s from Tuesday in Birmingham. More than a hundred officers — local police, sheriff’s deputies and DEA agents — stormed a housing project to conduct seven simultaneous drug raids.
Reporters and photographers from The Birmingham News were along for the ride and recorded the action. The pictures make it look like something from a TV show such as “COPS.”
And what was the result of this massive show of force? Six people were arrested and two weapons were confiscated. That seems to be it. The newspaper said that “the operation was aimed at the ongoing problem of people selling crack cocaine, meth, marijuana and Lortab out of apartments there, and even on street corners.”
So an entire housing project was disrupted with more than a hundred heavily armed officers just to pick up six suspects? All so they can’t conduct voluntary transactions with other people? It seems like an open-and-shut case of state overreach — which is typical of the so-called drug war.
But at least some residents were happy to see police. For instance, 31-year-old Kimberly Coleman told the newspaper that she woke up a couple of weeks ago to discover a bullet hole in her living room window.

I can force child to obey me, but obedience comes with high cost
Rational rules don’t apply when the state gives itself a monopoly
If principles of First Amendment still apply, principles of Second do, too
We who believe life has meaning have lost war for modern culture
What’s at the root of objections to real freedom? Paternalism
Beauty queen’s suicide leaves me pondering lesson of Richard Cory
Doing it for the children? No, they’re doing it for the TV cameras
Tools don’t make you great artist, but tools can change how you feel