Well, it turns out maintaining a fan page with thousands of "Likes" in a profession like crime fighting can become quite a project. It is fun to see the reaction to a new article, or a photo at a seminar, or a funny post such as the one of the K-9 sitting in a patrol car with the caption "Saw bad guy, bit same!" But does the public find it funny?
We like to think our social media posts are our little inside jokes, and that the public doesn't get a say. But more and more, after a critical incident the news media (cue the Darth Vader music from "Star Wars") immediately races to scour the various forms of communication we have used to expose our deepest thoughts. A couple of years ago I closed an otherwise positive conference on police uses of social media with a section I called "You bet your badge," where I showed various postings on Twitter and Facebook that contained job-threatening sayings, quotes, and pictures. Sadly, some were right off of my own sites.
Go to my Facebook page and you will see pictures of me with some crime fighters in Winnemucca, or my dog sleeping as I ramble on at a corrections conference in South Dakota, or the Sarge and me quaffing a brew after a Wisconsin talk. You will also see sad postings about the fallen and positive postings, and I like to celebrate a "Not Today!" moment when a warrior wins a battle against an evildoer. There's no fair and balanced here; I am unabashedly pro-police.
But what you will also find there if you read people's comments is that some of my friends have absolutely no filter on what they are willing to share with the world. I have good amigos who think every thought they have should be shared, and the day they win a gunfight I pray the media doesn't look them up and find their online comments.
It's OK to comment on things you are concerned about and to share a fun social moment. But, gang, think before you post. If you shot somebody tomorrow, how would the post you put up today about wishing they issued tags for "dirt bags" read in the mind of Miss Mary Poppins sitting at her breakfast table?