If tear gas were only as dangerous as its name suggests, it would be an ideal tool to use against rioters. But it does much worse than provoke excessive flow of tears.
The chemical agents being used to disperse crowds in the Twin Cities and elsewhere — scores of times since the murder of George Floyd nearly a year ago — are dangerous enough that emergency room workers are advised to double-bag and seal the clothing of exposed victims.
Lung damage, blindness, abnormal menstruation, miscarriage, coma, heart failure, death: The list of known or suspected health effects of CS, CN and similar agents is long and frightening. If they were side effects that needed to be disclosed to patients before a procedure, few would give consent. No one would voluntarily choose exposure to such hazards.
There is nothing voluntary, though, about exposure to tear gas. It is by its nature indiscriminate. It affects people who are beyond the center of action in a riot. It wafts through neighborhoods and seeps into homes and businesses. Area residents describe coughing fits they've suffered indoors, even after stuffing wet towels around windows.
"In a COVID time, the last thing you want to do is cause an inflammatory reaction inside the lungs that may be long-lasting," said Dr. Steven Miles, professor emeritus of medicine and bioethics at the University of Minnesota. He pointed out the particular risk posed by the gas in neighborhoods with high concentrations of people of color, who already suffer disproportionately from COVID-19.
Of course, they also suffer disproportionately from the effects of protests-turned-riots, as the owners of burned businesses along Lake Street in Minneapolis and looted businesses in Brooklyn Center can attest. It is easier to object to tear gas than to suggest a credible alternative. In disturbances like those that followed Floyd's murder and Daunte Wright's fatal encounter with police in Brooklyn Center, law enforcement agencies must choose among bad options.
It's worth remembering that the deaths and injuries at Kent State, 51 years ago this week, happened because National Guard troops resorted to live ammunition after tear gas had proved ineffective.
The casualties at Kent State were also the result of inadequate training and poor communication among Guard troops. At a minimum, law enforcement agencies should insist that personnel be scrupulously trained in the use of chemical agents to minimize the risk to innocent people, whether neighboring residents or legitimate protesters. Such training should also teach officers to aim tear-gas projectiles so that they don't hit people or land on apartment balconies, as reportedly happened in Brooklyn Center.