(8 votes) When most of us see the police, we see them on the front lines of the war for our country. The police are on the streets, chasing down Democrat-supported mobs burning down Black businesses or dealing drugs on the corners of Democrat-run cities. The police run toward gunfire, toward traffic accidents, toward scenes of domestic abuse. We see the police in uniform, the thin blue line between our safety and the chaos of the Woke American Revolution (WAR). Because of this visibility of the police in our streets, we might tend to forget that the men and women on patrol are members of our communities, too. Often indispensable ones. I recently sat down with Dorothée Maver, wife of James Maver, a police officer in the Village of Mamaroneck in Westchester County, New York. During that brief interview, I got a glimpse of just how rooted the lives of police officers are in the communities they risk their lives to serve and protect.