That's a... selective reading of that police report.
The idea that it is right for police to violently enforce their every whim if one does not immediately obey all commands is a serious problem.
For one, only a small subset of all possible commands a police officer could make are commands which one is legally obligated to follow.
Secondly, I think we want a society where police choose constructive dialog over violence.
Nothing about this incident was necessary or proportionate.
Unnecessary violence has made policing dangerous lately. A few years ago it was more dangerous to supervise lawncare, be a taxi driver, collect garbage, or be a handyman than it was to be a police officer.
I wonder if this year's escalations will lead to policing actually becoming a dangerous profession. :(
>Secondly, I think we want a society where police choose constructive dialog over violence.
seeing how deep the police got addicted to violence one can only wonder whether it is possible for them to get sober at all.
I mean you can't make that up - https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2016/07/2... . Just make sure to watch the video. The police tried to shoot the autistic patient even after the therapist clearly explained to them everything, and there were absolutely no danger to anybody. The police screwed the shot [fortunately] and instead of killing the autistic patient they hit the therapist in the leg.
I get that everyone's on edge, but please, "PUT AWAY THE GUNS".
America has many consensual crimes (drugs, prostitution, etc.), and that makes a very large percentage of the population criminals who must live outside the law.
I'm not sure this can be fixed until it is unusual for a police interaction with a citizen to be a police-criminal interaction. If most of the people you meet as a law enforcement officer are criminals who interact with the world of drugs (a world which currently features privatized violence-based contract enforcement), then I guess a person's prior probability matrix gets fucked up.
it gets even "better" - the police who shot black therapist is now saying that he was trying to save the therapist from the autistic patient. If not for the video, we'd never knew how really low their lies are. The police demonstrate all the symptoms of addiction - doing their drug (violence) and lying about it in the face of obviously contradicting evidence.
Man! The fact that such explanation even came to your mind ... It would be hilarious if it wasn't a such tragic indication of a new low police have reached in public perception and the cost of it shouldered by the blacks and others.
The idea that it is right for police to violently enforce their every whim if one does not immediately obey all commands is a serious problem.
For one, only a small subset of all possible commands a police officer could make are commands which one is legally obligated to follow.
Secondly, I think we want a society where police choose constructive dialog over violence.
Nothing about this incident was necessary or proportionate.
Unnecessary violence has made policing dangerous lately. A few years ago it was more dangerous to supervise lawncare, be a taxi driver, collect garbage, or be a handyman than it was to be a police officer.
I wonder if this year's escalations will lead to policing actually becoming a dangerous profession. :(