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by baryphonic
2033 days ago
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Framing in these types of polls is incredibly important (indeed, I found two others from around the same time as yours, and all were fairly different from one another in their conclusions[1][2]). If you ask people whether they want the police presence in their communities to stay the same or increase, large majorities agree. Only 19% of black Americans want police presence to decrease.[3] And yet none of this is inconsistent. If the problems in predominantly non-white urban areas are at least in part crime problems that the police aren't solving, it makes sense for those citizens to want to take money from the police, whom they perceive to not be doing their jobs. At the same time, these same people probably would prefer the police to just do their jobs in the first place. [1]https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/64-americans-oppose-defund-p... [2]https://news.gallup.com/poll/315962/americans-say-policing-n... [3]https://news.gallup.com/poll/316571/black-americans-police-r... |
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One example, from the first Gallup poll:
> Which of the following best describes your view about changes that may or may not need to be made to policing in the United States?
> Major changes needed:
> Black Americans: 88%
> White Americans: 51%
We can quibble about the definition of "radical" vs "major" but it seems pretty clear based on most polling that Black americans are far more dissatisfied as a demographic group with policing, than white americans, and are far more open to a variety of reforms ranging from minor to "radical".
As you said, there's no contradiction between wanting to reallocate money from police, who may be seen as doing a poor job, to social services, and wanting the police to actually show up and do the job they're supposed to be doing.