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by DiscourseFan
870 days ago
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"Finding out the truth" sounds almost like the goal is to uncover sets of relations that produce crime, and therefore to surveil the social world, rather than to simply look and see if its necessary to charge someone for purposes of social maintenance. The US policing and prison system is very maligned, but even for all that 95%+ of times when the police are called, nobody gets arrested and nothing happens, in fact the police just try to diffuse the situation; they are not there to get anyone arrested, but if they need to arrest someone, they will. The US is just a particularly violent place with extraordinarily well-funded police departments. |
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Compared to peer nations, the US spends a decidedly ordinary amount of money on the police:
https://www.cfr.org/backgrounder/how-police-compare-differen...
What makes policing in the United States different is the weakness of central (i.e. federal) authority and lack of nationwide standards of training and conduct. Typical US police training is about six months, while European programs are not rarely three years (including essentially an associates degree in law enforcement). A parallel issue is civil asset forfeiture, which can amount to legitimized robbery.