| >In those cases, it quite literally happens in the same breath. Perhaps you could show some examples, then. What you describe is completely foreign to my own experience. >When a LEO shoots someone without due cause No, that is not when the argument is brought out. Often, however, it's brought out to highlight that there was, in fact, due cause that was not obvious to critics. >But there's not very much risk if you shoot someone the first chance you get They don't actually do this, in any remotely ordinary circumstance. They do shoot people who threaten them - because someone with a knife standing several meters away, who doesn't care about the risk of getting shot, can seriously injure you before you can get off a clear shot with a gun (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tueller_Drill). >And there's not very much risk if you cannot face jail time for such an action, right? If you ignore the risk of physical injury or death (also noting that some criminals also carry firearms), then yes, there is not very much risk. >People usually do the opposite when they make such an argument You are still not providing anything that resembles evidence. |
> If you ignore the risk of physical injury or death
I didn't. It's really going over your head here.
> evidence
... of what? The phenomenon that people will often talk about risk while also using that definition of risk as justification for why slack should be given? I just did, in two different ways.
But it's a real phenomenon and you can find literally infinite examples. I don't know why you're fighting me on this, to me this is painfully obvious.
People say the same thing about the military. Risky, risking their lives, heros, yadda yadda yadda therefore look past some small crimes. These arguments eat themselves from the inside out.