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I think the best answer for your question is your own statement:when did you become police of my threads here?
Please stop reading intent where there is none.
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I think the best answer for your question is your own statement:when did you become police of my threads here?
Please stop reading intent where there is none.
So does anyone have any thoughts on why police are being targeted
Police departments design rules and training with the aim of resolving difficult situations without shooting anyone. But the rules vary enormously. About half of departments allow officers to give chase no matter what offense a suspect has committed, while the other half limits pursuits to certain kinds of offenses, according to a study by the International Association of Chiefs of Police.
After Las Vegas police in 2009 adopted a use-of-force policy requiring officers to put the highest premium on “the sanctity of human life,” some other departments followed suit. Four years after the change in Las Vegas, the city’s officer-involved shootings had fallen by nearly half. “That is a real sign of the times, a new kind of language that changes police culture,” said Wexler, [Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum, a Washington police think tank.], whose organization recommends tighter pursuit policies. “The guiding principle has to be proportionality: Is my action proportional to the act being committed?"...When New York, Boston and other big cities tightened rules on pursuits, they saw a sharp decline in the number of officers who shot at vehicles.
Police have shot and killed a young black man (ages 18 to 29) — such as Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. —175 times since January 2015; 24 of them were unarmed. Over that same period, police have shot and killed 172 young white men, 18 of whom were unarmed. Once again, while in raw numbers there were similar totals of white and black victims, blacks were killed at rates disproportionate to their percentage of the U.S. population. Of all of the unarmed people shot and killed by police in 2015, 40 percent of them were black men, even though black men make up just 6 percent of the nation’s population.
But personally, I believe that the next move should be aggressive and monitored law-enforcement reform. Training needs to be better, preserving human life higher on the scale, and all this needs to be communicated clearly with real change being seen and felt.
But personally, I believe that the next move should be aggressive and monitored law-enforcement reform. Training needs to be better, preserving human life higher on the scale, and all this needs to be communicated clearly with real change being seen and felt.
Til then, it's not going to get any better.
then a cop should face exactly the same procedure as any other citizen
some police departments ARE the criminals, responsible for burglaries, protection rackets, black markets in stolen goods, kiddy fiddling
Yes, because it's a pervasive problem and there's nothing being done about it.Are people that frustrated that they's shoot at a bunch of police (that have their own guns by the way)? I dont get that.
Also cops have tazer guns and other things that bring the suspect down without possible death, that can help too. Not possible in all situations obviously but in some and that can lower the possible death in the situation.