I hope more than anything that this tragedy will be used as an example of what is wrong with the way law enforcement is used in the US.
I was watching a video on YouTube, before I came to work today, on this topic. I don't think it's appropriate to link it, as it is a pro gun channel. However, there was a point made within the video that stood out to me.
He said that part of the problem is that the police are no longer trained or posted to be part of the communities for which they work in.
This is something that applies here in Canada as well.
I have worked in fields that have had me to have frequent brief interactions with police officers. (Not as a suspect or other type of law enforcement. Strictly as a civilian. Retail specifically.)
I worked in one area of this city for several years, in which I had interactions with police officers at least once per week, for various reasons (usually to pick up counterfeit money).
Out of the many dozens of times I met an officer. Only 3 times, yes 3. I met the same officer twice. It was almost always a different person.
I understand why this can be a good thing. But it also is a bad thing, as I never got a opportunity to know any of these officers. It was always a tense feeling as well. Police here are trained to be very to the point, no bullshit or small talk, professional. While I've no doubt it's not intended to be taken this way, it comes across as unfriendly. Which is a shame.
Eventually (and I hate to say this) it got to the point where I wouldn't even bother smiling or even saying hello, as it was never reciprocated. I began dreading having anything to do with them.
This in my opinion, is never how a law abiding citizen should feel about interacting with police. Especially when it is clear that you are not in anyway a criminal.
I would have to remind myself, that this officer, may have just come here from a bad call. Maybe the last person they spoke to was a sobbing parent of a teen suicide. Or a dead baby call, from some shitty junkies house. Or a rape, murder, assault on old lady or any number of awful things police see on a day to day basis.
Or maybe the cop was just a jerk. That happens too. Though I refuse to accept that 90% of police officers here are jerks.
Though I had no way of knowing, as this is likely the only time I would see this officer. All I was usually left with was a bad taste in my mouth about someone who I should have been pleased to have an opportunity to have interacted with. If only for a few minutes.
To have read in this thread, how the police and protestors had been sharing pleasant conversation and taking pictures prior to the violence, makes this all the more awful and tragic.