Diamondeye wrote:
Indeed, let's not.
"Not", however, will mean accepting some very hard truths:
1) To the degree that there is a need for police reform, it is going to be expensive, and it is NOT going to result in nicey-nice policing where no one gets shot ever again. No amount of de-escalation training is going to make it possible to de-escalate out of every situation. Things that (in my view) do need to happen are ends to civil forfeiture, no-knock warrants, and to regarding the possession of a weapon in and of itself as something that warrants action. The anti-gun people will need to start accepting that regarding possession of a gun as a problem will result in escalation far more often than we would like. Simply more training overall is probably a good idea because there just isn't a lot of it. Jocko Willink proposed 20% of time should be spent on training; I do not know if that's do-able, but 10% might be and it would be a lot better.
2) There is a need for people reform as well. Quite a few people are going to need to accept that shoving a phone into a situation that's already half over to film it is not an investigation, or cause of action against a police officer. Neither is seeing such a video on YouTube without any idea who filmed it, what happened before or after, left, right, above, or below, what might have been done to the video, nor can we necessarily trust that it captured what's right there (especially in the dark, adverse weather, or when the camera is bouncing all over the place). Far too much outrage at "police brutality" is based on collecting anecdotes, and not always based on quality evidence. The George Floyd video is VERY clear-cut; few videos rise to this standard. Finally, a lot of black people and white leftists are going to have to accept that "racism" is at best a simplisitic explanation for very complex factors - and some of those factors involve political actors (not politicians necessarily) trying to maintain a fear of police and distrust of white people in general in order to hold onto black votes.
The rest of your post was fun to read, but I don't really feel a burning drive to comment on it.
You raise a compelling point about the need for realistic expectations of police reform. You're never going to get to zero police shootings, without a degree of "people reform" that, quite frankly, we're all uncomfortable with. The use of force, or the threat of force, is an important negotiating tool. Though I'm philosophically opposed to the death penalty, for instance, it has a valid purpose. There needs to be an answer to, "What are you gonna do about it?" Maximum application of force is not a suitable answer to all problems, however, as it removes the incentive for the other party to de-escalate. When there are a range of possible punishments available, fewer criminals murder their victims. Some criminals still do murder their victims, though, and the police do need to be ready and willing to go all the way there if that's what's about to go down.
The issue that a lot of police interactions run into is that some percentage of black Americans have the notion that the police are racists who are out to kill them. We can debate whether cops are racist and to what degree until we're blue in the face, and that doesn't matter. What matters is a statistically significant portion of blacks believes this. That's the obstacle to overcome. Law and order types who do not accept this fundamental fact will never make any headway. All the police reform in the world is meaningless if the community doesn't acknowledge that reform is happening.
Training, which you touched on, is another big issue. In addition to training is officer evaluation. There are some people who are simply unfit to be police officers. How many officers like this exist is something of an open question. It is undoubtedly fewer than the general public thinks, as police interactions are generally negative to begin with. Previously, my sense was that most officers denied the existence of glorified bullies using the badge as a shield to hide behind while they brutalized their fellow man. The most significant thing I've seen recently has been the number of police officers who, when faced with this abuse of the badge and uniform, have expressed genuine outrage. This is promising, but until police departments start tossing these guys out on their asses, convincing the public they're reforming isn't going to be possible.
One of the changes that will have to occur is that police unions will have to be overhauled, and possibly abolished. However, it isn't fair to the police to treat them as if they are uniquely bad in this way. Teachers have the same problem. It is a harrowing experience for a school principal to try to fire a teacher that gets caught diddling children. The extent to which the union bureaucracy defends bad actors boggles the mind. This is going to be a hard pill for the left to swallow, because they love unions about as much as the right loves churches.
You bring up a valid point about the need to stop regarding possessing a gun as a crime in and of itself (and the escalation that attitude invariably leads to), but that is an argument that cuts both ways. We need police to cease this fantasy that they are in life-threatening danger every moment they're on the job (Portland and Seattle notwithstanding - those police officers should have traded their rubber bullets for live ammunition back in June). There are aspects of policing that are dangerous, but we had, until recently, a declining trend in violent crime. This notion that they're in danger all of the time is causing a lot of these tragic deaths that we're bombarded with in the news. In this, I do not think we are actually raising different arguments. Your point about viewing possession of a gun as a crime unto itself causing escalation implies that you think we have primed many of our officers to go weapons-hot too quickly. There is likely another complicating factor as well, which is officers running into the same type of knucklehead over and over again - almost like everyone they encounter is the same person, just with a different name and face. This has to cause frustration and demoralization, which could be impacting the officers' decision-making. It may be that police should be required to rotate duties every so often, and take a one-year break from certain job functions.
We also need to be more fair to police officers in what we expect of them. I think one of the problems is that we have too many laws and crimes for the number of police we actually have. More police isn't the answer. I think we need fewer laws and crimes. Police should not "have options" as far as charging people with crimes. That leads to asymmetric enforcement of law, which causes all kinds of societal problems. As much as it sucks to get a speeding ticket, and as awesome as it is to get off with a warning, if
everybody gets that ticket, it's fair. Every jurisdiction, from federal on down to municipal, has laws on the books specifically to allow police to charge people with something in lieu of evidence of the crime they want to prosecute. Basically, to enable the police to send Al Capone to prison on tax evasion since they couldn't catch him on any of the actual gangster **** he was doing. (And on that note, ending Prohibition would have also ended Capone's empire.) The big offender here is obvious, but I think there are more opportunities to improve our body of law than just the drug war.
On people reform, there's something to be said for bringing back a certain level of violence. I watched a clip from one of the Atlanta riots where a white teenager hit the windshield of a police car with his skateboard. Out pops this brick wall of a black man to provide that boy the loving discipline his parents were too pussified to give him. Seeing some of these videos, and hearing the vile **** coming out of these rioters' mouths, usually white rioters spouting off racial slurs at black police officers, I'm really coming around to the argument that we have a generation of adults who don't know what an ass-whoopin' is.