Khross wrote:
You do realize your argument is a regressive post hoc fallacy right? Because violence did not occur, the situation was not escalated. That's both logically and factually incorrect.
No, that's exactly correct. I never claimed that the officer knew beforehand that it definitely wouldn't escalate. It might or might not have. It also might or might not have had he not drawn his gun. Escalation refers to the
level of violence (or ore appropriately, force) in the first place; a lack of violence precludes escalation absolutely. Neither side used any, therefore the encounter never escalated.
What you are attempting to do is simplay assert that escalation has occured because drawing gun must necessarily be an escalation, and you have offered no good reason why.
Any time an officer interacts with anyone, it's a gamble. One can predict with a certain degree of probability what will happen, but one cannot know for sure. The officer guessed that having his gun already drawn would be a powerful deterrent to aggressive behavior by the person he stopped, about whom he knew absolutely nothing; it could have been a wanted bank robber. Most people will not attempt to beat someone who already has their gun drawn in a speed contest, but some people might try out of desperation or stupidity.
The fact that the officer was wrong in his belief that the man was illegally carrying the gun does not affect this in any way.
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A non-escalated situation would, regardless of your assertions and equivocation, require zero threat of force or violence or commission of violence/exertion of force by either party. Even in a state of ignorance, the officer could have questioned the individual's behavior (open carry) and arrived at the same conclusion without a) drawing his gun or b) the explicit threat of high level force that action entails.
A non-escalated situation requires no such thing. "Escalation" is a technical term used in law enforcement and means a specific thing in that context. Even in other areas, a threat of force is not escalation to that level. A threat to use nuclear weapons in the midst of a conventional war does not mean the war was escalated to a nuclear conflict; it means there was a threat of that, presumably to get the enemy to back down.
If we want to use your definition of escalation, ok, fine, according to a dictionary definition he escalated it. However, he didn't from a law enforcement standpoint, so it's irrelevant. You can't switch definitions in midstream.
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As such, drawing his gun makes the cop's behavior dubious.
In your personal opinion
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Acting out of ignorance, regardless of root cause for that ignorance, is not an upstanding or rational behavior for a public servant with special dispensation to use force in stopping a crime.
This is an utterly silly statement. Have you any evidence whatsoever that the officer
knew he was ignorant? Unless he was aware and acted anyhow, you cannot in any way claim his behavior was not upstanding or rational. This is doubly true if his ignorance was due to the negligence of others, which the facts strongly indicate was the case.
You could claim his behavior was wrong and in need of correction, but that's it.
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More to the point, because the officer was not stopping the commission of any crime and responded to a perfect legal action with a demonstrable threat of force, his judgment and behavior should be questioned and deeply scrutinized.
Not really. Many demonstrably legal actions appear to be a crime at first and require precautions to be taken. For example, if a burglar alarm goes off, and the polcie arrive with guns drawn to find a large white van at a rear door to a building, the fact that the people turn out to be custodians who forgot the alarm code does not mean the actions of the police need to be "questioned and deeply scrutinized."
You are focusing on the gun because it offers the greatest chance to castigate yet another cop. The gun is really not the issue. The issue is why he was not aware of open carry laws. I have pointed out why the facts lead to the conclusion that the city is covering its *** after failing to train on this issue. In fact, it occured to me that the city may not approve of state open carry laws and has quietly discourged it by avoiding mention that it is legal, and now it has bit them in the ***. This would put Philadelphia's behavior on par with Chicago and NYC and having lived in a suburb of Philly for over 10 years, counting summers home from college, it fits what I know of the city quite well.