Diamondeye wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
That doesn't make any sense, though.
Oh, I agree that it doesn't make sense. Yet, it happens. The tactics developed to deal with heavily armed drug dealers having bled over into use against less formidable suspects.
I don't see that they have. You stated off saying you "worry about it" then I pointed out why they wouldn't, then you ome back and say that they have.
DE, "having bled over" means it has already happened. As I stated initially: " I worry about the tactics developed to deal with heavily armed drug dealers
having bled over into use against less formidable suspects." The I repeated my statement as I wasn't sure you understood.
Yes, you worry about whether it has happened.
No, I worry because it has happened.
Diamondeye wrote:
The fact is that it hasn't.
Fiat declaration.
Diamondeye wrote:
The fact is that they haven't.
Fiat declaration.
Diamondeye wrote:
They can't.
Fiat declaration.
Diamondeye wrote:
You can't apply the tactics that apply to SWAT teams and drug raids to regular policing because the situations are too dissimilar.
Fiat declaration.
Diamondeye wrote:
It simply won't work and cannot meaningfully be done.
Fiat declaration.
Quote:
Diamondeye wrote:
I am not making "adamant fiat declarations" (contrary to the accepted glade practice of simply claiming any position you disagree with, especially an unpopular one is a "fiat declaration" and calling it such consitutes some sort of insta-win)
You repeatedly make statements such as the ones I've highlighted above and insist that they are true based on the fact that you made them. That's a fiat declaration. Of course I'm going to desire some proof regarding a position I disagree with, if I agreed with it, I'd already have seen the proof. Whatever you may think of various "accepted glade practices", you're discussing this with me, not "the glade".
Diamondeye wrote:
The fact is that when a person has, or is likely to, barricade themselves in the home (or any other structure) those sorts of tactics are appropriate. This does not mean it's somehow "bled over" into any other sort of police work, especially not protests and riot control.
The fact is that none of the situations I reiterated in this post involved the suspect barricading themselves in prior to the SWAT team arriving, as a matter of fact, one of them involved the SWAT team using
a key to the home.
Diamondeye wrote:
This is like saying that the advent of nuclear weapons somehow "bled over" into the development of depleted uranium armor and penetrators.
No, it would be like saying that the advent of nuclear weapons, and their use, in anticipation of an amphibious assault that would cost millions of lives, "bled over" if they were then used to enforce a "no fly zone" in Libya.
Diamondeye wrote:
As for these incidents you cite and others like them, there is nothing whatsoever wrong with having a SWAT team present for a warrant service with a subject that is likely to engage in a hostage or barricade situation. There's nothing that says he has to be a drug dealer. SWAT teams are here to stay because the situations they deal with are dangerous for police officers.
We could avoid a lot of those situations in the first place if we didn't have a "War on Drugs" political scene that creates an environment where a "small amount" of marijuana becomes a drug dealer, but the fact that the tactics exist and are used is not what's problematic, what's problematic is the political environment that drives the regularity they are used with. This is not "bleed over"; they are highly appropriate for warrant services or dangerous persons. The vast majority of warrants, search or arrest are not served this way. If they were, nothing would ever get done.
The press just likes to pick out the most dramatic and engage in a lot of screaming about it - especially since "the press" nowadays now includes every idiot with a blog and an axe to grind. Of your links, the first did not work. Of the others, the only one that could really be called neutral reporting was the one from Columbus. Just running a google search and finding that "holy crap, SWAT teams exist!" does not prove much of anything.
I'll give you a hint as to what "bleed over" is:
Saying that "tactics developed to deal with heavily-armed drug dealers" morphing it into "there is nothing whatsoever wrong with having a SWAT team present for a warrant service with a subject that is likely to engage in a hostage or barricade situation" then morphing it into "they are highly appropriate for warrant services or dangerous persons".
Diamondeye wrote:
Your use of the term "bled over" is an attempt to beg the question; it is a predjudicial term implying the tactics are somehow overused, or used where not approriate, and individual incidences of error aside, they are not simply used as a matter of course.
I have not attempted to "beg the question".
Petitio Principii means you prove the point attempt to prove your point without proof. I've supplied sufficient proof to refute claims such as: "The fact is that it hasn't." "The fact is that they haven't." "They can't." "You can't apply the tactics that apply to SWAT teams and drug raids to regular policing because the situations are too dissimilar." and "It simply won't work and cannot meaningfully be done." simply by showing where it has, and they have (by the way, your quotes just above give a perfect example of
hysteron proteron, or begging the question.
It is only prejudicial when you don't like the fact that it exists. Bleed over doesn't mean or imply anything prejudicial, it doesn't mean anything is used as a matter of course. Quite the contrary, it depicts a situation where a few occurrences lead to a practice that could spread to more common use if the "bleed" isn't stopped. It merely describes a situation where an action or actions slowly pass over the boundaries of which they were originally intended.
Diamondeye wrote:
This is not "bled over" in any meaningful sense of the word.
If you don't think using "tactics developed to deal with heavily armed drug dealers" on a family that includes a seven year old, a dog, no guns, and less than a gram of pot is bleed over...
If you don't think using "tactics developed to deal with heavily armed drug dealers" on a man suspected of burning a car where no drugs or guns were found is bleed over...
If you don't think using "tactics developed to deal with heavily armed drug dealers" on a man at his business because a woman filed a complaint that he was abusing his daughters in which no charges were filed isn't bleed over...
If you don't think using "tactics developed to deal with heavily armed drug dealers" on a dog after everyone left the building peacefully isn't bleed over...
If you don't think using "tactics developed to deal with heavily armed drug dealers" on a man accused of simple assault on a neighbor, who is unarmed isn't bleed over...
then I guess this is pointless.
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"Dress cops up as soldiers, give them military equipment, train them in military tactics, tell them they’re fighting a ‘war,’ and the consequences are predictable." —Radley Balko