Vindicarre wrote:
No, I worry because it has happened.
Fiat declaration
(see? I can play too.)
<snip endless "fiat declaration" nonsense">
The entire tactic of claiming someone else is making a fiat declaration is just a way of trying to get your own accepted.
Diamondeye wrote:
Quote:
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.
I have the tactical experience to be able to make this declaration. What in your experience gives you any qualification to call it into question, excpet by saying "fiat declaration" but so what? Because something is a fiat declaration does not make it incorrect - especially when:
they are completely dissimilar. In a raid situation, you've already accumulated considerable evidence. You've investigated long enough to get probable cause for a warrant, or, in hostage situations, you at least have a static situation and can sit back and conduct reconnisance. That's rarely the case in actual policing. For the most part, you are by yourself or with one other officer going into a situation cold. That situation may or may not even be at a building as a warrant service generally is, and you don't have a large team of officers that you've practiced with extensively.
Diamondeye wrote:
Quote:
It simply won't work and cannot meaningfully be done.
Fiat declaration.
In other words, you don't know enough about what you are talking about to effectively contest my tactical knowledge and experience, and so you are simply saying "fiat declaration" in hopes the Glade Idea Popularity Contest will see you through.
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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".
In which case, you might want to provide some sort of proof of your own fiat declarations, namely that there is some sort of "bleed over." Here's a hint: A few anecdotes from Google to not prove much of anything, especially since "bleed over" is an exceedingly vague term; I know of no accepted definition for it. As such, it seems to be one that means whatever you need it to in order for your argument to be correct. Does it mean that you may occasionally find some police department somewhere using a tactic that is really not necessary based ont he seriousness of the situation? Ok, sure, you certainly can. If that's what it means, however, it is so easily satisfied that all it essentially is saying is "things are not 100% perfect" in which case I don't give a **** if there's any "bleed over" or not. If, on the other hand, it means something more reasonable to you, it might behoove you to state that definition in terms precise enough that it can be demonstrated or not with some degree of surety. Until then, I'll continue to simply say that "bleed over" has not occured, because to me, it doesn't mean anything.
As to those supposed "fiat declarations" regarding tactical differences between things like, say, making a traffic stop and serving a search warrant based on a brief explaination, then you're just being obtuse or obstinate. I should not need to explain what the differences are between stopping a car or going to a domestic violence call with one or two officers and no advance information, and having an entire team of officers ready to conduct a search after weeks of investigation and recon; the fact that there
are differences should be patently obvious to the untrained observer, and it should not require any explanation whatsoever on my part for you to grasp that, regardless of your lack of experience in such matters. Saying it's a "fiat declaration" is essentially an admission that you can't contest this fact, but that it's inconvenient, so you just want to
imply there's something wrong with it.
Diamondeye wrote:
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.
So what? Why is it a problem that these tactics were used in any of these situations, other than that you just don't like them?
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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.
This example makes no sense wahtsoever. I can't even tell what you are talking about.
Diamondeye wrote:
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".
So in other words, "bleed over" means using such tactics in situations where they are appropriate for no other reason than some arbitrary line in your mind between situations where there are known heavily armed drug dealers, and situations where there is a high likelyhood of such persons. So what if they were originally developed for drug raids? Why should they not be used in situations where a hostage or barricade situation is likely to develop?
What you're really demonstrating is that "bleed over" is really just predjudicial language for evolving tactics. There is nothing inherenetly wrong with SWAT raid tactics; the problem arises from the War on Drugs that drives the frequency of their use. If you're going to go raid a house, that's the right way to do it. The problem is why we're raiding so many houses in the first place. The problem has nothing whatsoever to do with SWAT tactics; it has everything to do with the political drive behind it. We're also arresting entirely too many people for just smoking a joint; that does not mean that there's a problem with people getting handcuffed.
Diamondeye wrote:
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.
No, actually you haven't submitted such proof. You've submitted a few anecdotal incidents, where for some arbitrary reason or other you feel these tactics shouldn't have been used. You certainly have not provided
any evidence whatsoever to demonstrate that SWAT tactics are useful for everyday policing.
Simply showing a few incidents where such tactics have not been used, but apparently you feel they shouldn't have means nothing. All this means is that there's "bleed over" according to some nebulous criteria in your head. You need to show that it occurs regularly in situations that are unquestionably inappropriate for it. This does not mean situations that the Glade average thinks are inappropriate; it means situations where the courts think it is inappropriate.
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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.
The only thing I don't like is the fact that you feel a problem that is entirely a matter of your own arbitrary criteria being violated is somehow a matter of public concern.
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.[/quote]
The reason it's pointless is that you want to apply hindsight (intelligence, regardless of preparation time, is never perfect) and anecdotal evidence and complain that your nebulous personal standards are being violated. Of course it's "pointless" to you. You don't want to examine whether your personal standards are reasonable because you know, when it comes right down to it, that you have a problem with these tactics despite the fact that the courts don't, and that you don't have to take the risks. Cops are just faceless guys in uniform to you, and their concern for their own safety is something you can easily dismiss.