RangerDave wrote:
Talya wrote:
RangerDave wrote:
Given that American cops regularly unload more rounds in a single shooting incident than all the cops in any other western country do in an entire year, I suspect that "the limitations of the human nervous system" aren't the issue.
Is that an established fact or a fun hyperbole? (Not that there's anything wrong with that. I'm curious.)
Eh, a bit of both, I guess, but more fact than hyperbole. For example, in 2011, all German cops combined fired a total of 85 bullets - not 85 shooting incidents; 85 bullets in total for the entire country of 80 million people - and 49 of those were warning shots. Meanwhile in the US, cops in NYC fired 84 bullets at a single suspect in Harlem and cops in LA fired 90 shots at a suspect out there. And even though those are specific incidents, some quick Googling will show you that double-digit shot counts aren't unusual. NYPD shooting stats, for instance, show they fire 3-5 bullets per cop per incident on average.
In 2012, British cops fired their guns on three occassions over the entire year for the entire country. That same year, the NYPD had 45 shooting incidents. That's 15 times as many shootings by cops in a city with 1/7th the population of England and Wales. In other words, New York cops are roughly 100 times more likely than British cops to shoot suspects.
In 2011, Australian cops shot and killed 6 people while American cops shot and killed over 400. After controlling for population, that's 5 times as many here.
And so on and so forth.
All of which speak to the type, frequency, and nature of crime found in those countries. Germany is a particular example; like so much of the rest of its national policy it is driven by not wanting to have even the barest hint of something that could be associated with Naziism - despite having the fairly typical European greater degree of public compliance and wider latitude for the police in non-lethal situations. Try mouthing off to the
Polizei if they come to a bar fight in Germany - or for that matter do anything other than stand perfectly still until you're told what to do while they're there. You'll quickly discover they're allowed a lot more latitude than American cops in dealing with smartasses and German courts are not interested in your views on rights and freedom of speech. Many an American serviceman in Germany has found this out the hard way.
The fact that Germany allows its police to fire warning shot at all speaks to this. Warning shots are a terrible idea, and Germany is able to get away with this only because of the aforementioned high compliance and low crime rate. German police would be a danger to themselves and anyone around them in the U.S.
In pointing out the methods used in these countries, people like to point out situations like the guy with the machete outside Buckingham Palace not long ago, who was TASERd. Disregarding that A) British police do not carry firearms (well, most of them) and that in front of Buckingham Palace you also have soldiers with rifles, these comparisons are almost invariably cherry-picked to situations where the police have all kinds of time and room and backup to deal with a deranged individual out in a public space. Interestingly, these are also the cases most conducive to pictures and videos for third parties.
In Officer Wilson's case, the only thing in common was the "public place", (and no one had time, apparently, to whip out their Iphone and create a quick video for careful editing to put on YouTube, no doubt with appropriate commentary and music to point out Wilson's "obvious guilt" and cover up any inconvenient sound that might indicate what was actually going on). He was in his car, and he started the encounter by asking Brown not to walk in the middle of the street. Brown then became belligerent
for no apparent reason and
then Wilson saw the cigars realizing he was dealing with an armed robber he had a duty to apprehend.
Wilson was dealing with an opponent with apparently zero impulse control, and a wildly unrealistic sense of his own invincibility - well beyond what we normally expect from teenagers, and we don't know why, but we get some clues from his words to Wilson "You're too much of a pussy to shoot me"
as he was trying to take Wilson's gun, and the actions and words of those defending him - he was a young black male, so in his mind no matter what he did short of pulling out a gun of his own and firing at Wilson, he believed anything the officer did was "hassling" him or something to that effect.
That belief "What I'm doing is no big deal, the officer should just let me be because I don't
feel like I'm breaking the law, or don't care" is common to a lot of people, but when it's combined with a very large, very young man who feels no compunction about robbing a store in broad daylight. He felt that his skin color and unarmed state immunized him from being shot, and that anything he did short of using a weapon of his own (including trying to get Wilson's) would never be serious enough for anything to actually happen to hi, and he had an accomplice there willing to lie his *** off, even in defiance of plainly observable fact. Much like a school bully who pokes at a smaller kid over and over, and then wants to cry foul when the smaller kid finally slugs him, except he didn't cotton to the fact that the "smaller kid" was a cop that A) didn't want to get killed B) wanted to do his job and C) knew what the law allowed him to do and had the means and training to do it. Brown, for all intents and purposes, committed suicide by cop.
While each situation is different, the fact is that dealing with people like Brown is a daily event for police. Most do not end like this, mainly because most take place at night, in confined places, without passersby and TV cameras around. Yet we have people who insist that these events are a matter of:
Quote:
The most serious injury he suffered was to his pride, being punched by an uppity young black kid who wasn't respecting his authoritah.
For no reason other than their own cynicism and problems dealing with authority.
Brown is not an unusual suspect - he's pretty common. The circumstances that brought him to public light are. The problem we have is a public that is addicted to victim narratives. Our "system" cannot be effectively reformed at all until the public rejects people going on TV and painting people like Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown and the alledged "victim" of the Duke rape case as victims. If we wante fewer people shot by the cops,
people need to stop getting themselves shot by the **** cops. Then we can talk about cases of police excess and tactics. We cannot have an effective conversation while people are turning Michael Brown into some equivalent of Rosa Parks.