Corolinth wrote:
Ferguson is actually a very good example. The fact that there are issues with the protestors does not mean that the police don't also need to change their behavior. Police in Ferguson were quite literally violating Constitutional protections for the press.
Some police officers, on an individual basis MAY have been violating freedom of the press. The problem is that "freedom of the press" does not mean what you think it means. Freedom of the press is license to any person to publish what they wish - it is Freedom of Speech in written form. It is not freedom of conduct in finding things to report on, and it is certainly not a special protection for people in a certain profession. If you are in the middle of a riot, having a camera with you is not an entitlement to special privilege.
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They were engaged in precisely the sort of activity that prompted the Second Amendment.
No they weren't. The Second Amendment was not prompted by anything found in the modern world. Even if it were, it would be irrelevant - It's one thing to talk about the Second Amendment on the internet as if and armed populace is going to correct police misbehavior; its a totally different matter to go do it. People are not going to do it because poliuce misbehavior in this country is trivial It's a first world problem. This is why you talk about it on the Glade. It gives the veneer and feeling of doing something about a problem without the actual sacrifice that would be involved if the problem really existed.
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That is unacceptable. I don't care what the police felt they needed to do to secure law and order. I don't care how threatened they felt.
It's irrelevant that you don't care. The police are citizens, and have rights. The rules governing them are set by the courts and the legislature. This is why we do not allow people like you access to actual political power.
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The incident that sparked the protests involved an officer shooting the suspect multiple times in broad daylight with uninvolved bystanders in the vicinity. That is not an isolated incident. The number of shots fired is also not unusual, except in that it may actually be below the national average for number of shots fired by a police officer in an engagement.
A suspect that was attempting to kill the officer.
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Police officers in the United States are a threat to public safety. They are firing too many shots to accomplish their objectives.
No they don't. This has been discussed over and over- by people that are actually competent to evaluate armed exchanges. yoiu re not. Being a member of the public does not mean your opinion on this actually counts. You have no more business talking about this than I would lecturing you on Ohm's Law.
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Police officers in the United States need to be trained to handle conflicts in a manner that does not require them to unload the clips in their pistols.
They already are. The fact that you think otherwise indicates that you are entirely too ignorant, too biased, or too interested in trolling to have an opinion. Thge vast majority of law enforcement training focuses on things that have nothing to do with firearms or the employment of any other weapon or form of combat.
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This does not mean that police officers should be disarmed, or that the use of a firearm is never appropriate. There are too many questionable police shootings that have been brushed aside under the auspices of, "The police officer appropriately followed his or her training." So the officer does not need to be reprimanded. Okay, in that case there is a problem with police officer training.
No, there is not. There is a problem with the fact that you think there is a problem. You are armchair quarterbacking a game you have never been taught to play. The problem is that you do not understand what is needed
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Police do not need military equipment of any kind. Period.
False.
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They are not our national defense institution. They are civilian law enforcement.
If this is the case, then you just invalidated your earlier comment that you "do not care if the police feel threatened". Soldiers can be ordered into mortal danger or to undertake suicidal courses of action. Civilian police officers are not, and cannot be so ordered. The rules established by the courts reflect this the populace may not demand that police officers take unreasonable risks to their own safety.
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Usage of S.W.A.T. is far too prevalent.
It is not.
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American citizens are more peaceful now than at any other time in the nation's history. The police do not need armored personnel carriers, nor automatic weaponry. Society is becoming more peaceful, and the police should be less armed. Again, this does not mean the police should be totally disarmed or that the use of firearms is never appropriate, but there should be police officers who are unarmed. According to the statistics presented in that video the majority of police officers are not threatened in any way during the execution of their duties.
Your opinions here are essentially those of the feminists you're decrying in the threads on rape, translated into different form. You are demanding changes to the rules that put other people at unreasonable risk because you do not consider their viewpoint or interests important. No police officer should be unarmed any more than a male should have to suffer a hearing in a kangaroo court just because he's a college student.
Things like automatic weapons and armored personnel carriers indicate the depth of your ignorance - they're irrelevant. The polise rarely use them. They are around for situations where nothing else will do. The overall level of violence (and the assertion that we are "more peaceful than ever" is laughable) is not important; what's important is what the actual situation is when a given officer or department confronts it. An officer might go 20 years and not be threatened - and then one day he runs across the one guy that is determined not to get arrested at any cost.
These sorts of opinions disqualify you from being taken seriously. Like the other thread, the hyperbole hurts your case. The consequences of doing things the way you suggest - imposing arbitrary limitations based on the ideas of a person who has nothing more than intuitive ideas about the police and a serious problem dealing with authority possessed by someone other than he - would be that there would be no police, or at least very, very few. No one would do this job under such idiotic restrictions except at ruinous expense. If that were ever to come to pass, the public would have determined that it is undeserving of police protection. If the rules you suggest or anything like them were ever adopted I would demand a guaranteed income of $1,000,000 a year at least - as in, even if I were fired or imprisoned or killed my family would still receive it. Anything less and it would simply not be worth the risk. Another trip to a combat area would be preferable.
Thankfully, though, this sort of stupidity is confined to the internet where it belongs.