Khross wrote:
Diamondeye:
They receive additional authority in a court of law that leads to well documented outcome biases. Anyone reading the last 20 years of law journals and publications is well aware of these biases. The courts are prejudiced in favor of law enforcement, as are prosecutors and other components of the Justice system.
Oh, really? That's very interesting.
Now normally I would call out that you are appealing to authority and not providing evidence, but you're really just sort of waving your hand in the general direction of authority.
That said, I think it's quite clear that this is Khross's reading of legal journals, not some sort of consensus of "anyone" who reads them.
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Justice, correspondingly, is not blind when it comes to that facet of its existence. Cops do not make better eyewitnesses than other people.
Cops ARE, however, often better versed in what the law is in the first place and how to articulate themselves in court. This is not bias in favor of the police - it's the unavoidable effect of education and experience. People who testify in and deal with the courts a lot will be better at it than inexperienced people, and a lot of the people the police are dealing with are poorly educated to begin with, to say nothing of other underlying issues. If two people are equally reliable as eyewitnesses, the one who you can clearly understand what the **** they are even talking about will come across with greater credibility.
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They do, however, protect their own, which can also be problematic.
It
can be, but it is not always problematic. In
some departments, in
some cases, officers can be found trying to cover for the misconduct of others. This does not mean that every incident some segment of the public takes a dislike to is some sort of abuse and the officer was unreasonably let off the hook if nothing happens to him.
Given the behavior of those segments of the public, however, there is great call for the police to protect their own. The public has access to a largely sympathetic press, and plenty of opportunities for self-press such as YouTube with zero vetting for quality or accuracy, to say nothing of manipulation and editing. People rush to judgement with few of the facts, and are loudly encouraged by that same press. In the midst of an incident, people loudly insert themselves into situations as if the police were accountable to whatever jackass happened to be standing by at the moment. People whine about the treatment of "nonviolent" protestors while businesses are being burned int he background.
This country is a nation of spoiled brats. The reason public officials are not held more accountable is that people do not hold
themselves accountable. Everyone has an excuse for why what they did is ok, but it's unacceptable if someone else did it. Portraying the person with "power" or "authority' as the bad guy just for having it is the same argument race pimps and feminists use - it's merely the weaponization of excessive victimhood.
If you want less police bias, get people to start exercisign their right to silence. People not acting like total idiots and then unintentionally admitting it would probably solve at least 50% of bias, real or imagined.