RangerDave wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
I don't see what this issue has to do with either the way laws are designed, or the Arizona situation in particular.
My point in mentioning the AZ law was that my objection there was that even though the law doesn't technically allow racial profiling, that
in practice, cops would feel external pressure and a personal desire to nail illegal aliens and would thus skirt the rules in order to boost their stats. This is an example of that kind of stat-boosting behavior.
OK.. first of all, whether the cops feel a personal desire to "nail" illegal aliens is really irrelevant. Illegal aliens are criminals; the cops
should feel a desire to nail criminals. Assuming that the cops in general are going to feel some desire to catch illegals over and above other criminals is rather silly, especially since they're most likely to catch illegals when they're committing some other crime anyhow.
Second, this isn't stat-boosting behavior in your article; it's manipulation of stats by supervisors to make the stats appear a certain way, which is a totally different (and if true, far more serious) matter.
Third, I don't see why the police in AZ would suddenly get interested in "stat boosting" just because this law has been passed.
Fourth, Mexicans aren't a race. They are, however, the people primarily committing illegal immigration in AZ and the rest of the nation. Complaining that the police are going to suspect them first is sort of like complaining that the police will suspect white people of having committed a cross burning.
Finally, you're evidently arguing that because cops in NYC are possibly doing a certain thing for... no apparent reason, that cops in AZ are likely to do something sort of kind of similar because.. well because they're cops, and all cops are the same!
Diamondeye wrote:
Quote:
Aside from the fact that the article studiously avoids mention of any specific instances and just wants us to trust its characterization (it doesn't even say what precinct this is in), this is a problem specific to the NYPD and probably specific to the precinct this guy works in.
I think you should take another look, DE. The article says, right in the part I quoted, that it's the 81st precinct in Brooklyn, and it includes like 8 pages of excerpts from the recordings, plus links to the recordings themselves.
I'll go back and take a look; I thought you had quoted the whole thing.
However, the fact of the matter is that this illustrates my point. You're picking out one precinct of a very large PD, complaining that untoward events are going on there, and then generalizing it to hypothetical untoward events in unspecified police agencies two thousand miles away.