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Dukasaur wrote:I like how all the people who say "you can't judge the police force by a few bad cops" want to judge the entire protest movement by a few criminals within it.
Dukasaur wrote:I like how all the people who say "you can't judge the police force by a few bad cops" want to judge the entire protest movement by a few criminals within it.
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
KoolBak wrote:Ok. So I saw the video of the police shooting in Atlanta. I'm going to be straight up. I'm a miltary veteran. And have been on both sides of the law. I have been arrested 5 times, no violent crimes. I am a 2 time convicted felon and everytime I got in trouble it was my own doings. Nobody made me break the law. Nobody held a gun to my head. Nobody paid me to break the law. So here is the situation. When a police officer interacts with a convicted felon, I dont care what it's for, it changes the game for the police officer. I dont care if it's a routine traffic stop things are a little different than your average law abiding citizen. And it should be for the officers safety. The reason is they dont know how your going to react. They know you have been to jail and they know you dont want to go back. Remember, when your dealing with a convicted felon, your not exactly dealing with grandma doing 5 MPH over the speed limit. It's a different situation, and it could very easily become dangerous, as it did in Atlanta. I got feisty with the cops one time. Right after I got face planted, I realized that probably wasnt the smartest way to go about the situation. I didn't cry about it, I didnt tear anything up, I didnt scream defund the police, I fully deserved what I got. So back to the shooting in Atlanta. In my personal opinion, it was well justified. I dont care if your black, white, Asian, Mexican, or whatever if you take a weapon from a police officer, I dont care if its lethal or nonlethal, you have just made a fatal error in judgement. Ok, so they say it wasnt a justified shooting because the guy took a nonlethal weapon. It doesn't matter. Not only have you taken the nonlethal option away from the police, but your trying to shoot them with it, and by the way a taser does incapacitate long enough for him to grab the officers gun. So now the only option the officer has is deadly force. So here is why I say that. The kid is running, black males are much faster than white males. Plus a police officer is carrying alot more weight, and hes already shooting it at the police. If they decide to pursue him and he gets away, it probably wont be long before he has a gun in his hand. If he is desperate enough to take a taser, shoot it at the police and try and run, he is desperate enough to acquire a gun and shoot at the police with that. So now everything I just mentioned, the decision has to be made within a split second. Glad I'm not having to make those decisions, but yes that shooting was justified. Not to mention he overpowered two police officers. I'm sorry, and really hate that it cost the kid his life, but he should have been a little smarter about the situation. Too many split second decisions were made and they turned out to be the wrong ones and forced the police to make a split second decision, which we will never know if it was the wrong or right decision. I'm going with the right decision, just from watching the video.
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
mrswdk wrote:tl;dr KoolBak thinks 'black people run faster' so it was therefore fair enough for police to fatally shoot a feeling DUI suspect in the back.
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
jimboston wrote:KoolBak wrote:Ok. So I saw the video of the police shooting in Atlanta. I'm going to be straight up. I'm a miltary veteran. And have been on both sides of the law. I have been arrested 5 times, no violent crimes. I am a 2 time convicted felon and everytime I got in trouble it was my own doings. Nobody made me break the law. Nobody held a gun to my head. Nobody paid me to break the law. So here is the situation. When a police officer interacts with a convicted felon, I dont care what it's for, it changes the game for the police officer. I dont care if it's a routine traffic stop things are a little different than your average law abiding citizen. And it should be for the officers safety. The reason is they dont know how your going to react. They know you have been to jail and they know you dont want to go back. Remember, when your dealing with a convicted felon, your not exactly dealing with grandma doing 5 MPH over the speed limit. It's a different situation, and it could very easily become dangerous, as it did in Atlanta. I got feisty with the cops one time. Right after I got face planted, I realized that probably wasnt the smartest way to go about the situation. I didn't cry about it, I didnt tear anything up, I didnt scream defund the police, I fully deserved what I got. So back to the shooting in Atlanta. In my personal opinion, it was well justified. I dont care if your black, white, Asian, Mexican, or whatever if you take a weapon from a police officer, I dont care if its lethal or nonlethal, you have just made a fatal error in judgement. Ok, so they say it wasnt a justified shooting because the guy took a nonlethal weapon. It doesn't matter. Not only have you taken the nonlethal option away from the police, but your trying to shoot them with it, and by the way a taser does incapacitate long enough for him to grab the officers gun. So now the only option the officer has is deadly force. So here is why I say that. The kid is running, black males are much faster than white males. Plus a police officer is carrying alot more weight, and hes already shooting it at the police. If they decide to pursue him and he gets away, it probably wont be long before he has a gun in his hand. If he is desperate enough to take a taser, shoot it at the police and try and run, he is desperate enough to acquire a gun and shoot at the police with that. So now everything I just mentioned, the decision has to be made within a split second. Glad I'm not having to make those decisions, but yes that shooting was justified. Not to mention he overpowered two police officers. I'm sorry, and really hate that it cost the kid his life, but he should have been a little smarter about the situation. Too many split second decisions were made and they turned out to be the wrong ones and forced the police to make a split second decision, which we will never know if it was the wrong or right decision. I'm going with the right decision, just from watching the video.
... bottom line
It’s very easy for people sitting at home safe-and-sound to judge the police... but it’s a very different situation when you are there in the present and making split-second decisions. I don’t care how much training you provide for a police officer, you can’t train for every situation and in-the-moment they don’t have perfect information. It’s the definition of Monday Morning Quarterbacking.
Sometimes they will make the ‘right’ decision, sometimes they will make the wrong one.. but the way you apply judgement must consider these factors.
We definitely need to change oversight... but you can’t have a board of all civilians with no law enforcement experience (and some who are predisposed to hating police). People on an oversight board have to have some experience with police and/or maybe do “ride alongs” on a regular basis so they can FEEL what it’s like.
IMHO...
I agree the Atlanta thing is more nuanced...the guy was resisting.
George Floyd was under control and there was plenty of time. to cuff the guy and no need to keep the pressure on his neck.
There’s too much history of police ‘covering up’ for their own, and innate biases that people aren’t even aware of... so there needs to be reform.
...
Mr_Adams wrote:You, sir, are an idiot.
Timminz wrote:By that logic, you eat babies.
KoolBak wrote:Dukasaur wrote:I like how all the people who say "you can't judge the police force by a few bad cops" want to judge the entire protest movement by a few criminals within it.
You like this? Assume not....
Comparing a police force, a body of trained officers entrusted by a government with maintenance of public peace and order, enforcement of laws, and prevention and detection of crime, with a protest movement is inherently impossible. A protest movement by definition is not organized, perhaps unruly, organic and unsanctioned.
KoolBak wrote:Neither of those people would have died had they not been drug addicted repeat felons committing additional crimes. There is that....doesn't matter your color - you f*ck violently with the man, your life's in danger.
I proudly continue to support our police forces who risk their lives every day for our well being. Human nature means there's always bad apples. Here's a story from a guy I know that sums up my feelings very well:
Ok. So I saw the video of the police shooting in Atlanta. {etc}
spurgistan wrote:Resisting arrest isn't a capital offense, dude. A man running away with a taser is not...
... a threat to anybody's immediate safety - the only reason to use deadly force.
spurgistan wrote:Also, we shouldn't need to have ride alongs, we should have a new system of policing that leads from the community instead of basically being occupation tactics. This. Isn't. Working.
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
KoolBak wrote:Assholes f*ck with my family, they're dying.
mrswdk wrote:And then a tyrannical government would be able to oppress its people.
So maybe, criminals are valuable?
mrswdk wrote:In a discussion about whether or not the police should use lethal force in various situations:KoolBak wrote:Assholes f*ck with my family, they're dying.
I refer you back to my point about the Freudian minefield of his posts.
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