So... With no reasons backed up by anything as can be seen on this page alone, two men, LEO or not, took it upon themselves to chase a man who had no reason as far as we know to even be under suspicion of any crimes in the area, and it seems most reports show that no, there was not some break in spree happening, with, I have read, no break ins in 6 months.
Now... Does ANYONE disagree that, maybe, just MAYBE the climate fostered by close to 20 years of high profile cases where some citizen is gunned down by another or by police and it appears the police or regular civilians were in the wrong... But felt no real consquences for their actions, ( And yes... Not every single one of these shootings is a good example of police brutality and overreach... But the cases that are such examples in my opinion are the minority. And as unpopular as it is to state as both a fact of the law and as a practical matter... Yes, even criminals have rights. And there is a thing such as proportional response. Letting the police get away with violating rights and using over the top methods to subdue and apprehend someone that isn't some movieized thug from central casting for so long? Yeah... Not good. Not ideal. Not a formula for effective law enforcement.) well, this may have let too many think they can also easily be let off the hook and if that's the case... Why not use excessive to lethal force for ****s and giggles?
Once more... Canary in the coal mine. They start with the "others" of society. Don't worry all you "regular" folk... They'll get to you. And they'll get away with it too... Because the regular folk handed over all the power when they decided that even the suggestion that we hold Law Enforcement to high standards of conduct is somehow "anti-Cop".
Which is just the usual ****ing silliness of a certain type of modern American. It's not Anti-Cop to know that yes, it's a hard job that saps the soul and places burdens 95% of the populace can never and willl never be able to understand completely from the outside. I can but begin to understand the fears and weight of being someone that both is charged with going into dangerous situations but also of being handed the immediate authority over another human beings life or death.
But that's it... "Life or death". We have invested police with enormous powers to do a necessary but very difficult job... Still, these are those we have granted with the literal "violence of the state" as a power. It's not "anti" anything to expect that said powers are used sparringly and resposibly. That there's been far too many headlines where the police seemed too callous, too brutal, to unthinking or frankly... Too racist, well, that's on the cops. Sorry. At some point when is the common denominator of each situation going to get the focus it deserves? Cops are for whatever reason, even good ones, too trigger happy. And on both the local and the state level government has backed them pretty consistently across the country. For every story of a LOE being brought to task for brutality or murder there's two more about how the offenders at best received some slap on the wrist.
And we wonder why these two guys felt confident enough to chase down another human in broad daylight and kill him in cold blood with zero reasons to do so as far as we know now? And the reasons that are being floated by certain types? Jesus...
This is a problem and I dare say it will continue to be so as long as there are enough people that will never, ever give a non-white person the benefit of the doubt. Even when the majority of the evidence and just plain old common sense and the simple morality we were taught as children tells us different, nope... These folk through their actions and inactions in the face of actual government overreach that leads to the end of someone's life, whether good stand up member of the community, local near do well, rambunctious teenager or yes, even someone with a criminal history, to these people those lives are worth a lot less than the ability to ensure cops that kill when it's not necessary face no consequences.
This is the exact thing that was common in the South 65 years ago. Unsurprisingly at this point... The politics around these events hasn't changed a bit.