The Question
Objectivism doesn't work.
- Joined
- Apr 17, 2005
- Messages
- 40,541
- Reaction score
- 30
- Points
- 58
The blood splatter showed the robber was moving towards the cop.
He had a name, you know.
The blood splatter showed the robber was moving towards the cop.
He had a name, you know.
Both of them did.
Again, I can't answer this question because I have never seen another officer or backed up another officer who had a traffic stop or terry stop of an individual and when I asked them "what did you pull him over for?/stop him for?" the officer responded "cause he's black"...
Been a cop since 2010... work for a known large agency... high crime rates... worked my first 3 years in an area that was mixed white/black about 50/50 and for the past year and going into my fifth year the area I work is almost 100% African American and it's the busier part of town to work in.
The basis of your question being that some people were racially profiled is like fantasy-land to me because I've never seen it happen.
So typically bad witnesses are not screened out before testifying before a jury?
Were the bad witnesses at least cross examined or were they allowed to influence the jury with a full uninterrupted testimony?
Misguided at best.
Any context?
That guy could be mentally ill or on PCP.
and reaching out to assault a cop makes sense at close range, not 35 feet away.
What makes you think this witness is credible but those who contradict his/her are not?
I find this post fascinating. The normalcy of racial profiling is how it has become so.....easy to do.
Underage drinking happens at fraternities(a largely racially segregated institution) across the country but cops aren't going to put effort into actually walking around an off-campus facility unless there's an actual complaint. It's just accepted as a fact of life unless they try drinking and driving.
But as someone who lived in a poor black community, 10 black people, especially young men, sitting on a porch drinking. You could expect to have a cop car slow down or get "polite" questions from an officer as a matter of life. You don't have to be doing anything.
Source that he's a millionaire?Yes, but Darren Wilson is alive and a millionaire
Right, they're just threatening to kill him and his family. And all cops. And burning their neighbors and their own town down. Such brilliant humanists at work here.and people aren't actively attempting to dehumanize him and describe him as some kind of demon.
It's because those stories get more ratings on the news. Ratings = moneyI'd like to go back and discuss a few of the posts, but I'm curious how many people who are angry about police shootings have actually watched more than the few videos that have been released due to high profile crimes.
I don't know if people truly understand or appreciate just how dangerous a job being a police officer is, and why they are allowed to use force, even deadly force, to deal with certain situations.
Again, please understand that I am not justifying every use of force by an officer. I am merely trying to see if there's a true balance in the perspective of people who get really angry every time they hear that someone who is unarmed gets shot. There's a reason, and it's not usually because an officer is inept or wants to kill, or that they've decided someone doesn't deserve to live because of the color of their skin.
I'd like to go back and discuss a few of the posts, but I'm curious how many people who are angry about police shootings have actually watched more than the few videos that have been released due to high profile crimes.
I don't know if people truly understand or appreciate just how dangerous a job being a police officer is, and why they are allowed to use force, even deadly force, to deal with certain situations.
Again, please understand that I am not justifying every use of force by an officer. I am merely trying to see if there's a true balance in the perspective of people who get really angry every time they hear that someone who is unarmed gets shot. There's a reason, and it's not usually because an officer is inept or wants to kill, or that they've decided someone doesn't deserve to live because of the color of their skin.
Source that he's a millionaire?
Right, they're just threatening to kill him and his family.
And all cops. And burning their neighbors and their own town down. Such brilliant humanists at work here.
I was a delivery driver in college. My job was more dangerous. People need to stop acting like cops are soldiers patrolling Baghdad circa 2006. It's not even one of the top ten most dangerous job categories.
Frankly, Brown's father should have been arrested for inciting violence when he shouted "burn it down", along with all the protesters chanting about dead cops.
Way to shoot yourselves in the foot and eliminate any legitimacy your protests might have possessed.
I notice you didn't actually answer the question. You just deflected.
It's pretty clear that the violence that did occur at the Ferguson protests was the result of the police escalating the situation and was thoroughly one sided.
I have watched a lot of these videos, and a pattern emerges.
There is no denying that police in America have a problem using excessive and disproportionate force and the system that is supposed to stop that from happening is clearly broken. There is also no arguing that there isn't a serious race issue at play.
Ironically, I am unsure if that's the case here. I.e. the Michael Brown case. Michael Brown was by all accounts a violent criminal in the making, and Wilson's response may have been justifiable.
But that doesn't change the issue that there are some serious problems, and the violent (and nonviolent) protests in Missouri aren't the result of one isolated incident.
Thoroughly one-sided? So no responsibility lays with those who were rioting and looting?
This is my whole issue with making Michael Brown the poster child.
I don't deny there is a problem with police brutality/corruption and with African-Americans being disproportionately targeted.
The problem is, I think it hurts your legitimacy when you try to distort the Brown case into a clear-cut story of the police brutality you're protesting.
The protesters are just hitching their wagons to the wrong pseudo martyr.
I have watched a lot of these videos, and a pattern emerges.
There is no denying that police in America have a problem using excessive and disproportionate force and the system that is supposed to stop that from happening is clearly broken. There is also no arguing that there isn't a serious race issue at play.
Ironically, I am unsure if that's the case here. I.e. the Michael Brown case. Michael Brown was by all accounts a violent criminal in the making, and Wilson's response may have been justifiable.
But that doesn't change the issue that there are some serious problems, and the violent (and nonviolent) protests in Missouri aren't the result of one isolated incident.
Well, assuming you want your movement to have any credibility, it would be wise to stop.
Thoroughly one-sided? So no responsibility lays with those who were rioting and looting?
Are you kidding me? It's a threat, along with the multiple other death threats to specific police.Supporters donated over 500,000 dollars to him, and he was payed an additional 500,000 dollars for a news interview on TV. It's why he resigned from the police force. This is publicly available information. It's why he resigned from the police force.
Which is absolutely horrible. I never said it wasn't.
A chant at a march isn't a threat. Come on now, you know better than that.
But glorifying a hoodlum, and rioting and burning and looting like animals, makes people less inclined to sympathize with or listen to you.