What is "until recently"?
Until the murder of
Walter Scott
And shooting a suspect for merely fleeing hasn't been acceptable since the
1985 SCOTUS decision
It's NEVER been acceptable, even when it was (arguably) legal. And yet there is a difference between "what is acceptable" and "what police officers are known to do" and it is THAT difference that drives enmity between police departments and the communities they serve.
So your response is "Well, the unequal treatment is probably justified."
Not unequal treatment of individuals, but unequal outcomes if blacks are more likely to be combative toward police than whites.
But despite the cliches, individuals are not statistics. Both the media and the American public are willing to believe that ANY particular black person is more likely to be combative towards police and therefore a police officer who kills a black man probably has good reason to "feel threatened."
Just like the officer who killed Walter Scott "felt threatened" because Scott supposedly grabbed his taser.
Just like the officer who shot Levar Jones "felt threatened" because Jones "dove back into his car" to get his license.
Would you care to guess why that might be? Should I commit a further waste of my time asking you if you think there's something wrong when a community is almost as frightened of police officers as they are of gang bangers?
Yet statistics prove those fears unjustified (many more blacks get killed by other black civilians than by police and those killed by police are usually criminals like Thomas).
And if getting KILLED by police officers was the only thing they worried about, that would mean something. In an environment that includes a group who shoots at you twice a year and another group that beats you up and arrests you twice a month, one of those poses the more immediate threat.
And again, what does it have to do with what Thomas did?
Because you posed the question of why he tried to escape, which lead to the question of why police officers have elevated threat levels dealing with black people. Or, more specifically, why would they send twelve officers and a canine unit to arrest a guy over a probation violation?
The answer is that police officers have cultivated a reputation for the reckless use of force and black people no longer feel confident that the police will treat them with patience or understanding even when they're being entirely cooperative. Simply put: the police in this case showed up EXPECTING trouble, and Thomas lived up to their expectations.
The term "Pig" originates from the 1950s and 60s tensions at a time when police were WELL KNOWN for targeted harassment and sometimes even murder of black people on the flimsiest of pretexts.
And black nationalists were known for things like ambushing and murdering police, robbing banks, attacking prisons to free fellow thugs etc. Black power groups like the Panthers...
Didn't exist before 1966, at which time their most aggressive actions were the use of California open-carry laws to "patrol" police actions in black communities, a reaction to years of unchecked abuse of civil rights. The term "pig" didn't even originate from the black nationalists; it was originally an allusion to George Orwell's "Animal Farm"
On the other hand, it was way the hell back in 1946 when a group of police officers beat Issac Woodard within an inch of his life and permanently blinded him for supposedly being rude to a bus driver. It was 1955 when a County Sheriff famously greeted black spectators to the Emmet Till murder trial with a cheerful "Hello niggers!" It was only a couple years later that police in North Carolina arrested a nine year old black boy an charged him with rape because a white girl kissed him on the cheek. And those are just the cases that drew international outrage; black people in Chicago still remember the time in the early 90s when the police declared martial law in Cabrini Green because somebody ran over a puppy; there are people alive TODAY who remember when future mayor of Chicago Richard Daley Senior helped the police start a race riot on the south shore.
Just to be clear here: Are you seriously pushing the theory that police departments started being overly aggressive towards black people because of the
Black Panthers?
That relationship was confrontational almost to the point of armed insurrection, and despite the gains in the civil rights movement it didn't get BETTER during the 70s. In Chicago, that history is VERY well known, and the revelations that "surfaced" a few years ago about police officers torturing suspects, blackmailing community leaders and the "anti-crime" program that helped transform the Vice Lords from an activist movement to a street gang were COMMON KNOWLEDGE for black people in the 1980s and 90s.
I get it. If black people commit crimes, it's police fault.
No, Derec.
The Police committed crimes, and that is
the Police's fault.
"Getting tortured into a confession" is not a crime.
"Getting blackmailed into shutting down rent-relief programs" is not a crime.
"Having a paid informant testify that you are a drug dealer and then taking a plea deal that includes 'stop helping black people move into the suburbs'" is not a crime.
"Having the police shut down every program your organization runs EXCEPT for the one asshole who is selling drugs out of the back because he's informing for them" is not a crime.
There are open secrets the Chicago police have been caught red handed doing, have admitted to doing, are documented as having done, in a few cases have even apologized for. Those things left a legacy of confrontation between the police and the community that became so toxic that by the 1990s the city had to completely reassess its policing strategy just to prevent an all-out war. Even then, the CPD still has operates three or four of the "black sites" that were established in the 80s that were used for holding suspects without charge, without trial, without a lawyer and without anything resembling due process.
But you're you, so I'm well aware that you're going to find a way to argue that Jon Burge was only torturing "thugs" and therefore his actions -- and everything the police ever did -- were justified and it's actually black people's fault for being hyper sensitive (or the Black Panthers' fault for making them that way

).
The problem BEGAN with the police,
No, the problem began with Thomas' criminal behavior.
Yeah, because there's no record of police officers violating people's civil rights before Nicholas Thomas turned the ignition on that maseratti.
And lest you overlook the point once again, it comes down to this:
Why was Thomas so afraid of the police?
and the onus was on them to fix it.
Criminals bear no responsibility?
Not for the dysfunctional relationship between the police and the community, no. There are a multitude of perfectly acceptable ways for police departments to deal with crime; abusing their power and antagonizing the community is not one of them.
And when a thug (known for doing that before) is driving a 2 ton luxury sports car toward your fellow officer, what are you to do?
Take a small step to the right and get the fuck out of his way. Which the officers actually DID.
So no, a lack of respect for police officers CANNOT and WILL NOT justify police officers responding in kind. The purpose of the police department is to serve the community; if it's respect you're looking for, go join the Marines
So if a thug starts yelling "fuck the police" police should remain meek and friendly?
Yes. When a "thug" starts yelling "fuck the police" the police should remain meek and friendly.
Because yelling "fuck the police" is not a crime. Even assholes have a right to free speech. And every police officer who respects the rights of the citizens under his protection more than he respects his own ego is, in fact, serving his community.
And wouldn't you know it? Everyone else in that crowd who ISN'T yelling "fuck the police" notices this. They notice how the police react, how they conduct themselves in those situations, whether they maintain their professionalism under pressure or loose their shit and become "thugs" themselves. And the police officer who responds to "fuck the police" with "Have a nice day" is a police officer who probably ISN'T shooting people in the back and then claiming he "feared for his life" just to cover his own ass.
I know full well what it means. From education: if there are fewer blacks than whites (as percentage of population) admitted into colleges, then we must not treat individuals equally in admissions but have different standards for admission to achieve equal distribution of outcomes. That is pretty standard left wing philosophy, don't you agree?
No, that's a right-wing talking point that deliberately mischaracterizes "left wing philosophy" for the purpose of generating righteous indignation by people who never actually TALK to liberals (namely,
you).
Which has WHAT to do with black nationalists, again? Wait, I get it: you're about to explain to me that "race conscious" policing is just the agenda to force police departments to give special treatment to black people... I'm sorry, to "thugs"... and let them off the hook more often for their widespread criminality, an agenda that is being pushed by black nationalists like Van Jones and Barrack Obama who secretly control the government and are waging a war on white people everywhere.
