And this is at least the seventh time you've been shown that too.
All of which is besides the point, because BLM isn't about the conduct of the victims of the shootings, it's about the conduct of the police departments. "Black Lives Matter" means police should be held accountable for taking those lives just like anybody else.
The police should be held accountable for justified shootings?
No. The POLICE do not get to decide whether or not a shooting is justified or not. That's why we have COURTS.
The point is that we have a shooting that is clearly justified...
And the people who should determine whether or not a shooting is justified are judges and juries. Which means police officers should not be shielded from prosecution if there is any question at all about the shooting's justification.
IF there is any question at all about the justification, let those officers provide reasonable doubt if the case is that clear cut. It shouldn't be a problem at all.
It sounds like you want no police shootings, period.
Why is that an unreasonable thing to want? There are lots of ways to achieve that goal, and getting the police to exercise restraint and deescalation strategies is a big part of it. Getting handguns and concealed weapons out of the hands of would-be criminals is another. Reducing shootings by 90% is more than doable from those two factors combined.
The problem is the agitators whitewash the situation and the protesters show up over cases where the cops did nothing wrong.
Bullshit. When the cops shoot someone who was unarmed;
that is wrong. You can explain HOW it happened and how his own behavior contributed to the cops' wrong action. But it is the police who have the responsibility to make the correct and proper choice; the citizens have no such responsibility to do it FOR them.
When someone who was armed or acting aggressively is shot, this is ALSO wrong, but at least understandable in the context of a confrontation. In this case the response is a question of how and why the cop was unable to deescalate the situation without having to resort to lethal force, and that's a situation that calls for dialog, not protests. When and where police departments refuse to begin that dialog, or refuse to take the situation seriously, or try to avoid having that discussion alltogether by lying to the press and/or the public about what actually happened in that case, THEN you get protests.
For example, Michael Brown...
Is an example of the cops doing ALOT of shit wrong, which resulted in a homicide. The protests are a great example of what happens when a person in a position of extreme authority massively fails in the performance of his duty and then completely refuses to own that failure.
"Black lives matter" is shorthand. What it really means is "Black lives matter more than a policeman's ego"
Except we keep seeing political prosecutions.
Which is why nothing changes. The political prosecutions are gestures designed to shut up the protestors without actually changing the conditions that cause the problem in the first place. It's not going to work.
Had the guy simply been carrying a gun he never would have come to the notice of the police. The incident started when he tried to run them off
Which he, in an open carry state, has every right to do.
Even assuming that that is what actually happened and not (as you clearly assume we have all forgotten) some speculative theory you pulled out of your ass in order to justify the shooting.
It was a hostile move (effectively, "I can defend myself, don't mess with me!")
... Which is legal -- and is, in fact, the WHOLE POINT OF BEING ARMED -- in an open carry state.
It's clear you and a lot of people disagree. But you know who really should have had to decide who was right in that case? A judge, and a jury, in a court of law, ruling on whether or not a man openly carrying a handgun has the right to display that handgun in order to show would-be criminals he can defend himself.
The problem isn't the shooting. The problem is the police decided among themselves that there would be no consequences for the shooting. That is not a decision the police can be trusted to make on their own, but it still happens in almost every case.
OTOH, in cities and districts where they don't tolerate that shit, where corrupt cops get served up on a platter as soon as they're discovered, where cops who abuse their power or shoot people unnecessarily are thrown off the force immediately and/or prosecuted, you don't see a lot of protests. In fact, in those communities you see more people rallying behind their police departments, because they trust the officers who protect them to act honorably, because they know that if their police officers really screw up and hurt someone, they'll admit it, they'll own it, and they'll do what they can to fix it.
There are police departments that switch into "cover your ass!" mode when one of their officers does something stupid or tragic or unexpected. And then there's this guy:
Which is why the BLM movement has been so quiet in Richmond these past several years; it's not a coincidence that Richmond police officers also shoot fewer black people than almost any other department in the country.
It's almost as if authority figures who EARN the respect of the community are actually more likely to BE respected...
Clearly false. Even you're asking for cops to be treated worse than civilians.
Of course I am. Cops should be held to a HIGHER standard of conduct than civilians, which means they should be investigated more thoroughly and punished more severely when they screw up. That comes with being an authority figure: greater power means greater responsibility.
What should he do, nothing?
If he cannot gain Brown's cooperation in his grand anti-jaywalking crusade without physically engaging him in combat, then yes, HE SHOULD DO NOTHING.
If he cannot get Michael Brown to respect his authority as a police officer without engaging him in a physical struggle, then yes, HE SHOULD DO NOTHING.
If he can think of any way to get Michael Brown from walking in the street without driving his car up onto him and trying to fight him through an open window -- a monumentally stupid move according to every law enforcement specialist in the country -- he should do that instead, and if he CAN'T, he should lose his job and go into another line of work.
Black lives matter more than police officers feeling their authority is unchallenged.
Black lives matter ALOT more than stopping people from jaywalking
Black lives matter more than a police officer's career
You're just upset that he wasn't put on trial. Putting people on trial when it's clear you won't get a conviction is a miscarriage of justice.
Bullshit.
George Zimmerman was brought to trial under nearly identical circumstances. The only difference between Wilson and Zimmerman is that Wilson was a cop.
"Being a cop" is not a valid defense; it doesn't excuse reckless behavior or unnecessary violence. It should be the opposite of that: Wilson should have stood trial BECAUSE he was a cop, and because "being better at conflict resolution than George Fucking Zimmerman" is part of the job he has been entrusted to do. That police departments around the country prefer to hold civilians responsible for the conduct of their officers is the whole reason why Black Lives Matter is a thing.