Malintent
Veteran Member
I know someone who spent over 15 months patrolling in a war zone. And he is consistent in his view that if he or his patrol mates acted like some of these officers while on patrol, they'd have been immediately punished for disobeying orders. And they were subjected to bombings and shootings on a routine basis.If any of the posters in these types of threads that ask "couldn't the cop have done X, instead of shoot", spend a day as a cop, they would probably get themselves, or even several bystanders, killed, like immediately.
But your post and the posts of the other unthinking apologists for the police are evidence of the unthinking deference the police receive by the general public and the legal system.
The police have a difficult and dangerous job. It is becoming more dangerous in part because, as a group, they are losing the respect and trust of a growing portion of the civilian community. This is a legacy of the unthinking deference. The cure is not more deference but to re-engage critical deference. Until that happens, this cycle of violence is going to get worse, not better.
I am not opposed to the idea that police should be trained more like how soldiers are... but that is an admission that the "streets" are a "war zone". so the "problem" is with the "combatants" (citizens), after all (since it is, apparently, a war zone out there)?