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Cop looking for a fight. If it's Sergeant hadn't been there what would have happened? If somebody in this position tells a police officer to back off they need to back off.What never ends?
Cop looking for a fight. If it's Sergeant hadn't been there what would have happened? If somebody in this position tells a police officer to back off they need to back off.
There's no law against walking around wearing a mask and taking pictures.
There's plenty of videos on the internet of cops acting like idiots.Ah. I wasn't aware there was an epidemic of this,
If you ever come across one and have the displeasure of interacting with one of these police you'll understand this very well and there doesn't have to be an epidemic of it one in a thousand is too many.which isn't the same thing as understanding that some cops are pigheaded Rambo LARPers.
That's true.On a given day I'm far more likely to be accosted by vagrant disorder and urban decay than I am to be accosted by some cop with a power complex.
No I wouldn't really say that I've never held the position that you're more likely to have an unpleasant running with the cops than you are with any random person. I've interacted with plenty and I've never had this problem.And I understand what people might say: cops, as function of the institution of policing, are obligated to serve, which is not the case for the average citizen population in a city.
Well cops like burkhart here erode public trust in police and that's a lot more important than public trust in your local vagrants. I would say this sort of thing is a much bigger problem. If you want to be a police officer you can't let yourself be provoked by this crap. Let them cuse let them flip you off let them call you a pig there's no law against pissing off the police.And I think this kind of thinking is precisely the problem.
Well cops like burkhart here erode public trust in police and that's a lot more important than public trust in your local vagrants. I would say this sort of thing is a much bigger problem. If you want to be a police officer you can't let yourself be provoked by this crap. Let them cuse let them flip you off let them call you a pig there's no law against pissing off the police.
Yeah and a lot of times it's overly dramatic. This case however it wasn't. People being unfair to certain police does not give other police the power to abuse the authority.Here's my broader point: it's very vogue (if correct in a narrow sense) to call some cops power tripping pigs.
The fact that there are criminals that need to be dealt with by the police is not an excuse for the police to act like this.Whether they erode public trust more than petty crime, violent crime, vagrancy, loiterers, etc. is a hotly contested debate that really only has one correct answer.
I'm not defending anything here.What isn't very vogue is being critical of a general classlessness and moral laze which infects all of society, but particularly the lower and middle classes. Wearing pajamas and a stained graphic T-shirt to Walmart isn't illegal, but it is uncultured and offensive to the soul.
I'm critiquing the degeneration. When you put on the uniform you are held to a higher standard.There is a direct correlation between the popularity of bluntly critiquing order & the slow degeneration of the social fabric into a standard-less, disgusting consensus.
Yeah and a lot of times it's overly dramatic. This case however it wasn't. People being unfair to certain police does not give other police the power to abuse the authority.
The fact that there are criminals that need to be dealt with by the police is not an excuse for the police to act like s**
Then what point are you making of course considering the video of the op?I'm not making that argument.
Who's arguing for the right of police to behave crudely or sadistically? Not I.
I'm critiquing the degeneration. When you put on the uniform you are held to a higher standard.
Then what point are you making of course considering the video of the op?
They do more damage to the police in one incident like this than a thousand people screaming that they're pigs. This kind of thing means that sometimes they're right.I suppose this is a relevant critique if you think that in the hierarchy of trends causing damage to the social fabric, a handful of cops acting like douchebags is anywhere near the top.
Well I'm not being hypercritical of policing so I don't know why you're making this point.I thought it was pretty obvious. It's easy, even popular to be hyper critical of policing.
You can talk about both at the same time.It's less popular to talk about the general degeneration of the social order and why that might be a more serious issue than a handful of douchebags.
So we shouldn't say anything when cops have the wrong attitude for the job because?Maybe this is purely a regional issue and anecdotal for me, but has anyone's community become cleaner and more cohesive over the last 20 - 30 years? The entire American economy is basically built upon building fortresses to isolate yourself from the degenerating social fabric and criminality. This is not a phenomenon which has an exact parallel in other advanced nations.
A broken clock is right twice a day. You can't oppose the critique just because of the person making it. Base it on the behavior of the officer and you will be a lot more consistent.Admittedly, this might be the wrong thread for what I'm describing since it has nothing to do with the video and more to do with the sentiment of the OP which seems to imply exhaustion for an issue which doesn't impact the average citizen in a country they don't even live in.
They do more damage to the police in one incident like this than a thousand people screaming that they're pigs. This kind of thing means that sometimes they're right.
I view this as a pro police viewpoint.
Well I'm not being hypercritical of policing so I don't know why you're making this point.
You can talk about both at the same time.
So we shouldn't say anything when cops have the wrong attitude for the job because?
A broken clock is right twice a day. You can't oppose the critique just because of the person making it. Base it on the behavior of the officer and you will be a lot more consistent.
The social fabric depends on the policeThe social fabric isn't 'the police'.
With regard to the critiqueYou replied to me originally. I didn't call you out.
No just being able to think about multiple subjectsA novel concept!
It was a question?Strawman.
I don't engage in discussion to get people to concede or to win at some debate game. It's just to talk to people. To find someone who thinks about things differently than I doI supposed you'd have a point here if I haven't already conceded multiple times that the officer wasn't acting professionally.
I'm not sure what your broader point has to do with this subject? The police do get a lot of criticism I agree with that a lot of the times it's unwarranted.Sort of ironic that you'll say 'you can talk about both at the same time', but when I make a broader point about the discourse on this subject you insist on getting defensive.
The social fabric depends on the police
It was a question?
Should we not critique police when they are in the wrong?
So we shouldn't say anything when cops have the wrong attitude for the job
I don't engage in discussion to get people to concede or to win at some debate game. It's just to talk to people. To find someone who thinks about things differently than I do
I'm not sure what your broader point has to do with this subject? The police do get a lot of criticism I agree with that a lot of the times it's unwarranted.
True but I would say it's their presence mostly that keeps most people behaving at least in an acceptable way.The social fabric depends on people. If people behave inline with the cultural consensus, the police have no job to do.
I didn't see you made a claim I asked you a question.It was a strawman because I never made this claim:
I didn't respond to disagree.If this is the case and you agree that we can simultaneously have a critique of the police while also addressing a more general degeneration of quality and texture of life, then I don't see where the disagreement is.
I would say it's hyperbolic.I'm calling the OPs sentiment trite.
Why don't you start at that thread I would be interested in reading it and responding. This thread is a critique on police I'll be at a hyperbolic one.It's not a serious or novel take. It's uninteresting. I'm interested in opinions which challenge the assumed zeitgeist, not noise commentary about conclusions everyone else has already made.
1 in 3 American adults have a criminal record. Let that sink in.There is an arrest in the US every 2.5 seconds. Let that sink in.
On a given day I'm far more likely to be accosted by vagrant disorder and urban decay than I am to be accosted by some cop with a power complex.
And I understand what people might say: cops, as function of the institution of policing, are obligated to serve, which is not the case for the average citizen population in a city.
And I think this kind of thinking is precisely the problem.
The difference is in most states you can defend yourself against criminals, however nowhere can you legally defend yourself against some low IQ douche bag wearing a blue costume.
Nobody believes that. The supremes have held repeatedly that cops have no obligation to protect you or your property. When you're on the road, nobody feels safer when they are being followed by some dumb pig.
I don't really subscribe to the idea that the only way society is negatively influenced is if someone physically accosts you.
I'm more irritated by the Nissan Altima's driving 105 in the left lane than I am about some fat dude eating donuts speed checking people.
Again, it's not the attack, it's the fact that it is illegal to fight back, and the attacker knows this and uses it to his advantage.
One of the highest obesity rates for any profession. Average salary is about 70k per year, and it takes virtually no intellectual ability and not much in the way of physical capability. That should tell you something about the job.
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I suppose this is a relevant critique if you think that in the hierarchy of trends causing damage to the social fabric, a handful of cops acting like douchebags is anywhere near the top.
I thought it was pretty obvious. It's easy, even popular to be hyper critical of policing. It's less popular to talk about the general degeneration of the social order and why that might be a more serious issue than a handful of douchebags.
Maybe this is purely a regional issue and anecdotal for me, but has anyone's community become cleaner and more cohesive over the last 20 - 30 years? The entire American economy is basically built upon building fortresses to isolate yourself from the degenerating social fabric and criminality. This is not a phenomenon which has an exact parallel in other advanced nations.
Admittedly, this might be the wrong thread for what I'm describing since it has nothing to do with the video and more to do with the sentiment of the OP which seems to imply exhaustion for an issue which doesn't impact the average citizen in a country they don't even live in.