Aseahawkfan wrote:No one in American society wants to make hard, unpopular decisions any longer and be a leader. We just have politicians looking to garner votes and paint everything in a way that is best for them with professional speech writers and press workers paid to do this for them.
RiverDog wrote:Which is another reason why I've lost a whole lot of confidence in our democratic system here in the United States. To our elected leaders all that matters to them is their election or re-election. Everything else is secondary.
We really need to overhaul our system. One 6 year term for governor, one 4 year term for Congressmen/women, one 8 year term for Senators. At least that way, once they are elected, they would be more likely to do the right thing vs. what's best for their re-election.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I'll never give up my freedom though unless they kill me. I have seen China and Russia with their "strong" leadership. I have no interest in that. Putin and Xi make plenty of "hard" decisions to maintain their power and don't care about the vote as they answer to no one but themselves I never want a dictatorial leadership system where a handful of dictators who are able to hold power indefinitely control us. That would be worse in my opinion.
We may take longer to do things, but we benefit from a slower, freer system. It may not be the best for vaccine distribution, but for long-term living it is much preferred.
RiverDog wrote:I would personally give up some of my freedoms if I thought that the end result would benefit society in general. Where I draw the line is at the three inalienable rights mentioned in the Declaration of Independence: Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness.
c_hawkbob wrote:For every story like that there are are plenty of stories of cops in pursuit of a simple traffic violation T-boning a family of 4 on their way to church to balance that scale. Police can follow, and even pass surveillance of to he next jurisdiction, without actually engaging in a high speed pursuit.
Some sort of balance needs to be found. As with all things, either extreme example is what needs to be avoided.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I think they would accomplish more by restructuring criminal law myself, specifically drug law. The war on drugs has been the single biggest disaster in American legal history. It's like if Prohibition had continued on too long, but with drugs. It's some of these dumbass Republicans who just don't realize they've lost the war on drugs and their methods aren't working. People on drugs who already aren't making rational decisions don't suddenly start making rational decisions because you implement a 3 strikes law. We just end up with full prisons of unproductive people we have to pay for to do nothing but sit in a cage becoming acclimated to prison life that doesn't allow them to mix back within society well as well as creating the incentive for an illegal drug trade with massive violence and issues not just here, but in Latin America.
We really need someone to wake up about the complete failure of the current drug laws. It would go a long way to clean up the police issues.
But hey, politicians always need scapegoats for their failures and the police are as good as any scapegoats I guess. Paint them as racist, ignore the drug and violence problems in communities populated by people of African and Latin descent that are harming those folks more than people of European ancestry, and call it a success. Then wonder why these things aren't really fixed and are possibly made worse.
RiverDog wrote:Oh, I agree with you regarding the drug laws, at least as it applies to the end users. And as a person that voted for the 3 strikes law in this state, I openly admit that it was a mistake and needs to be re-visited.
But that isn't the point here. We're talking about changing police practices, not the war on drugs or 3 strikes.
Aseahawkfan wrote:What I am saying is if they want the police to have reduced incidences of citizen violence, they would accomplish more by changing bad laws that cause these interactions than by scapegoating the police who have increased interactions due to the sheer number of bad laws on the books.
I believe these measures are put in place to scapegoat the police who end up involved in these incidents due to bad laws to start with. If they spent time cleaning up the law books and asking themselves if they need a particular law requiring police interaction, they would accomplish more and better manage police resources.
If crime rises, these same politicians will scapegoat the police for not doing their job to stop crime while they at the same time handcuffed the police from doing their job.
They should start by cleaning up the drug laws. The number of bad police interactions due to drug crime must be the highest of the bunch. Then make their way through the traffic laws, which are also insane in number.
Reduce the bad laws, reduce the number of police interactions with citizens, reduce the problem they are trying to fix without vilifying the police.
From 2014-2018, fifty-six percent of people killed during police pursuits were someone other than the fleeing driver.
An analysis by the Fine Law Firm and 1Point21 Interactive found that there were 1,699 fatal crashes involving police chases from 2014-2018, killing at least 2,005 people – 1,123 were not the driver of the fleeing vehicle.
Among those killed were:
882 fleeing drivers
337 fleeing vehicle passengers
21 police officers
765 bystanders (occupants of uninvolved vehicles or non-motorists)
75 non-motorists (67 pedestrians, 5 bicyclists and 3 on another means of personal conveyance)
RiverDog wrote:You're preaching to the choir, bro. But the issue here is specifically the police accountability law. We can do away with all the drug laws that we want, it's not going to restore the police's ability to keep the peace unless something is done about this new law.
The WCIA also recommends police stay away from misdemeanor crimes, such as small theft, he said, as well as custody issues. “Sometimes, those incidents require use of force, and we don’t have a legal authority to be there,” he said. Under WCIA recommendation, following the use of force bill, police can find a child runaway, but cannot take custody of them unless they volunteer to come along, Fuhr said.
The use of force bill is also putting limits on police pursuits. After July, police will only be allowed to pursue vehicles suspected of major crimes, such as robbery, rape and homicide.
For any lesser offense, police can stop the car, but they can’t require people to get out, can’t pat them down without consent and can’t put them in handcuffs without probable cause, Fuhr said.
https://columbiabasinherald.com/news/20 ... -police-w/
It's legislation like this that is driving a deeper wedge between liberals and conservatives and is of the type that fosters an environment where a politician like Donald Trump can win the presidency.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The Police Accountability Law is another example of politicians scapegoating the police while creating more bad laws that are going to discourage quality candidates from joining the police force because there are now laws in place to make the police the bad guys while they haven't seem to have adjusted the laws that create these police interactions.
Now the police will have to police themselves. So now you have police policing citizens, then some other entity policing the police even more than they were policed before. The endless law and institution creation goes on and on as politicians try to appease the population that they're doing something when the existing entities fail. Then they rename and manipulate or ignore the statistics to claim they have improved the situation.
Like why do we need a Department of Homeland Security, F.B.I. I.C.E, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, National Security Agency, C.I.A., D.I.A., D.E.A., and the list could go on and on. We literally have created a numerous network of intelligence and law enforcement for all the various laws on the books.
In my opinion, until they fix all this crap, this police accountability law is just par for the course of politicians fixing things by adding more laws, more complexity, and more unnecessary bad laws to criminalize another group within society.
What do you want me to tell you? We're screwed and have been for a while. What is inevitable is that with size, the population will grasp for security over almost anything else even if that security is a fabrication or lie sort of like Trump followers believe America is made better with Trump as president without any real proof that it is so.
Hawktawk wrote:Derek Chauvin was THE LEAD OFFICER TRAINING NEW HIRES. He was also the guy who punched a black teenager in the face so hard it split his face open then knelt on his neck while he was cuffed for SEVENTEEN minutes . That was in 2017 , long before he murdered George Floyd . But he was cleared of any wrongdoing and was a senior officer training new hires for a major metropolitan city. Cops are in oath keepers , proud boys . They were at the Capitol. I can show footage of cops hanging out windows of squad cars spraying tear gas in the faces of people holding signs . I’ve heard enough of the bad Apple theory . I think cops are kind of out of control sometimes which is what’s led to these overreactions . My guess this Washington law isnt going to last long . Even liberals get how stupid it is . But policing in this country has got some changes to make . When you have the right to arrest someone , maybe shoot them you better be a well adjusted person.
Cops are in oath keepers , proud boys
RiverDog wrote:You can add the Secret Service, Coast Guard, Capitol Police, National Park Rangers, and others to your list that fall under the umbrella of federal law enforcement. These agencies are often times redundant, get into turf wars, and don't communicate with each other, which was highlighted in the Capitol riot/insurrection, the 9/11 attacks, the Kennedy assassination, and so on. They need to consolidate some of those agencies or at least create a position where they all report to the same individual.
I don't buy that "we're screwed." In this particular police reform law, we can petition to put it to a vote and get it rescinded. Our friendly watch salesman Tim Eyman has filed a suit contending that the law is unconstitutional, that it should have been put to a vote.
Aseahawkfan wrote:You look at this in the context of a single Act. I look at this in the context of how politicians handle problems be creating new levels of bureaucracy that we must pay for that are ultimately redundant.
If the police continue to engage in the type of racist profiling and violence towards citizens they are doing now, they will get shackled more and more as people being targeted gain more economic and political power.
The best answer to these types of situations is a complete revision of the legal system and laws.
Other nations are handling drugs very differently than us, it is a major reason why they don't have the crowded prisons we have or the level of violent police interaction. Changing the drug laws would be far more effective than anything else politicians could do to fix the issue the Police Reform Act was created to fix.
RiverDog wrote:[The single act I am talking about is something that can be changed now, or at least within the next year or two. The things you are talking about are going to take decades, if they ever get resolved.
I'm all for revising our laws, particularly on drug use. Take the money we spend on enforcement and interdiction and re-direct it to education and treatment. But it's not going to happen overnight.
RiverDog wrote:[The single act I am talking about is something that can be changed now, or at least within the next year or two. The things you are talking about are going to take decades, if they ever get resolved.
I'm all for revising our laws, particularly on drug use. Take the money we spend on enforcement and interdiction and re-direct it to education and treatment. But it's not going to happen overnight.
Aseahawkfan wrote:That is why I don't think this law will change much, even in a few years.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The cell phone has changed everything including policing. The police cannot hide or muscle their way on citizens. Someone will always be watching or filming them in almost any populated area. If they continue this poor treatment of citizens, they are going to get hammered. Citizen journalism has made everyone more accountable for their actions.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The main unfortunate part for me is that the media racialized this rather than showed that they pretty much do this type of behavior across the board. There is tons of video evidence that they are treating citizens this way regardless of skin color, but the media doesn't show any of it. If George Floyd had been white, it wouldn't have had nearly the same reaction as racializing the incident did. That part is unfortunate as this could have been a unifying movement, but instead became a politicized, one-sided, racialized movement.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Lastly, I will wait and see what kind of effect this has before I assume it will turn out badly. Fact is the police have reached a point where they have too much power and too little accountability. I hope this forces police hiring boards to be even more selective about hiring some of these loons with these terrible attitudes.
RiverDog wrote:Well, there's already been several incidents of which I posted that involved a serious incident that could have very well ended in tragedy. I guess it's going to take several preventable deaths in order to get guys like you to recognize that this is a bad piece of legislation.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Yes. It will take at last a year of data showing a noticeable difference in police statistics. You are correct. Anecdotal evidence from a few news stories with an agenda won't do it. As you know, I don't like news articles. They are one of the lowest forms of evidence along with TV news and Netflix documentaries. Articles and written works with clear agendas with evidence carefully curated to support the agenda are not what I consider good evidence. They are a few steps above, "I think..." opinion.
What will be good evidence is a year or more of this law, the adaptations to the law made due to recorded data, and if the data shows the law accomplishes what it set out to do while at the same time not causing a subsequent increase in other crimes or legal issues.
For me recognition absent evidence is opinion and opinion is not fact or data supported. So right now you have a theory that this piece of legislation is bad for citizens and police officers, the data to support your theory will take time to collect.
Cops are in oath keepers , proud boys
c_hawkbob wrote:It was true then, it's true now. It'll unfortunately always be true to some degree. I think the best we can do is erase that code of silence that made the 8 or 9 good cops look the other way while those 1 or 2 bad cops got away with whatever they wanted. I do think we've at least made a step in that direction finally.
NorthHawk wrote:Better background checks are needed, too.
Up here a news outlet did a piece on Police abusing the system and found that many of those bad Cops were in fact High School bullies who now graduated
to the Police and were givne a badge and a gun. The good Cops know who they are but just turned a blind eye to the goings on. Hopefully things are changing.
With these Police Reform Laws in general, if they want to divert funds to social agencies and take some of the responsibilities off of the Police, they have to
have a transition period where the Police maintain their current assignments, but pilot projects are implemented so as to get it right for how much can be
taken off of the Police plate. Just changing the rules and/or defunding them is a ridiculous step without knowing the consequences of those actions.
It's sending trouble your way and could very well set back the intentions big time if things don't work out.
c_hawkbob wrote:I did say training and vetting. Just like I provided statistical proof of a point I was called BS on earlier. I know I am not as deeply involved in this conversation, but don't blow me off and return to talking to each other... (we need a sad face wink emoji, that sounds way too needy!)
RiverDog wrote:
Sorry that I didn't respond. I got distracted and moved on.
You didn't conform to the parameters of my challenge, in other words, all you gave was some statistics with no story behind them as, in your own words..." For every story like that there are are plenty of stories of cops in pursuit of a simple traffic violation T-boning a family of 4 on their way to church...
Also, that reference of yours isn't exactly official: An analysis by the Fine Law Firm and 1Point21 Interactive What the heck is that? Where did they get their information from?
I'm waiting for two or three out of your "plenty of stories" of cops T-boning church going families in pursuit of someone running a stop sign, not some unofficial stats compiled by a bunch of law clerks.
Oh, and actually I like the eye roll thing, I'm gonna have to remember that one!
Sorry, my friend, but I'm still calling BS.(closest I could find to a sad wink).
And BTW, we're perfectly aligned on the training and vetting of cops. I was simply adding that it's going to cost a lot more money and is unlikely to happen if we continue to demonize the police.
RiverDog wrote:So what evidence did they have when they came up with this legislation in the first place? Would it not have made sense to set such a high bar of fact supported data in order for you to support it had the issue came to you on a ballot like it should have? How many times has some of these non lethal weapons they're banning caused a death or serious injury to a suspect? What evidence was there that would support taking away the police's ability to apprehend a fleeing suspect?
You've got it backwards. You don't pass new legislation without any justification for it then wait and see how it works as if it's some type of laboratory experiment before deciding that it's ill advised.
c_hawkbob wrote:I wasn't trying to conform to your parameters or your challenge, you called BS on what I said and I showed you it was not BS, accept it or not. This isn't a class and you don't get to hand out either assignments or grades. I mean, you didn't complete my assignment either did you? I told you a quick search returned a lot of individual storied but that I was looking for statistics to demonstrate the "plenty of" portion of what I said. And I guess I'm less dismissive of a law firm's research than you are (shrugs).
Oh well, as I see it you told me I was wrong, I demonstrated that it was you who were (are) wrong. I'm good with leaving it at that.
c_hawkbob wrote:As for the training and vetting of the next wave of LE officers, I frankly don't care what it costs, get Bezos to pay some taxes and we're way in the green. This is too important to pinch pennies on.
Aseahawkfan wrote:What part of all the racial incidents of negative police interactions did you miss as evidence? Such as the five times more likely to be shot by a cop and stopped by a cop? These new laws are specifically in place to address racial inequality in the legal system. There is a plethora of evidence indicating that the police have more negative interactions with people of African descent at around 500% compared to those of European descent. This law is supposed to reduce these negative interactions and police shootings of people of African descent.
That is the metric you will need to watch to see if the law is effective for the Democrats that made it.
Aseahawkfan wrote:You know why this law was made. You know when it was made. This law is specifically meant to address the concerns raised by the BLM movement which means it is racial in nature. So it will be the racial statistics for police use of force and negative interactions that will be used to track its success or failure.
Aseahawkfan wrote:What is my personal theory? I personally don't think it will do much negatively or positively if you want my honest opinion absent any facts. I think this law will be a net zero change that will be used politically by both parties to attack the other. But it won't have a dramatic affect on the crime statistics or negative interactions with folks of African descent. The vast majority of negative interactions do not seem to occur during routine police stops. They seem to occur when someone is called to an incident where a crime is occurring or some other active incident is in process. Then the police at the scene make a decision, then the media spins it up using whatever agenda they choose. If the majority of negative incidents that get publicized occur when the police are called, then it won't matter if probable cause is required as they have been called and that is sufficient cause for them to act.
I think the evidence at the end of a year will be a net zero effect on crime statistics and negative interactions with people of African descent. No real change.
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