the justification is the presence of the taser. i admit, i do not like the "schrodinger's taser threat", where everyone claims non-lethality when they have it and then it's suddenly lethal/dangerous in the other person's hand. that bothers me, and as mentioned earlier it's one hypocrisy police and people they interact with share.
i know 26 year olds sometimes act like children (heck, people more than twice that age sometimes do), but that is firmly in "adult" territory.
both people were contesting the taser, until the cop lost it. it shouldn't be that hard to use it from a "non-dominant" position.
i don't know your experience, but i can tell you that if you are fighting over some object and the other person has it while face down, they have a significant leverage advantage. doesn't matter if it's a ball, gun, toy, etc. contesting it like that is easier as the person on the ground. this is also why football players fall on a fumbled football and cover it with their body; that makes it the hardest to take it from them by far.
it would be somewhat harder to use from the ground, but we're talking 1-2 seconds tops. actually these situations unfold incredibly quickly in the moment, generally. you don't actually get time to consider it carefully, once it's happening.
https://cvpcs.asu.edu/sites/default/files/content/projects/Taser Media CPP.pdf
"less lethal", indeed. i don't think it's as black and white as you say. this is also why police and suspects alike use the "schrodinger's taser" argument. though one might notice that this also makes its attempted use by the cop questionable as well. if it's a sufficient threat to merit self defense, maybe it wasn't appropriate to use it in this context at all, and maybe it's not a surprise when the other guy doesn't want to get tased either...
i would agree this case was mishandled (i don't really believe "clean shoot" above, was just annoyed). what i will not agree with is that it's an incident of "shooting an unarmed black man", because that's false and not a matter of opinion. it ignores what actually happened, and the situation at time of shooting.
I think the Lyola case falls in the category of unarmed or not armed with a firearm. There techniques to use that don't have to result in dead civilians. The problem is the police tactics and rules they learn. Cases where an individual has a rock, knife or other non firearm weapon can be approached from and entirely different angle that does not involve deadly force. There are examples to prove it too.
Yes this is a huge and obvious conflict of interest issue. A division within the police department "investigates" the police. Similar to a wolf guarding a hen house. Here where I live they tried to remedy this by having the Sheriff department investigate the various police departments in the area. Don't piss on my leg and tell me its raining! Its the same effing thing, law enforcement peers investigating law enforcement. They need an objective independent team investigating the police. Also Police Unions are huge and powerful groups that wield political power. In some cases a Police chief may know an officer is a bad officer have good reason to fire him but cannot do so because of the Police Union.I was baffled to learn about the general level of professional training in the US. Now, there are several entrenched problems (such as most of disputes over whether things were handled "well" are done internally by the potential offender's colleagues - this is like asking for corruption).
Or Brittany Spears is a good example of a dumpster fire.What exactly is dumpster fire, burning trash cans?![]()
I was invited to D.C. by Crooked Media to appear on the “Lovett or Leave It” live show in March. This was also the week my Crooked Media-produced podcast (“Stuck With Damon Young”) launched. And so, Morgan, who’s one of my producers and also lives in Pittsburgh, and I made the four-hour drive midweek and drove home Friday.
During the trip back, we noticed that traffic was moving much slower than usual. The speed limit on that stretch is 70 mph, but cars were going below 50 mph. It wasn’t until I saw a blob of flags flapping from trucks in the right lane a quarter-mile ahead that I realized what was happening. We were behind the infamous and infamously stupid “People’s Convoy,” which drove, in a circle, from Hagerstown to D.C. every day, on a stretch of highway Defector’s Albert Burneko described as “a hellish interchange that turns into a giant snarled parking lot” — on a normal day.
And they’re doing this to … protest? And they’re protesting … cloth? Science? Daylight saving time? How the rules of spades change depending on the house and the city and how the arbitrariness of this feels democratic but is just unfair? Who knows? They don’t, so I won’t pretend to! Anyway, it took a half-hour to drive past them. Here’s a recap of that experience.
0:01: Have you ever encountered something so uniquely, aggressively and impressively dumb that you wished you had a friend with you to verify what you saw? Morgan is a talented producer, but I’m now convinced that God convinced me to hire her just so someone could witness the miles-long hillbilly elegy with me. It was like driving past Bigfoot, but if Bigfoot wanted to ban books about small feet.
3:23: Most of the cars in the convoy are draped with American flags. Some with not just a flag or two, but a flag orgy. Flag Freaknik. I never understood the compulsion to be so conspicuously patriotic — to show every American in America that you’re the Americanest American … when everyone knows that you’re American. It’s like me walking around my house with a flag that says “I’m Damon, and I live here.”
Also seen: A dozen or so Blue Lives Matter flags, two “Don’t Tread on Me” flags, at least one Confederate flag and at least one hundred Trump flags. Most of the Trump flags were pretty straightforward — “Trump 2020” or “Trump Won.” And some were just weird, including one with what appeared to be Trump either greeting or arm wrestling a dog-sized frog. Morgan, after seeing the dog-sized frog flag. “These are strange people.”
I never understood the compulsion to be so conspicuously patriotic — to show every American in America that you’re the Americanest American.
17:45: Admittedly, the convoy isn’t the only thing slowing traffic. They’re in the right lane, and there’s enough space to pass them What’s happening, though, is that many of the cars in the left lane are doing what Morgan and I were doing: gawking, pointing, filming, taking pictures, giving them the finger, etc. Basically, exactly what you’re supposed to do when seeing Idiocy in the wild. I actually wished I had my kids with me then, just to give them an impromptu tutorial.
“Who are those people, Daddy?”
“Those are idiots, baby. White American idiots.”
“Where do idiots come from?”
“The idiot tree. Also, Texas.”
29:12: When I shared this experience with some friends, a few of them responded with concern for my safety. But fear never crossed my mind. As we drove through and eventually left the convoy behind, I felt pity more than anything else. How small must these people be to think that what they’re doing is doing anything other than providing entertainment for an otherwise mundane stretch of highway?
And they weren’t even good at that, because after the first 10 minutes or so, I got so bored that I had to open my window to keep from nodding off. They’re not patriots. They’re Percocet.
Morgan, however, felt otherwise.
“Yeah, I think they’re patriots.”
“Why do you say that?”
“To drive this much with gas this expensive, you definitely love America.”
In my eyes if someone has given you their back its as close as a submissive position that you can get.
I think the Lyola case falls in the category of unarmed or not armed with a firearm.
I was baffled to learn about the general level of professional training in the US. Now, there are several entrenched problems (such as most of disputes over whether things were handled "well" are done internally by the potential offender's collegues - this is like asking for corruption)
we often disagree on things, but this is such an obvious/overwhelming problem that it annoys me that it couldn't have been fixed with bipartisan support decades ago. current practice is a joke for the same reason that enron auditing itself would be a joke.
i can definitely get behind improving training + moving oversight to someone other than "ourselves".
The key, he said, was the Taser at the time of the shooting and whether it posed a threat of death or great bodily harm to the officer. It had already been fired twice, striking the ground.and i'm telling you that belief can get the crap kicked out of someone, even ignoring weapons, in a matter of literal seconds. it's fantasy. if you also have control/restrained them, it's different, but not the fact pattern in this case.
lyoya began unarmed, then armed himself with a taser. as i mentioned earlier, the cop drawing it seems to be the most important point of divergence/escalation. once someone has "non gun" in the middle of a scuffle, it's too late for de-escalation. that had to be done sooner.
we often disagree on things, but this is such an obvious/overwhelming problem that it annoys me that it couldn't have been fixed with bipartisan support decades ago. current practice is a joke for the same reason that enron auditing itself would be a joke.
i can definitely get behind improving training + moving oversight to someone other than "ourselves".
[replied here so as to avoid derailing the other thread]If it's about fairness, then using "gender" or "sex" as a proxy for performance or competitive advantage is a poor approximation given that physical variation within each population is greater than variation between the populations.
[replied here so as to avoid derailing the other thread]
You're saying that as if that somehow mattered.
Those female Olympic medalists, who would have finished somewhere in the total obscurity of a second hundred if they had to compete against biological males are not going to be consoled by the fact that physical variation within each sex is greater than variation between the sexes.
Now, professional sports can go die in a fire for all I care, so it is not exactly a concern for me... but that also means I don't see it as "existential right" for someone to participate in said competitions.
I imagine it's only a matter of time before people either have to acknowledge that there are, in fact, differences between men & women or do away with separate sports leagues altogether on account of them being "separate but equal" or something
I don't know, I didn't mention anyone here as far as I can tell?Who here is not acknowledging that there are differences between men and women?
Personally, I think the Olympics are a lot of crapola and run by crooks.
Michael Phelps is unfair. <...> you're just a transphobe.
physical variation within each sex is greater than variation between the sexes.