warpus
Sommerswerd asked me to change this
The avatar is of darth vader, but when I read the posts I can only ever hear dark helmet.
The police shouldn't have have the right to beat you or shoot you simply because you resist an order; this should be up to the nature of the order, and it should be up to the police's discretion to measure when to use violence or not. The tension of the situation shouldn't legitimize violence, either. A parking ticket is a parking ticket. It seems like you are very pragmatic about this (that one should, in the current climate, follow orders because the police is irrationally and impractically violent) but we are arguing for the police not to be those things. Are you aware of this?
But frankly, this is all I'm saying. Resisting cops is seldom a good idea. If you do it, I don't feel sorry for you...except in those very rare cases that you have a good reason to. Those are exceedingly rare.
We have the problem where cops are ordering you not to film them, to give over your phone and camera, to disperse protests and forfeit your right to assemble, to comply with their obstruction of evidence.
So in other words, yeah, as far as you are concerned those guys should have gotten up out of their wheelchairs as they were told, and the beating they got is fine by you.
By the way, the one time I considered filing a complaint, just for the experience of it, I consider myself lucky to have gotten out of the police station.
"You hate cops, and cops know that only criminals hate cops, therefor the cop who pulled a gun on you was totally right in doing so because you're obviously a criminal. If you weren't a criminal you would love cops, and have no complaint. So, do you really have a complaint?"
As to filing a lawsuit, if I had the financial horsepower to line up enough attorney power to compete with the city attorney and the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department legal division I would just buy a third world country and install my own police force there. The idea sounds great as a cop out if you don't really want to think about the issue, but in practice it's an absurdity.
Before you even get started you face the real world fact that it is an accepted precedent that 'the officer is a trained observer, so if your testimony contradicts his, his will be automatically accepted in the absence of other evidence'. In short, your attorney will have to prove every word you say with some added corroboration, and the officer can describe events however he wants.
The police shouldn't have have the right to beat you or shoot you simply because you resist an order; this should be up to the nature of the order, and it should be up to the police's discretion to measure when to use violence or not. The tension of the situation shouldn't legitimize violence, either. A parking ticket is a parking ticket. It seems like you are very pragmatic about this (that one should, in the current climate, follow orders because the police is irrationally and impractically violent) but we are arguing for the police not to be those things. Are you aware of this?
Additionally, you ignore that when threatened on one's life, one may or may not act irrationally. This is up to the police to control. There should not be a default threat of beatings or shots just for not following orders. That is not the way things should work. If so, the suspect is always threatened on his life when being approached by the police and I just noted to you that threatened people act irrationally and that it is the police's moral burden to contain the tension of such a situation. Your moral imperative, while pragmatic in the current status quo, is a wrong state of things and should be changed.
The police is able to work properly in Denmark, why aren't they able to in the US? Explaining this with American civic culture isn't a legitimate argument, because the whole point is to change this culture. The status quo should be changed.
And if it's a gun problem, limit the accessibility to guns.
It's a better source than any you provided, innit?
JohnRM is defending arbitrary police authority.
While using a Darth Vader avatar.
It's true, irony is dead.
While not agreeing with cops shooting people (in fact, I don't think the police should be routinely armed at all, but that's probably not a viable proposition in gun-mad USA), I strangely find myself agreeing with you on this one specific point.
etc.
I, unlike you, do, however, feel sorry for those who think it's a good idea to risk it.
But rather than "are exceedingly rare", I'd go with "absolutely never happen".
And yet I still sympathize with a largely black population feeling resentful of a largely white police force which is "in authority" over them.
Filing a lawsuit against cops is an uphill climb. The judge can toss the case for any number of reasons, the big one being sovereign immunity. If you actually get to trial, a judge or a jury is likely going to give the cop a good head start on credibility whether warranted or not.
where my life depends on police action,
I do not plan to address a specific case that I am not familiar with.
You went to the cops to file a complaint against cops? I am not surprised by the reaction. You go to internal affairs or some similar agency or organization.
And if a case looks like it will make your position untenable you will close the viewports of dark helmet and scream 'lalalalalalalal' until it goes away so that you can stay unfamiliar with it. I know the type well.
Sorry. So now I need to become more familiar with distinguishing amongst cops. As I have said many times, if cops can't police themselves why should they be allowed to police anything? I did go to a different breed of thug, since it was a state cop who pulled the gun I reported him to the county cops. But from where I stand cops are cops so 'go find their internal affairs cops' is not my thing. I'll stick to 'calling cops is always a bad idea, solve your own problems'.
Reaching for the officers weapon isn't cause enough for you to react like the cop did?I just wonder when can a cop use a gun or a weapon?
Given the choice between the two, I'll take the system we have now because if I ever end up in a situation where my life depends on police action, I don't want them hesitating because they are worried about lawsuits or regulations.
They policed Ferguson, MO, but you complain about that. Are you telling me you plan to join the guys with bumper stickers that read, "Security by Smith & Wesson." That is the direction you are pointing.
J
Ferguson Missouri is definitely a place where police have not policed themselves and should not be allowed to police anything else.
I suggest reading what you quote.
Who then, would do the job of the police?
The rioters?
Reaching for the officers weapon isn't cause enough for you to react like the cop did?I just wonder when can a cop use a gun or a weapon?