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That women is in prison now.
Officer Lisa Mearkle shot the unarmed David Kassick in February of 2015. Mearkle was charged with murder and acquitted by jury on November 5th, 2015. This is the court released video from Mearkle's taser.
No real surprise here. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2016/07/09/the-nras-internal-revolt-over-philando-castile/?utm_term=.26b54c7f35edOf course the NRA's supposed unwavering support of people utilizing their second amendment rights has a pigment sliding scale.
You know what a find super racist and disturbing
Quote from: catastrophe on July 08, 2016, 06:30:19 PMQuote from: pmshead on July 08, 2016, 05:31:31 PMQuote from: catastrophe on July 08, 2016, 05:00:13 PMI don't necessarily have a problem with #BLM, but to me this whole deal isn't about blatant racism or even poor training (though I think it would help). It's a trust issue. Situations escalate quickly when each side thinks the other is out to get them. Distrust causes innocent people to act defensive and on edge which results in police officers acting more aggressively to protect themselves. I don't think BLM does anything to help that. It is important to keep police accountable, but the more people hear that cops are out to murder black people the less likely anything good will come of it.That's where the community outreach section of a police department is supposed to reach out to the leadership of the local segment of the Black Lives Matter movement and begin to rebuild that trust. We've back slid from a community based policing approach to what resembles a broken windows approach. There's data to show which method brings about that best results, it's not the latter.But the problem is that national movements like BLM detract from a community based approach. Dallas has had one of the lowest instances of violence against police among all major cities, and there were no issues from the actual BLM protest. Still, you get someone willing to kill themselves in order to kill a few cops in that setting just because of outrage over stuff that happened hundreds of miles away.What is your point?
Quote from: pmshead on July 08, 2016, 05:31:31 PMQuote from: catastrophe on July 08, 2016, 05:00:13 PMI don't necessarily have a problem with #BLM, but to me this whole deal isn't about blatant racism or even poor training (though I think it would help). It's a trust issue. Situations escalate quickly when each side thinks the other is out to get them. Distrust causes innocent people to act defensive and on edge which results in police officers acting more aggressively to protect themselves. I don't think BLM does anything to help that. It is important to keep police accountable, but the more people hear that cops are out to murder black people the less likely anything good will come of it.That's where the community outreach section of a police department is supposed to reach out to the leadership of the local segment of the Black Lives Matter movement and begin to rebuild that trust. We've back slid from a community based policing approach to what resembles a broken windows approach. There's data to show which method brings about that best results, it's not the latter.But the problem is that national movements like BLM detract from a community based approach. Dallas has had one of the lowest instances of violence against police among all major cities, and there were no issues from the actual BLM protest. Still, you get someone willing to kill themselves in order to kill a few cops in that setting just because of outrage over stuff that happened hundreds of miles away.
Quote from: catastrophe on July 08, 2016, 05:00:13 PMI don't necessarily have a problem with #BLM, but to me this whole deal isn't about blatant racism or even poor training (though I think it would help). It's a trust issue. Situations escalate quickly when each side thinks the other is out to get them. Distrust causes innocent people to act defensive and on edge which results in police officers acting more aggressively to protect themselves. I don't think BLM does anything to help that. It is important to keep police accountable, but the more people hear that cops are out to murder black people the less likely anything good will come of it.That's where the community outreach section of a police department is supposed to reach out to the leadership of the local segment of the Black Lives Matter movement and begin to rebuild that trust. We've back slid from a community based policing approach to what resembles a broken windows approach. There's data to show which method brings about that best results, it's not the latter.
I don't necessarily have a problem with #BLM, but to me this whole deal isn't about blatant racism or even poor training (though I think it would help). It's a trust issue. Situations escalate quickly when each side thinks the other is out to get them. Distrust causes innocent people to act defensive and on edge which results in police officers acting more aggressively to protect themselves. I don't think BLM does anything to help that. It is important to keep police accountable, but the more people hear that cops are out to murder black people the less likely anything good will come of it.
s
Baton Rouge Police again used super good judgment yesterday.
Do some research WackyCat08
Umm,., what happened idiots?
I can't imagine wasting a Sunday to protest something, that's going through faint ears anyways. Sounds miserable.