Bates said:
L K said:
Bates said:
CarltonTheBear said:
Bates said:
I'm not sure the defense of the Altanta guy is warranted, he fell asleep at the wheel while driving drunk. He would be getting arrested here in Canada no matter what Colour he was. And when he hit a Police man and took his taser and tried to use it on him I'm fairly confident his chance at getting shot would be pretty high. He created and escalated the situation.
So arrest him for disorderly conduct, resisting arrest, and even abuse of an officer or whatever that would be called. None of those things are death sentences.
When an Officer answered an attack with deadly force i don't see the same case as the Floyd case. You hit an Officer and then shoot a taser at him you have greatly increased the chance that you will be shot. They are not going to allow you to escape when you have shown that action. The chance you return with more firepower won't be happening.
Part of the problem is the threshold for use of deadly force. It is far too low, particularly the US. I don't get to shoot (or throw punches back) patients who throw punches and my nurses and myself.
You can't compare your occupation to that of a US Police Officer. This has been decades in the brewing with the increase in guns, Officer assaults, and Officers shooting people. I would however be fairly confudent you are permitted to defend yourself with as much force as needed if you are assaulted.
What a bizarre take to have. You wouldn't be able to compare any profession in which people can engage in use of force. One of the main reasons people don't go around assaulting and shooting each other is a stable rule of law that applies to everyone, which we are starting to see, many officers are to some degree above due to qualified immunity and police unions. And I'm going to go out on a limb here, but if most cops were as well trained and educated in their own field as LK and his colleagues/staff are you'd have far less excessive use of force issues.
And I mean honestly, in many cases the police aren't using correct judgment in determining risk here. You don't see this happen all over the world. You don't see this happen in most developed Western democracies. The justification of excessive use of force because the argument "I thought I used the right force as required" when you clearly did not is therefore ludicrous. If you can't take a look at what's happening to peaceful protesters getting teargassed and shot in the head with rubber bullets and think that isn't excessive then I don't know what to say.
And if you're going to go down the road of the woe is me police officer how much funding do police get every year at the expense of literally every other social service to prevent crime from occurring in the first place?
We are such idiotic creatures that we can't assess the benefits of doing things upstream but we can allocate billions for problems that arise downstream. Coronavirus is just another example of that, and climate change will probably be next.