About Cops
Sometime ago, I noticed a definite negative attitude toward police by certain persons who post in the Gulch. While I have a number of friends and a relative in law enforcement, I have personally only known cops who are really good guys. They are patriotic persons who believe that they are doing good, and are willing to put themselves at risk at the drop of a hat 24/7. I was wondering how pervasive is the anti-cop attitude in GG, or is it only by people who have had a bad experience, or just plain dislike having anyone having authority over them.
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There are many good police who try hard to make the world a better place, but in the end it is the entire system above them that has gotten corrupt.
What the political class get away with enforcing today, is worse than what the Founders of America went to war over.
Also way too much of the time, the police are used simply as tax collectors by local governments and then the totally unconstitutional asset forfeiture laws make policing for profit a huge business, usually on the backs of the lower classes.
Also when advising kids, I added to what you said "put your hands where they can see them."
I think that being a policeman or women is a tough profession. Their job must be frustrating to say the least when perpetrators they apprehend get slapped on the wrist and then repeat many times with fatal results.
The complications with policing are many, the law makers pile on new laws and regulations.
Then those same officials pressure to ignore laws. (illegal aliens).
The vetting of candidates for policework is also
Challenging. When I read a sheriff is fined $10000 for requiring citizenship as a job requirement.
I think about how controlling and irrational national govt... meddling is over local .
My recommendation to my kids when they were teens. Be respectful, be good use your manners and don't run from the cops.
The most difficult situations in anyone's life and death, the police are first responders.
Another issue that would improve the police situation in our country would be to take the money out of drugs. Legalize and Millions would no longer be criminals for using or trafficking.they would have to work to make the big money they make on selling narcotics .l think murders would decline all across the country. Just my two bits.
I believe that police officers just like any other job have good and bad people. Sadly today the media makes big news off the few bad ones.
Me now the old dino been around. Me done seen it time after time.
My degrees are in criminology. Most of my work in that has been in private security. I am now in the state military department, which despite posse comitatus does have a law enforcement role. All that I can say here is: "It's complicated."
We know from statistics that college-educated police write more tickets.
We know from statistics that college-educated police have fewer complaints from the public.
We know from statistics that women write more tickets than men.
We know from statistics that women have fewer complaints from the public.
The best police force would be comprised entirely of college-educated women. (For a glimpse into that, there is a novella, "The Good Walk Alone" by Wolf Devoon.)
Criminologists know the unsolved problem of "Rotten Apples or Rotten Barrels." Some departments have bad cultures. We know that. When the college semester 2005 opened, our class assignment was to fix the New Orleans police department. Then Katrina struck and the assignment was canceled. On the other hand, Minneapolis does have its problems, but statistically far fewer of them.
O. W. Wilson was a student of August Vollmer. Wilson re-organized several police departments. His last success was Chicago. No sooner was he congratulated than the department committed the "police riot" at the 1968 Democratic Party Convention. To me, all that proves is that people are not billiard balls so therefore criminology cannot be physics. There are no reductionist answers to the problems.
The retired cop (my cousin's kid) never pulled his gun in 30 years except on a target. However, his shoulders are almost as broad as his height. His nickname is "Bear." So, most bad guys don't usually give him much trouble Many first responders are there simply because they are closest to the scene when the call goes out. They are not given a choice when they get a call, also, and remember, they are on call whether they are on duty or not.
In a nation of 330 million of the supposedly most free individuals on earth, that imprisons more people per capita as well as more in total than any other, and sees near 100 per month dying in interactions with police, more than any other--we've got problems. The hero cop in my thinking is the one that has never had to pull his weapon while on duty, and the one that his neighbors talk to about their difficulties without fear of being reported--not the first responder type that wants hero recognition.
I've known, throughout my life, good and bad cops, as individuals--as well as good and bad CPAs, good and bad Doctors, good and bad car salesmen, etc., etc.. But all those other good and bads don't kill nearly 100 Americans per month of all races and ages, nor are they protected from the consequences of their misdeeds by the state and their good compatriots. And saying that, I fully recognize that there is a number of those shootings that are unavoidable, though I'll continue to question each and every one. We've all seen the Carolina shooting of a fleeing man shot in the back and the cop trying to plant his taser.
But until the good cops weed out the bad cops and the bad practices and the bad enforcement actions, such as early morning SWAT raids to serve misdemeanor warrants by militarized members of their organizations, I'll continue to question all cops, particularly the ones I know personally and individually. Those men take an oath when they enter their profession, and 'I'm just doing my job and following orders', just flat out doesn't cut it any more for me.
I don't have an anti-cop attitude as much as I have a pro-individual-liberty attitude. If they desire my respect, they're going to have to earn it, and I don't recognize or grant anyone's authority over me.
I know there are some bad apples out there as in any profession. Experience with those officers should not color the entire view of law enforcement officers actions.
Consider this single stat. There have been 60 officers killed in the line of duty so far this year. If there are no more killed, that equates to 5 per month or 1 and a 1/4 every week. That is a record we should not try to emulate ever again.