Thing is, it is quite simply NOT going to have the desired effect, it will actively make things much much worse.Zaune wrote:It won't, but it might make them scared to pull their guns on a black guy unless they're really sure he has a weapon and intends to use it.Borgholio wrote:My wife and discussed it the other day and we are baffled by the idea that going out and deliberately hunting cops is somehow going to make them friendlier and more tolerant...
And yes, I am aware that angry young men with AR-15s and Molotovs are a lousy way to go about that, but if various police disciplinary organisations were doing their damn jobs then this wouldn't be happening.
It means that the people who DO decide to pull out weapons and attack police officers when lawfully stopped will feel entitled to do so, because on some tribal level they're viewing the police as "enemy of my tribe," rather than as "the guy who enforces the law I just broke." This means that more police officers will be in greater danger, will be harassed and abused more often, and will become more trigger-happy.
It's an incredibly bad strategy, except it honestly isn't a strategy at all, it's just resentment finding an outlet for itself by way of thuggishness.
Yes. The best comparison here is to places where police forces truly do not exist and law is handled informally between citizens. Such areas of the world are typically underdeveloped, poor, and violent even by US inner city standards, with good reason. Businesses cannot function due to the frequency of petty theft, vandalism, and breaches of contract- or if they do function, they are forced to remain below a certain maximum size, so that they can stay in business while working only with trusted employees, customers, and suppliers. Infrastructure doesn't get built and doesn't get maintained; even if it exists there is no one to prevent gangs from taking control of roadways or bridges and levying tolls. People become suspicious, clannish, and isolated, because it's dangerous to travel and meet new people who are potentially hostile.Alyrium Denryle wrote:Police forces are human institutions and human institutions can have problems. That does not mean anarchy is a preferable alternative. How many people are considered guilty of a crime, only found by actual evidence collected by actual professionals to be completely innocent? A large number. Vigilantism is almost always unjust,while reliance upon the legal system is only sometimes unjust.Highlord Laan wrote:Given the encounters I, my family and several of my friends have had with the local power-tripping gestapo wannabes and their friends in the courts, I'd rather hold my own. It's not like police prevent crime or protect people anyway. All they do is show up to make sure the evidence gets picked up and the bodies sent to the morgue.
For a lot of crimes, the presence of police in an area also prevents those crimes from being committed. They can root out criminal organizations as well.
But probably their most important function is acting as cogs in the gears of our society. Contracts can be enforced because ultimately there is recourse to the police (if someone does not pay rent, or tries to remove you from your apartment even though you HAVE paid rent). They can help resolve disputes without having to go to court (ex. freeloading roommate argument, neighbors call police, officer calms everyone down). In the event of a breakdown in public infrastructure, they are available to direct traffic, or help evacuate civilians.
Plus, if you think you can "hold your own", you are a deluded moron. Everyone who would prefer anarchy always assumes they will somehow be OK. But in an anarchy, you have only those rights you can defend, and I guarantee you when the fabric of civilization collapses, you wont be able to defend much.
It's not a good state of affairs. It's like every bad thing we've ever experienced in the lawless and unpleasant parts of the developed world, amplified.
The problem with that latter half is that guilty/not guilty verdicts are often handed down by juries. If you make a jury's deliberations public, then they are vulnerable to intimidation and harassment.Jaepheth wrote:I think seeing convictions for officers who break the law, and, just as importantly, sentences comparable with or harsher than (due to breaking public trust) what a civilian criminal would get would go a long way in repairing relations.
Trials involving police officers may also need some sort of special public access so that when a verdict comes back "not guilty" for an officer who is shown on video doing something questionable and "everyone knows he's guilty" people can see a reason for it.
If a judge rules on a police abuse case, perhaps they should be required to write an opinion on the facts of the case and explain their decision, though.