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Now they're peacefully smashing up a police car yelling "get your money".
 
Ah, true skeptics are okay with arguments from authority. Thanks for the lesson.

Appeal to proper authority is always skeptical. And when it comes to issuing bills of indictment, there is no more proper authority than a grand jury.

What's your null hypothesis now? That grand juries are not a proper authority to decide these questions?
 
Appeal to proper authority is always skeptical. And when it comes to issuing bills of indictment, there is no more proper authority than a grand jury.

What's your null hypothesis now? That grand juries are not a proper authority to decide these questions?

And we have to remember that on both sides of the evidence there were experts leading the jury in what to look for. So while no individual jury member might have the expertize, there is over a 1000 years of experience leading them
 
Authority has two criteria. First, they have to have training and experience in the relevant field. Second, they have to be generally recognized as an authority in the relevant field by those in the field.

Anonymous, randomly selected citizens? Seems legit.

You may want to read up on how the grand jury works.
 
Peacefully smashing windows of a Quiznos now. I wonder if they sell those 9mm sandwiches there?
 
Appeal to proper authority is always skeptical. And when it comes to issuing bills of indictment, there is no more proper authority than a grand jury.

What's your null hypothesis now? That grand juries are not a proper authority to decide these questions?

As with all juries, they are not determining truth. They are determining points of law. There may simply not have been enough physical evidence to determine what happened. We won't know until we see the evidence.
 
As with all juries, they are not determining truth. They are determining points of law. There may simply not have been enough physical evidence to determine what happened. We won't know until we see the evidence.
They are finders of fact, and their decisions are the legal truth.
 
So was the OJ jury. Legal reality != reality

No there is a major difference, the grand jury's job was to see if there was possibly a case to answer. They felt there was not even enough evidence to even do that.
 
Well is it? While it is clear the officer has acted within the law, the question still has to be asked why terminal force was applied in this situation. At least 10 shots were fired on a suburban street. I mean this kid was not exactly the Boston Bomber

That's like asking if someone who drives too fast deserves to die. Did Wilson deserve to be attacked? Did the storeowner deserve to be robbed?

As McCulloch said several times this evening, there's no way to answer that.
 
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