thaiboxerken
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2001
- Messages
- 34,605
<snip>\
It's been said already, but I feel it needs repeating.
Are the cops supposed to be not scared?
How would that work? Could we hypnotise them all before each shift so they're under the false belief that they are not in The Land Of The Free? Where everybody could have a gun? Where a cop dies by gunshot every week?
Interesting concept.
Blue Lives Matter Too.
It's also been said already and also seems to bear repeating.
What is it the cops are scared about?
The danger of their occupation?
They aren't even near the top of dangerous occupations. How are construction workers not scared? Garbage collectors? Their jobs are significantly riskier.
Maybe the cops need to hang out with some carpenters and garbage collectors and find out how they manage to face the debilitating fear of going to work every day.
Without even being able to use abusing and killing innocents as a stress outlet.
Coz getting shot sucks?
I'm sorry. There's just too much hyperbole in your post for me to bother.
What would you accept as proof?
& cops are still branding blacks for the actions of a few. Do you think that's ok?
... Do you think that applies to police as well?
Coz getting shot sucks?
I'm sorry. There's just too much hyperbole in your post for me to bother.
What hyperbole?
Do you even know what that word means?
.
Other professions may have more casualties, but 2 by 4s and trash cans are rarely trying to kill their handlers, the injuries tend to be due to handler error. A cop's fear comes from a conscious intent to harm them, not accidents.
What hyperbole?
The last 2 sentences.
Do you even know what that word means?
.
I do. I used my Google Fu.
I didn't make any argument that policing was more dangerous than anything else.
See Mostly Dead's post for clarification.
Why is that relevant? It doesn't change the odds.
If the cop can't handle the level of danger inherent in the occupation they need to choose a different one, not subject the public to their phobias.
Why is that relevant? It doesn't change the odds.
If the cop can't handle the level of danger inherent in the occupation they need to choose a different one, not subject the public to their phobias.
Those were conjecture. Offering a possible solution to the problem you described.
No. You were trying to justify their reprehensible behavior by suggesting that their fear of danger could somehow make it seem more reasonable.
Accepting that level of danger is a choice they made. They don't seem to be able to handle that choice well, in spite of their highly vaunted "training".
Maybe they are in the wrong occupation.
Yeah. He didn't do that very well, either.
¿¿¿¿how they manage to face the debilitating fear of going to work every day.
Without even being able to use abusing and killing innocents as a stress outlet.
Accepting that level of danger is a choice they made.
I was a roofer before my spine had other ideas. I did it for over 10 years. Every day I risked death from obvious means. I never fell off a roof, or ladder. My risks were obvious and predictable.
Obvious? Perhaps. Mostly.
Predictable? No.
Humans are anything but.
Yes, but reacting to active threats is vastly different from dealing with passive threats.
<snip>
Active duty military also have lower casualty rates than construction workers, but if they weren't shooting back or attacking I think you would agree that the rates would be much higher?
And they are doing it badly.
Cop groupies are quick to point out that the relative frequency of such incidents out of all cop encounters is extremely small.
I don't disagree with that. It is also evidence that many cops are capable of handling the stress and not letting their fear rule their reactions.
The ones who are not capable of that or don't care to be should be in a different line of work.
And the ones who cover for those that can't handle the job at the sacrifice of the welfare of civilians need to be in another line of work, too.
We are comparing cops to soldiers in combat?
Their daily beats are war zones?
This is nothing more than romanticizing the job. There's enough of that on TV. It is exactly this sort of attitude and its unquestioned acceptance which has created the problems we are discussing in these threads.
Of course not. We are comparing construction accidents and the like to actual conflict, and yes sometimes combative jobs. As noted, piles of lumber don't shoot at you.