I wouldn't describe watching the officers leave and standing silently as the chancellor leaves the building as "throwing a tantrum".
Selecting a separate incident to try to prove your point isn't fooling anyone. The video of the actual spaying event and the ensuing media afterwards demonstrates tantrum throwing.
Violently assaulting peaceful protesters.
Controlling people resisting arrest.
Again, Nuremberg defense.
Yet no crimes were committed by the police. The policies used are widely accepted as appropriate. You and a few others with this "violent assault" claim and lack of effective alternatives aren't convincing.
If enforcing a rule requires committing injustice, then an officer who cares about justice should not enforce it.
Yet no "injustice" was committed here.
That would be preferable to spraying all of them.
What, you approve of such injustice? Violence against a few is okay but violence against many is bad?
I think the most effective way to handle it was just as they did. Hose down the lot of them. You try to pick and choose who to spray, you run the chance of being targeted as discriminatory if you pick the wrong race or gender.
Just to clarify, do you actually mean to suggest that it is impossible for, say, 5 or 6 police to lift an individual who has his arms linked together with two other individuals, break the chain, and arrest them?
Impossible, no, but as explained before, you get into a tugging match in that situation, someone can easily get hurt much worse that stinging eyes from pepper spray, which is why the correct police procedure is to spray them.
I think what you fail to see is that this outcry isn't about the use of pepper spray to subdue and arrest people. That is a well established and accepted practice. The problem here is that the police indiscriminately pepper sprayed a row of protestors without first attempting to arrest them. There was no indication that the protestors presented any threat, and no indication (your speculation that the Mighty Hercules himself cannot break a human chain notwithstanding) that the police needed to pepper spray anyone to effectuate their arrest.
They were not "indiscriminately" sprayed. They were told they would be sprayed if they didn't quit resisting. Locking their arms together was resisting. The police don't "try" to tug them apart to see if they will cooperate. They knew exactly what would happen if they didn't cooperate, and they got what they had coming to them.
Do you have any evidence that the administration did this to "pacify the crybabies"?
That's my take on it. I totally expected it to play out that way.
Because the article I linked and other I have read said they did it out of concern of the proportionality of the police response. In advance, I'd like to note that speculation is not reliable evidence.
Of course they described it that way. If the investigation comes back and says "the correct procedure to deal with this situation is X but the officers did Y which is a direct and clear violation of procedure and their training", I'll accept that, even though other departments said what they did was correct.
More than likely the report will in fact state that "the officers acted correctly according to their training, but that we are re-evaluating the procedures that should be used...", again to pacify the crybabies.
leftysergeant said:
Already given earlier in the thread. I'm surprised that you would doubt it though, you always profess to be an expert in everything from firefighting, to military strategy, to small arms handling. I'd think that with your vast knowledge of such things it would include basic police procedures for crowd control.