lobosrul
Master Poster
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2011
- Messages
- 2,313
Everything in your post seems pretty irrelevant. Why? Because the point (as I read it) wasn't that US police officers shouldn't be armed. It was that the officers in nations where police don't routinely carry firearms, given the exact same situation otherwise, would obviously do something other than pull a gun.
Do you think that police officers in the US are trained to draw, let alone fire, their gun at someone attempting to drive away from a routine traffic stop? Should they be so trained?
I know what RandFan and the article he linked are getting at. Let me rephrase: There are only a handful of countries in the world where police do not routinely have firearms on their person or at least in their patrol car. More relevant is how police officers in nearly every single other developed country in the world show far more restraint in shooting people, even though they are also armed. Would this shooting have occurred in Germany, or Canada, or France? I very highly doubt it.
I don't know the ends and outs of how police in the US are trained, and I'm sure it varies by jurisdiction. However this isn't even the first time this decade that a cop shooting an unarmed suspect in a traffic stop has made national news:
http://abcnews.go.com/US/cops-heart-sank-realizing-shots-fired-minivan-full/story?id=21567684
We very obviously have an endemic problem with policing in the US. Given that police think they can deal out extrajudicial beatings as they see fit (Baltimore), or think they can arrest someone for being rude (Texas), or shoot someone in walmart idly holding an air rifle (still the most blatantly bad police shooting ive ever seen filmed).
I can't quite put my finger on the root cause: hero-worshipping of LEO's since 9/11, or DA's afraid they'll lose the support of police if they prosecute, and the weirdest thing is most conservatives always side with the police even when they're completely anti-authoritative/government in every other respect.
Last edited: