To me, it has always seemed the natural role of a skeptic to hear a story presented in the media as "horrible racist treatment of black people has happened again, black man beaten and/or killed for no reason at all!" and then say "Hmm, I bet there's more to this story"
I don't see why so many here want to shut down that sort of reaction to these stories.
This is a reaction I'm familiar with from the conspiracy theory forums. "You're supposed to be skeptics, why are you supporting the official story and why are you trying to suppress alternative theories?" Viewed in the most charitable sense, it's based on a fundamental misunderstanding of the difference between skepticism and denialism. Less charitably, it's an attempt to subvert the process of rational skepticism in support of an agenda. Skeptic Tank's stated his agenda quite openly, and strongly argues for a belief that black people are unfit for citizenship, so we needn't bother enquiring too closely about motives. But it's worth pointing out that skepticism only requires that conclusions are questioned, not that they're necessarily rejected. We're allowed so form working conclusions based on the evidence available, rather than having to wait till irrefutable proof of a conclusion is presented - in fact, outside of mathematics there is no such thing.
I'm being criticized for my provisional conclusion that racism played a part in this incident, so I'll explain what led me to it, and where I stand with respect to evidence. Firstly, we regularly see stories of black people in the USA suffering excessively brutal treatment at the hands of police officers, and my perception is that these stories are vastly more common than white people suffering similar treatment - though there are such stories, they are relatively few. The simplest and most parsimonious explanation, given the long and well-documented history of racial discrimination in the USA (please note: I'm not suggesting here that the USA is unusual in this respect), is that racism has not been eliminated from the law enforcement community, and the result is a preponderance of stories in which black people are beaten or killed by police when there is no rational cause. This is clearly exascerbated by the USA's attitude to gun ownership, which raises the perceived level of danger police work under to the point where the "warrior cop" attitude becomes prevalent. Police see their job as taking out the bad guys before they get taken out themselves, and some tend to associate black with bad. Even if that's based, as ST insists, on crime statistics, applying it to a situation like this, if that's what happened, is still racist; it's judging an individual on the basis of characteristics rightly or wrongly assigned to their race. The common counter to this is "You can't prove this specific instance was racist." This is equivalent to asking for the benefit of the doubt, but the overall picture seems too clear for there to be much doubt to benefit from.
Now, I admit I may be wrong. It may be that white people suffer this sort of treatment at the same rate as black people, but the stories are not widely reported. I can think of three responses to this.
Firstly, are the stories not reported because they're hushed up by police departments? Do municipalities offer generous settlements to white victims of police brutality that they don't offer to black victims, so only the latter become major issues? That would simply remove the racism one step, but I'd be interested to see evidence of it.
Secondly, are the stories not reported because they're not considered newsworthy, that more or less innocent white people being brutalized by police is considered so commonplace that it's not worth talking about, but the occasional black person suffering the same becomes national news? This seems unlikely, because there are news outlets quite capable of reporting stories of brutality against white people; there should be links to post.
Thirdly, is there a nationwide conspiracy to suppress stories of brutality against white people? I'd be prepared to consider evidence for this, but the burden of proof is pretty damned high.
Fourthly, is Skeptic Tank right, and was every single incident of this sort brought on by the criminality of the victim? Was 68-year-old Marvia Gray a violent criminal who needed to be wrestled to the ground by armed officers? Was Philando Castile's exercising of his legal right to carry a weapon, and his notification of the police officer stopping him that he held one, a crime so threatening that it demanded his instant shooting? Was the supposed carer of an autistic man armed with a toy car presenting such a threat by lying on the ground with his hands up and politely asking a police officer not to shoot him that he needed to be shot, handcuffed and left to bleed for half an hour before receiving medical attention? The arguments offered so far in support of this interpretation have been weak at best, pathetically biased at worst. But I'm open to better evidence.
But for the moment, simple, good old fashioned racism is the explanation that comes across as most compelling in this case, based on the overall picture. And the arguments I've seen for any other interpretation simply don't fit the facts as presented. As a middle aged white man, I'd expect on occasion to get rather annoyed with a customer services representative without being body-slammed, handcuffed and hospitalized. Yet when a black man and a black old lady get treated differently, we're asked to assume it can't possibly be racism unless and until it's proven beyond possible doubt.
Skepticism doesn't work like that.
Racism doesn't work like that. If you want to change my mind, give me something better.
Dave