I guess with those odds you'd be quite happy to sit in a chair that has a 1 in 82 chance of electrocuting you once a year?
Note that that was the rate for assaults. The rate for actual deaths is more like one in 1 in 6666 years, as I calculated on page 2.
Guess what? People do stuff that has higher chances of death all the time. As I was saying, the chance of dying in a motorcycle accident is about 4 times higher, and we don't treat that as some heroic thing to do. Nor do we think that motorcyclists should have a right to shoot someone for driving too close and too aggressively.
Wow, you go from noting that there are 40 million encounters with cops in a year to rushing claim that the Police just shoot people for acting funny. Yet somehow the streets aren't running red with the blood of the thousands if not tens of thousands of those 40 million who likely acted funny, instead we're talking a handful, most likely 30 odd given the numbers reported in the news, but hey let's be generous and say 100 out of the 40 million where something goes terribly wrong. That is hardly the police just shooting everyone who acts funny.
1. I never said EVERYONE who acts funny. Running out of ideas and going for ye olde strawman already? Come on, we're barely on page 4
2. I've already mentioned that there are good cops and bad cops. Obviously not everyone goes for homicide at the drop of a hat. So I see no problem there.
3. Those people don't have a legal mandate to wave a gun in someone's face, nor are given the power to act in the name of the state. So there's little extra responsibility we can demand in exchange for that power. As they say, with great power comes great responsibility.
And yet with the odds (assuming they were just shooting random people they meet) of being killed by a cop is around 1 in 40,000 each year. Yet some how this converts to people needing to be terrified of the super bad bully boys that go around shooting everyone.
I never said you should be terrified, so again, that would be a strawman.
In reality, the odds of getting shot actually increase with your own behavior.
So what?
The same can be and IS said for rape victims, you know? Yet we don't automatically recognize the right to rape someone just because someone thought they acted provocatively.
The question still remains if in a particular situation the behaviour was actually warranting self-defense with deadly force, not whether it increased the likelyhood of getting shot. The question is precisely whether that increase is actually justified.
You know, like running from them, getting out of your car without being instructed to. Failing to comply with orders. Continuing to approaching them when told not to. Fumbling about in pockets or waistbands, quickly reaching into glove boxes and centre consoles. Saying, "I have a gun," and then reaching for it.
Time and time again when these incidents occur we see these same things happening, and we also see the same crowd leaping up and down about how terrible the cops are because they can't distinguish between behaviour that often leads to attacks on cops and just someone acting strange.
This is the thing. The reason that most of those in the 40 million don't get shot for "acting strangely" is that their "acting strangely" doesn't mimic the behaviour of those that are acting with malicious intent against the cop.
If you act like someone planning to attack a cop and then move in a way that looks like going for a weapon, don't be surprised if you end up on the wrong side of a bullet.
Again, stick to the actual facts of the situation at hand, not making up some OTHER, completely different, BS situation in which the shooting would be warranted. The fact is, the guy didn't actually have a weapon.
The thing about self defense, or any other legal situation really, is that you can't just imagine some demonstrably different situation as a defense. E.g., if I were charged with, say, shoplifting by just walking out the store door with the goods, I couldn't just present in defense a situation in which I was heading to the cashier instead. In the same vein, you can't just make up an excuse that hinges on the presence of a gun, for a situation where the guy was unarmed.
It takes two people to cause these situations, but in the minds of the Cop haters, the victim can never have done anything wrong at all.
Oooh, "cop haters". I was wondering how long you'd reach for ye olde ad hominem too. I mean, all that arguing nonsense had to be tiring on the imagination. Might as well reach for the classics, right?
Well, if you've read my messages at all, you've probably noticed that I'm not impressed much by browbeating. So save it for someone who cares, really.
Nope the cop was suppose to be a mind reader, the actions of the victim are totally irrelevant to it all cause the cop should have know that despite how he acts, he's not actually a threat.
Actually, on the contrary, what some of us ask is that the cop -- or anyone else involved in a self defense, really; there is no different standard -- doesn't act like he's a mind-reader. We'd rather they don't just assume to know a bunch of stuff pulled right out of the ass.
Hey, here's an idea. How about we make it so that cops aren't allowed to fire until fired on? Might mean more dead cops and criminals able to go on and kill other people instead of being stopped, but who cares if it save a few civilians from being shot by cops. Right?
Here's another idea, again: how about you address what's actually being said, not on whatever strawman or slippery slope justifies some self-righteous indignation.