Indeed. Consider though... Frequently I hear black people describe how they instruct their children to behave in order to avoid risky confrontations with cops. They don't do this because they think their kids are guilty of something, or because they think cops are always in the right. They do this in the interest of protecting their kids from harm.I think we're getting caught in a trap here, of post-event analysis.
Of course, whenever a terrible thing happens, we can look back on it and say "he should have done something different." We now know things we did not or could not know then. We're like the audience at a horror movie, yelling at the screen "No, don't open that door!"
Thieves came and stole my TV. I should have put better bars on the window. I should have had a different TV. I shouldn't have this or should have that. And of course, in some sense that's true. In some irrelevant, red-herring way, whenever a crime is committed, there's something we can point to afterward that redistributes the responsibility.
But when a crime is committed, it's the criminal who does it. When a bunch of yahoos in a pickup truck accost a jogger and kill him, it's their fault. All of it is their fault. When we look at the video and see what happened, and see what might have been done, it's useful to plan for our own future, but if we use it to evaluate the event itself, we are diving into a morass of moral equivocation and speculation and critique of inferred attitude, which at best is useless and at worst results in accusations, real or not, that we make victims the authors of their demise.
Here on the internet, it's hard to distinguish that sentiment from excusing the perps.
(I'm not addressing this to you.) It's my sense that Thermal is not excusing the perps in any way, and I wish posters would lighten up on him.