Good point! That 18 cases figure should be reduced then, according to your statistics.
What do you think her other concerns are?
I'd say Michelle has at least 3.6 times more reason to fear that her kids might be shot than some others:
https://jjie.org/2021/02/11/police-...ects-show-the-young-more-likely-to-be-killed/
I don't know that being shot by police is her only concern, I doubt it. I think someone here made that up.
Man, "18"...incredible. Police perform about 10 million arrests per year. There are 40 million+ African Americans. There were 60 total such killings, across every race, of the 340 million Americans. Obviously, this is an epidemic.
Man, "18"...incredible. Police perform about 10 million arrests per year. There are 40 million+ African Americans. There were 60 total such killings, across every race, of the 340 million Americans. Obviously, this is an epidemic.
The problem is not the number 18. The problem is police in the United States shoot and kill black people at the rate of 37 per million black people, as opposed to only 15 per million for white people. In case you didn't notice it, the rate at which black people are killed by police is twice that for whites.
Article at the Washington Post
Not to mention that police in the USA are far more likely to shoot someone, fatally or otherwise, than police in Canada or Europe.
If it's the case I'm thinking of the guy being attacked was still alive (he actually lived though having a large chunk of his face being bitten off) and the officer shot the perpetrator to try to save the victim's life. The only other choice would have been to try to physically restrain the guy, and a single officer trying that with someone that's obviously on PCP or bath salts is incredibly dangerous.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miami_cannibal_attack
Exactly. Being shot is the most severe outcome from a whole range of potential bad.
We don't have any figures on Tazer uses or pepper spray uses for example, except for snapshots which show that in some municipalities blacks have been targeted by police.
It also leaves out people that were shot but not killed.
Ohio cop that was fired for stomping on a restrained man's head is getting his job back and back-pay.
https://fox8.com/news/i-team/east-cleveland-officer-fired-for-stomping-mans-head-to-return-to-force/
Who, apart from you, said that?
I'd say Michelle has at least 3.6 times more reason to fear that her kids might be shot than some others:
https://jjie.org/2021/02/11/police-...ects-show-the-young-more-likely-to-be-killed/
I don't know that being shot by police is her only concern, I doubt it. I think someone here made that up.
I'd say Michelle has at least 3.6 times more reason to fear that her kids might be shot than some others:
https://jjie.org/2021/02/11/police-...ects-show-the-young-more-likely-to-be-killed/
I don't know that being shot by police is her only concern, I doubt it. I think someone here made that up.
Yeah but it's not an epidemic so no need to worry about it.
Let's say Malia is driving her Chrysler 300c to Whole foods to buy arugula. What happens next?
How many of the 'not unarmed' were presenting any real threat?18 unarmed people killed by the police in a year seems pretty epidemic to me
How many are shot but don't die?
Why are unarmed people being killed by the police at all?
Using class resentment to excuse bigotry is an age old (and, sadly, reasonably effective) tactic.But only if she's going to Whole Foods - not sure what the point of that is.
The problem is not the number 18. The problem is police in the United States shoot and kill black people at the rate of 37 per million black people, as opposed to only 15 per million for white people. In case you didn't notice it, the rate at which black people are killed by police is twice that for whites.
And how does that compare to the difference in the number of police encounters between the two population groups? Considering the crime rates, and especially the violent crime rates, show that black people commit MORE than twice the number of violent crimes than white people do, you could argue that they are actually underrepresented in police shootings.
I'm not arguing that police violence isn't out of control in the US, but I'm arguing that the numbers show it's not racial.
Investigators say there was a dispute in a home on Arborcrest that spilled out into what police are calling a “gun fight” in the street.
Two vehicles were also shot up during the incident.
Police ask anyone with information to please come forward.
“When we have these shootings in these neighborhoods, we need people that witnessed this to come forward and help us out. We can’t do it all by ourselves,” said IMPD Night Watch commander Kerry Buckner.
Family members say the man who died was 28-years-old and was in a wheelchair from a prior gunshot wound. According to relatives, he was also an innocent bystander who got caught in the crossfire of bullets when the unknown suspect or suspects drove by and started firing.
If it's the case I'm thinking of the guy being attacked was still alive (he actually lived though having a large chunk of his face being bitten off) and the officer shot the perpetrator to try to save the victim's life. The only other choice would have been to try to physically restrain the guy, and a single officer trying that with someone that's obviously on PCP or bath salts is incredibly dangerous.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miami_cannibal_attack
Back to the mass shootings committed by not-police. I've recently been waiting until Friday to post all of the mass shootings that occurred during the middle of the week, but it appears it's going to be an especially busy week so I will get a head start now.
Queens, New York
4 wounded when three masked men stepped out of a SUV and fired at people standing on a sidewalk.
Iselin, New Jersey
Bachelorette party →Hotel →Argument between two groups → Gunplay → 4 wounded.
Indianapolis, Indiana
4 critically wounded.
Detroit, Michigan
1 killed, 5 wounded outside of a banquet club early in the morning. A drive-by shooting with return fire.
It wasn't a quote. It was a conclusion based on how people react to black in the US.