U
Usagi
Guest
For no reason? Or because police across the country have been seen to get away with assault and murder under the cover of their jobs and people are fed up?I don’t think police are being pelted with rocks and bricks because they’re accused of bad things; most directly, they’re being pelted with rocks and bricks because lawless violent rioters are assaulting them.
(Yes, I consider the rioting reaction to be excessive, but if people defend the police for being human and having emotional reactions despite presumably being trained in things like de-escalation, surely we can extend at least the same courtesy to citizens without any such training who are pushed too far?)
We probably do ask the police to serve too many roles. That’s actually one of the issues that has bubbled up out of the protests, with the result that a lot of people are talking about restructuring response options so that some things are actually handled by social workers.As I see it, you’re asking police to act like social workers, i.e. Inquire after the welfare of those who accost them. That’s not the police’s job.
Though, they are police and not soldiers. The people they’re dealing with are the ones they signed up to protect (and indeed, indirectly, their employers), not The Enemy. There should be a lot more occasions on which the job calls for them to speak kindly and reassuringly to someone than ones that call for armoring up and steamrolling whatever is in the way.
Okay, hold up. The police started this. Not just the killing of George Floyd, for which the responsible parties will get their day in court. Minneapolis police sprayed (assaulted) protesters who were just sitting on the ground, complete with masks and social distancing. There are far more accounts of police going after people who were nonviolently sitting or standing around (even bystanders and journalists who weren’t part of the protests) than of them heroically standing up to perfidious rioters and looters. (And when they have nabbed somebody who was committing an actual crime, nobody particularly complains.)This person intentionally accosted police and interfered with them; he’s lucky worse didn’t happen to them. The police across the US showed enormous restraint collectively; some would say they showed too much restraint.
How much less restraint could police be showing? “Kent State 2.0,” as was mentioned above? You realize that would be definite outright murders on the police’s part, not in any way justified and certainly not likely to de-escalate the protests, right?