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Yes, but at what point does it become too much force? No one wants to see police needlessly harmed, but they swore an oath to protect and serve. These innocent victims didn't.
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...and yes, I know, I'm sure we can all find isolated incidence of lethal force being used incorrectly.
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Take a look at the map from the article. There are your examples:
http://www.cato.org/raidmap/ While it heartens me to see that a few of you right-wingers see the dangers of "enhanced" police powers, you're only talking about cases of physical entry into homes. I consider wire-tapping and other forms of government collection of information on citizens to be just as intrusive and just as susceptible to mistakes and outright abuse. You may trust the current administration with these powers (I certainly do not) but do you really want some gun-grabbing Democratic administration reading your email, examining your credit card statements, and listening in on your phone calls? Is this still the land of the free and the home of the brave? Please, for the love of all that is Good and all that is American, quit living in fear and say NO to this! |
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One shot to the leg would have solved the situation. Unfortunate, but the police on too many occasions 'choose" to end a life instead of save one.
Thousands of other examples can be provided if necessary to prove my point. |
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That's not a good example. And I know that you know enough about firearms to know that it would needlessly jeopardizes the safety of the officer to ask him to target a limb in a high stress situation like that. And it's also not an effective way to quickly drop and aggressor and eliminate the risk to the officer and those around.
Furthermore, if an officer uses lethal force, that means the aggressor is within a just a few steps away, and a bullet to the limb will be ineffective at preventing him from reaching the officer. But even this problem is being addressed as police forces increasing supply their force with non-lethal weapons such as tazers and sprays. |
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I agree with the part about not shooting at limbs. Can often cause crippling injuries and leave people as invalids.
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| I disagree with the premise that tasers are non-lethal. It is a fact that many people who have been tasered have died. |
| We must reconcile due process and the 4th amendment with the EXTREME militarization of the police and federal agencies. Everybody's got helicopters and tanks now except for citizens. Why in the world should the police need a tank or a gunship, or even fixed-wing aircraft for that matter? |
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I'm amazed at the way you attempt to wriggle out of my taser comment. Your argument is that since many people DON'T die, it doesn't really matter that many DO? That's an argument more typical of Johnny, not you.
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| Your British bobbies with sticks comment is a straw dog, designed to make my comment look absurd. The problem is that I never said anything of the sort. That is you putting words in my mouth. |
| I really don't have time to answer every point that you made, although most of your points were really rhetoric designed to distract from the real issue raised by the article I posted, which you have glossed over and excused. |
| You are looking at a very one-sided view of this. You refuse to address the issues with the 4th Amendment, even so far as to debunk them by pre-empting any discussion of violations with a "...and yes, I know, I'm sure we can all find isolated incidence of lethal force being used incorrectly. But those are rare exceptions." |
| That statement is false. These are not rare exceptions; they happen EVERY DAY in this country. You really should go to badcops.ORG and check it out. |
| If you want to discuss this rationally and point by point, then fine. But all you're trying to do now is bury me in rhetoric. |
| Do you really believe naively that this could never happen here? Do you not remember Waco, Ruby Ridge, and Ken Ballew? |
| Do you care more about the rights of police, who are our public servants, than you do about the rights of the citizens of this country, who pay the salaries of those who oppress them? |
| Do you have a close family member in "law enforcement" and as such take all discussions of this nature personally? |
| Have you ever read "Unintended Consequences" by John Ross? If not, would you consider reading it to obtain the perspective of the other side, a perspective you obviously do not agree with? |
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It's an old maxim that the government should fear the people, not the other way around.
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At what point does it become too much force?? Never. Because, what you're failing to note is that while this huge presence might be called upon, most of the time deadly force is not used.
It's terribly inconvenient when a mistake is made, but rarely does it involve the loss of innocent life. As bad as it may seem when an old lady gets hand cuffed, she's not dead. |
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Originally Posted by Calabrio
The police and law enforcement are constantly put in a bad position. These are men and women who have valiantly and nobly put themselves between us the predators in society. They don't do it for the money. And as criminals become more sophisticated, more violent, and better armed, they also have to fight a public that is more jaded, more ungrateful, more hostile, and lawyered up.
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I disagree. There are way too many instances where police decide to use lethal force where it wasn't warranted. Literally thousands of cases where the police used lethal force in a situation that could have been resolved without the loss of life. But their 'training' doesn't allow for those instances where less-than-lethal would be appropriate. In most instances I consider it legalized murder on behalf of the police.
Case in point. I guy standing 5 feet away that supposedly "lunges" at a police officer who then shoots the guy 5 times point blank in the chest. Please! One shot to the leg would have solved the situation. Unfortunate, but the police on too many occasions 'choose" to end a life instead of save one. Thousands of other examples can be provided if necessary to prove my point. |

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I wonder how you feel about this story, Cal. It was, as you put it, "terribly inconvenient." But I guess it's best for cops to err on the side of THEIR OWN SAFETY ALWAYS, right? And the hell with the citizens they are supposed to protect?
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| A "Quality" Arrest & Prosecution. |
| Re-read your words. The police should not be in the position of "fighting the public." |
| Nor should police ever attack citizens with machine guns and hand grenades (Waco). Did you ever think that the reason the public is jaded is because of the loss of freedom perpetrated by the police, who are the ENFORCEMENT ARM of the corrupt government officials? |
| What should we be grateful for? Nanny state Feds and SWAT teams that "ensure our safety" while stripping (literally in this case) our liberties from us? |
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You're conspiratorial paranoia is getting really bizarre and alarming. We do not live in a police state. Police officers are the guys in blue who form a line and protect you from chaos. They are noble people serving in a thankless job.
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The coarseness of your rhetoric is getting out of character for you. I'm actually surprised. You sound defensive and you're calling names. I, on the other hand, am anything but bizarre. More people think like I do than you realize. Don't start casting aspersions on the gun culture when you know absolutely nothing about it.
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| If I were to respond in kind, I would say that you are living either in ignorance or denial. Just take a look at New York City these days. They are going to install 3,000 cameras on street corners. Helllooooo! Did you ever see the movie 1984? |
| Anybody who still thinks we live in a free country is a member of the sheeple. |
| I'll offer you this challenge: Buy it and read it, and if it doesn't transform your thinking, I'll buy it from you for your entire cost. No risk to you. I'll even escrow the thirty bucks with MonsterMark if you want. Do we have a deal? |
| By the way, my wife's son is a federal agent, so yes I do know people in that line of work personally, and I know that they are not all corrupt; |
| however, I believe that when push comes to shove, they will obey their superiors and protect their careers no matter what orders they are given. |
| If the higher ups tell them to go around confiscating guns, LIKE THEY DID IN NEW ORLEANS, they will do it. If the higher ups tell them to arrest gun owners, they will do it. They will rationalize this in their own minds by thinking like you: "Hey, they will get their day in court, and they can always sue." Meanwhile, the victims who have done nothing wrong have had their lives turned upside down. |
| And I'm getting a little tired of your lame attempts to minimize the abuses by cops across this country. This kind of thing happens EVERY WEEK in this country. |
| So stop acting like it's once a decade unless you have evidence to back up your statement. My contention is that it is a growing trend, despite the numbers of good law enforcement in this country. |
| Regardless of your opinion, you have yet to acknowledge that they are our public servants, not the other way around. |
| Do you have a conceal carry permit? Do you know anybody who does? Do you know how out of control cops get when they realize somebody they've pulled over for speeding has a gun? Don't tell me they don't overreact. |
| Ever hear of gun rights activists being harassed by the police? Google "Shaun Kranish" and see |
| There you have it - it's institutional according to Maitland - cops don't want citizens armed on the streets. And he acknowledges that this is not the Old West. He prefers ONLY COPS to be armed on the streets. What is that, if not a police state? |
| You really believe that somebody who shoots a bird on his own property should be attacked and bound naked by a SWAT team? |

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Don't make yourself a victim here and stop mischaracterizing everything I say as some kind of personal attack and thus avoiding the substance of everything else I've said.
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The mere fact that there are "more people that think like you" than I may or may not realize is absolutely meaningless. There are more socialists and anarchists than I may realize, but that doesn't strengthen their argument.
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Additionally, what aspersions am I casting on the "gun culture." I am a trained and licensed fire arm and handgun owner. I'm extremely familiar and active within the gun owning community. The only culture I may not be knowledgeable about would be the conspiratorial loony types that act outside of the legal system while developing ridiculous conspiratorial plots involving black helicopters and evil jack-booted police officers.
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Many cities have installed cameras on their streets. It's been deemed to be constitutional because it's a public space. Whether you think that this is a good or bad thing is not related to whether or not you think that the police and law enforcement officers are dangerous thugs hell bent on denying civil rights to the gun owning meth addicts who's half-stories so often find their way to the internet.
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Do we need to be constantly vigilant when protect our constitutionally protected rights? Absolutely. Does that having anything to do with your so-called "militarization" of the Police Department, when it's defined by good gear and tactical efficiency. No.
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How are out rights better protected when the police resemble the Keystone Cops?
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Not necessary. Given my understanding of that book, I expect myself to be in agreement with it. I've yet to read it, but do intend to.
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And now we aren't. Federal law enforcement officers are not robots. They don't lose their humanity. Nor do soldiers or local cops. You take a job like that to PROTECT the constitution, not suppress it.
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Again, there are always exceptions. Bad people sometimes slip through. But given how difficult the screening and application process is, this isn't common. And this whole sale indictment of nearly a million of some of the best Americans is offensive and ignorant. Do you have any idea how difficult it is to get a job with the FBI, Secret Service, or any other federal law enforcement position? Or the nearly six months of intense training they also often require?
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Again, how does this have anything to do with local law enforcement using flash bangs before entering a gang leaders home?
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But what is your suggestion? Eliminating all law enforcement officers because they might function to enforce bad laws? Are you saying they should be so poorly armed and equipped that they will be easy to shoot if they attempt to enforce a bad law?
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Don't you think it'd be better ot work within the system to ELIMINATE those bad laws, not leave law enforcement so poorly prepared they are basically offered for sacrifice to actual criminals?
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Over eight hundred Thousand law enforcement officers.
Again, you're solution is what? Disarm law enforcement? I'm not building a straw man here, what's your point? Give them night sticks alone? You can kill a man with a night stick, so how about whiffle ball bats? What's your goal? Not only do you mistrust the government, the politicians, you're venting on the regular normal guy who choses a thankless, dangerous career, with the intention of just helping people. |
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..do you have any evidence to back up that the law enforcement abuses are actually proportionately increasing? Noting that the population has grown, as have the numbers of law enforcement, are the stats really getting worse? I'd actually expect to see some increase given the increased likelihood of the public to report them and the litigious society we live in. But is that even the case?
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What do you mean by public servants? I've stated that these are men and women who serve the community, that they dedicate themselves to a thankless job with the intention of helping out other people, people they probably don't even know. You seem to think that public servant means that they should be our whipping boys and victims. That they should be cannon fodder for scum bag criminals. And that they should be viewed suspiciously and as though they are our enemy.
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To the contrary, I think of law enforcement as an ally. To someone who is trying to improve the quality of the neighborhood. Someone I work with, not against.
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Yes and I've never had a problem.
But, have you ever been in a line of work where it's very possible someone will shoot you in the chest because they've been pulled over for speeding and they have a pending arrest warrant. |
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The police chief is a political position. So you have now quotes the public statement from a politician. Every police officer I know encourages responsible adults to own and train with fire arms. All of them. But I'm not friends with that Police Chief.
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Of course not. However, I do get the distinct impression that story is either bullcrap or missing some crucial information. Regardless, if reality is as the story was presented, that was a horrible abuse of power,reckless abandoning of better judgment, and horrible allocation of resources.
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But, if posted a true story about the heroic deeds of a police officer, would that counter your single negative story? What if I matched every negative story you can find with three stories of bravery and nobility? What if I matched it with five? or ten? Would that prove something to you?
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What about the sixty police officers who died at the World Trade Center attempting to save people on 9/11? Or the police officers who routines dive into icy water to save children. Who form human chains to pull people out of rushing waters. The ones who throw themselves in harms way to protect innocents from enraged gunmen?
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You keep reminding us of the exceptions and you wholesale dismiss the quality and character of the vast majority of those people who dedicate their lives to public service. You denigrate them, you equate them to mind number, brainwashed, robots who simply lust for power.
This is not the case. |
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Comparing a 100 year old picture of a Chicago police officer to a photo of a U.S. Capitol Police is totally ridiculous and meaningless.
Earlier in this thread, I made a reference to the police officers being completely out armed by the bad guys at the turn of the century. Those same police officers in 1915 were completely ineffective when it came to preventing bank robberies and other violent crimes. Bad guys, like Bonnie and Clyde for example, simply purchased BAR automatic rifles. ![]() Were we safer because the police were more poorly armed and defenseless against the criminals? Was it wrong to equip police departments with BAR rifles? Does giving the police radios result in them being a repressive force? If dealing with a BAD cop of some kind, are you any less dead when beaten to death with a stick, shot by a .38 snub nose, or it's an MP5 round that finishes you off? As I've stated repeatedly, the author misses the point by making the way the police look the issue of his article and not the policies they are mandated to enforce. Further, he is incorrect for saying that we should disarm law enforcement in order to make us safer. Personally, my hunch is that the author would really like to see ALL weapons banned, in both the hands of civilians and law enforcement. |
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So you're denying that you called me bizarre and a conspiracy theorist?
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| And now you are implying that I'm a socialist and an anarchist? Just throw everything you can think of against the wall, eh? |
| Again with your coarse rhetoric. Who are you calling loony? Examples, please. |
| Waco and Ruby Ridge were NOT figments of anybody's imagination. |
| It is NOT irrelevant; it is DIRECTLY related to the term "police state." You saying so doesn't make it irrelevant. What authority are you using to make this claim? |
| Good gear and tactical efficiency? That's what you call it? |
| There's your false straw man again. Either they have to be the Gestapo or the Keystone cops. No middle ground here with you. |
| Interesting. The truth is that there should be jurisdictional limits on what law enforcement can and can't do, and that should include what kinds of crime they should target. |
| Local police forces should NOT be MILITARY. That's what the MILITARY is for. |
| If there is a crime problem that is out of their league, that is what the FBI or the MILITARY is for. Call them in. But don't cross the line from "protect and serve" to "dominate and destroy." |
| You really, truly don't see the link between militarization of your "friendly, neighborhood beat cop" and the growing distrust and outright fear of them by the public? |
| It's like taking the red pill. |
| Oh! Which parts of the Constitution? Only the parts not in the Bill of Rights? Because I could have sworn that the 4th Amendment along with the 2nd is being swept away in this country every time a SWAT team busts into some poor schmuck's house with a pre-signed warrant. |
| Show me where I indicted nearly a million people by talking about militarization. Talk about being misquoted. |
| Yes I do. I applied for the FBI several years ago and missed the cut because of color blindness. |
| And I'm ex-military. By the way, what does the FBI and Secret Service and Fed law enforcement have to do with local police forces? You're straying away and using straw men again. |