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alehul | 5 years ago
U.S. civilians own nearly 400 million firearms, which is larger than the country's population. The intentional homicide rate is comparable to Kenya, Pakistan, Ecuador, or Argentina (5x higher than Western Europe). Are you sure that police will be able to operate effectively without being armed in a somewhat militaristic manner?
> redistribute law enforcement responsibilities among domain-specific entities
What will happen if I call 911 and report someone stole from me at gunpoint? What if I report that someone violated my restraining order against them? What if I report that someone is yelling threateningly at waitstaff at a restaurant?
> not violate the public trust
While we absolutely need more oversight, there are over ~55,000,000 documented police-public encounters in a given year, and ~1,000 cases of lethal force used by police (vast majority were people attempting to harm the officers).
The rate of lethal force as a percent of interactions: 0.0000206473%.
The rate of lethal force against the total U.S. population: 0.00000343477%.
dragonwriter|5 years ago
I have a problem with centralized, all-purpose paramilitary law enforcement agencies.
If you ignore half the words of a description, it can change the meaning significantly.
alehul|5 years ago
In a country as armed and violent as the United States, escalation happens quickly and dangerously. We've all seen videos of officers pulling a car over for speeding and being executed the moment they look away, there's been more than a few in the past couple months alone [1] [2] [3]. Nearly any situation can become lethal for the officer and civilians [4], so I think it's fair to ask in what situations there would be an armed responder.
Edited with sources as it was downvoted:
[1] https://nypost.com/2020/09/15/police-release-footage-of-fata... [2] https://apnews.com/article/808248ed232ca2a83dad8780359bf69b [3] https://www.cnn.com/2020/10/20/us/south-carolina-deputy-kill...
[4] https://www.scotusblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/16-153...
bberenberg|5 years ago
> What will happen if I call 911 and report someone stole from me at gunpoint? What if I report that someone violated my restraining order against them?
FYI, the police have no obligation to do anything in the restraining order scenario: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Town_of_Castle_Rock_v._Gonzale...
In fact, police have no obligation of duty to you as an individual in almost any scenario.
alehul|5 years ago
Wasn't an open warrant for violating a restraining order what led to the Jacob Blake alteraction?
scythe|5 years ago
>The rate of lethal force as a percent of interactions: 0.0000206473%.
Could you explain this number? I get 0.001818%. Did you forget to correct for the factor 100 in giving a percentage?
sumedh|5 years ago
What is the percentage when it comes to Black and Latinos in the US?
unnouinceput|5 years ago
I would argue that anything above 0.00% is wrong. Police must and should always use non-lethal approach. Regardless of their situation. Sound / visual / sensory approach would incapacitate the violent persona and bring it to justice. Police in now way should be granted judge and executioner roles.
We are either consider life precious or not at all. No middle ground.
alehul|5 years ago
Of the percent I cited, >90% of that lethal force is against an armed individual.
I don't know what sensory approach could prevent every single death, when there are so many cases of violence in this country.
[1] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6080222/
d1sxeyes|5 years ago
watwut|5 years ago
dragonwriter|5 years ago
Yeah, I don't know why the biggest argument people raise against radical reform of the US law enforcement system is "the current system is doing a spectacularly bad job at controlling crime, so we shouldn't mess with it".
throwaway9980|5 years ago
- Mao Zedong
It's easy to wonder how the government would collect taxes without armed police. Or confiscate guns if stricter gun control laws are created. The reality is, of course, that they merely want to defund or disarm this version of the police.