I wouldn't give the U.S.P.D the pass because of culture. It's so clearly fucked up and crazy. I suppose I live in the U.S., so I can understand the hesitancy [I'm generally less critical of other countries, just because I know I know very little about them], but it's nice to have counter-examples like this. — Moliere
Indeed. And as a martial artist, what often stands out to me is that I—a private citizen—seem to be not only better trained in how to handle some (emphasis on some) of these situations, but expected to show more control in these situations than a police officer. It seems there are failures at multiple levels here: in the hiring process, the training process, and perhaps even the assignment process. As money gets tighter, it becomes harder to hire qualified candidates and budget gaps are filled with (military-grade) equipment rather than training. Then officers are taught to be suspicious of everyone rather than to learn about and integrate with the community in which they will be serving (particularly bizarre when you consider this would make threat assessments much easier, and threat assessment is precisely what so much of an officer's training focus on). And perhaps there is an important mistake being made in which assignments are given to novices and which to officers with more experience. Maybe beat cop isn't the entry-level position that it gets treated as.But conservative measures when it comes to the taking of life are surely what we want of our security forces. — Baden
And while such stunts might be fine so far as they help officers integrate with their communities, it often seems to be nothing more than public relations (as you say). And the public they are trying to impress doesn't seem to be the one they are policing. In fact, I'm far more impressed by the officer who diffused a situation with a dance-off (and then refused media attention) than by any police media event.The police do public relations stunts like that in order to have a good report with the communities they police. — Moliere
On the money side of things -- we spend a considerable amount on police. In our city -- and I'm lead to believe that this isn't an anomaly, though I haven't sifted through the data -- the police department is the single largest chunk of the general fund. Police have more than striker fire pistols -- APC's, body armor, shotguns.
The force has been militarized in recent years because the feds have given surplus military gear to local PD's. — Moliere
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