dave is ok
aztek is ok
Probably carbon monoxideWait, poisoned? Now I need to know what the hell happened there
Probably carbon monoxideWait, poisoned? Now I need to know what the hell happened there
Seems odd that people are willing to paint with such a broad brush on this topic, yet would find it intellectually dishonest or worse when applied to a different one. Like it's ok to generalize those who have traditionally been in a privileged position, but reprehensible if done to those who have traditionally been oppressed.
I won't give specific examples because it will probably get me banned.
Anyone willing to talk me down from this observation? I'm willing to listen.
Why? They are paid to represent cops. If their boss isn't pushing them to, why would they?
And that's my point. They should represent GOOD public servants. Not the corrupt pieces of shit amongst them. If you're suggesting that they have or should have no obligation to do so then thank you, you're proving my point.
I don't associate bad apples with the whole force, I'm better than that.
This police union boss wants us to use a broad brush to stop criticizing police officers that deserve criticism and the union groupies and attorneys who defend them no matter the circumstance. Why aren't you observing the fact he's using a broad brush to defend all officers as innocent? He's says they're human right? Why didn't you ask why he doesn't believe all humans are individuals? Why are message board posts, from posters not put in a position of trust, more worth pointing out? In one post why couldn't you criticize the Union's broad brush strokes in the article along with those in this topic?Seems odd that people are willing to paint with such a broad brush on this topic, yet would find it intellectually dishonest or worse when applied to a different one. Like it's ok to generalize those who have traditionally been in a privileged position, but reprehensible if done to those who have traditionally been oppressed.
I won't give specific examples because it will probably get me banned.
Anyone willing to talk me down from this observation? I'm willing to listen.
I'm partial to "stop resisting" personally.Primarily it gives cops an out for their murders.
Planting guns, or even making up guns that never show up in evidence, isn't a movie or TV thing.
Why would anyone want to be a cop these days?
It's gotta suck to be a Chicago Cop.
There's times when I think about how fun it would be highway patrol or something, just out pulling all the stupid drivers in the area over and ticketing them into either responsible driving or such a deep bankruptcy that they cannot afford gas to continue driving. But then I think about the shit pay, shit hours, the risk, quotas, the other cops that I would have to interact with, pressure from the entire chain of command to pull over people of color, and more. Being able to ruin some asshole's day who's doing 20 over down Main Street and cutting people off and tailgating wouldn't be worth it for me.Why would anyone want to be a cop these days?
"The perception of a lot of police officers in the City of Chicago is that nobody has their backs," Dean Angelo Sr., president of the local Fraternal Order of Police, said in a luncheon address to the City Club on Tuesday. He spoke of a "deafening silence" in support of police as they deal with an "enormous level of confrontation, a level of disrespect we have not seen."
There's times when I think about how fun it would be highway patrol or something, just out pulling all the stupid drivers in the area over and ticketing them into either responsible driving or such a deep bankruptcy that they cannot afford gas to continue driving. But then I think about the shit pay, shit hours, the risk, quotas, the other cops that I would have to interact with, pressure from the entire chain of command to pull over people of color, and more. Being able to ruin some asshole's day who's doing 20 over down Main Street and cutting people off and tailgating wouldn't be worth it for me.
It didn't go so well for a cop GAFer around the Ferguson times. Dude was chewed out.I would love an AMA thread from a gaffer who's a cop in a larger city and willing to answer questions about their job. I think it would be incredibly interesting but knowing the OT forum it wouldn't end well.
Why would anyone want to be a cop these days?
This is a very large and unacknowledged problem. We need good people to be cops, but if everyone hates them only bullies/douches will be cops. Then it gets worse.
This is a very large and unacknowledged problem. We need good people to be cops, but if everyone hates them only bullies/douches will be cops. Then it gets worse.
This is a very large and unacknowledged problem. We need good people to be cops, but if everyone hates them only bullies/douches will be cops. Then it gets worse.
Angelo blamed the "Ferguson effect," referring to last year's police protests over the shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and said people who record officers with their phones are "hoping for a payday." He also said new demands for increased paperwork contributed to why Chicago Police "are down over 150,000 street stops" this year.
Weren't these jokers the ones responsible for the chicago black-sites?
Rosenfelds research was widely cited in articles debunking the Ferguson effect.
But that paper only looked at the evidence for the effect in one city. With funding from the National Institute of Justice, the justice departments research arm, Rosenfeld did a new study early this year that looked that more broadly at homicide trends in the nations 56 largest cities and found an overall 17% increase in homicide.
As a result of that broader national analysis he said, he has had second thoughts about the Ferguson effect. My views have been altered.
Looking at the additional homicides in large cities, he found that two-thirds of the increase was concentrated in 10 cities: Baltimore, Chicago, Houston, Milwaukee, Cleveland, Washington, Nashville, Philadelphia, Kansas City and St Louis.
Those 10 cities had somewhat higher levels of poverty than the other cities he examined. But, he said, the key difference was that their African American population was substantially larger than other large cities: an average of 41% in those 10 cities, compared with 19.9% in the others.
Separate analyses looked at two of these cities in 2015 and early 2016. A FiveThirtyEight assessment of Chicago crime data concluded that the citys increase in gun violence was statistically significant, that the spike dated back to the release of the video of the police shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald, and that it was closely correlated with a drop in police arrests. Researchers in Baltimore found a similar correlation between a drop in arrests and an increase in violence in the wake of protests over Freddie Grays death, and concluded that while the Ferguson effect played no role in Baltimores rising violence, a Freddie Gray effect may have been a significant factor.
That line about people who are recording the police are "hoping for a payday" is the kind of cynicism that is pervasive throughout all aspects of american policing. Maybe they are recording because they are afraid for the apprehended person's human rights. But no, keep thinking everyone is a crook, and everyone will go on disrespecting you.
While this is certainly good advice, and I fully believe the police are doing a poor job, they are also tasked with policing a heavily armed population. Most other countries police don't have to deal with that.
Weren't these jokers the ones responsible for the chicago black-sites?