Shoot to disable so they can pull their weapon and kill you? |
The vast majority of these cases - there are some exceptions - would have turned out differently if the civilian just obeyed police commands. Where is this defiance of authority getting them? What is so hard about doing what the cop tells you to do? |
+1. and once they shoot the police officer(s), who is there to stop them from then going and shooting innocent bystanders? that is why it is shoot to kill/stop the imminent threat. |
| ^ meant to say immediate threat |
Especially if you claim to be so distrustful and afraid of cops. If you are afraid of them do you think disobeying their orders and reaching in your car/pockets/whatever is a good idea? |
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What was a man with such a severe traumatic brain injury that he could not comply with simple instructions doing driving a car and open carrying a weapon?
Has the TBI been proven, through medical records, not just the word of his family? |
Truth. Also that statement makes me sad.
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Not only that, but the NYT reported that he worked as a security guard at a mall. Why would someone with an ex-felon with a brain injury have that type of job? |
This is what I don't understand. Why is no one willing to concede that in this case Scott was in the wrong? Doing so does not negate the BLM movement or the fact that in some cases police have unjustly shot someone. But this case? Come on you have to do some serious mental gymnastics and blaming to come tot he conclusion that it was the fault of the police and not Scott. |
He is an ex-felon? Then his open carry wasn't legal either. |
Crickets |
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I've made several valid points and brought up several relevant perspectives in the hopes of furthering discussion but to no avail so I'm out too.
But before I go let me say this... Yes rioting and looting and destroying property does immeasurable damage to communities, but so does falsifying accounts and arrests and planting evidence and trumping charges and profiling citizens. Communities are just as damaged when innocent people are arrested and jailed and in extreme cases killed. Communities are just as damaged when police perpetuate toxic environments and relationships with the communities they serve by undervaluing the concerns of law-abiding citizens who are in the majority and over-emphasizing their focus on the criminality of a much smaller segment. Not a perfect analogy but consider... If you have a classroom of 30 kids and 28 of them have their hands raised in response to a question the teacher presented but two students are giggling in the back is it important to stop them from disrupting the rest of the class, yes! But it shouldn't shift the teacher's entire focus away from those other 28 students who aren't acting up. The teacher still has a duty as defined by their profession to dedicate themselves towards the majority who need that teacher's instruction. Again, not a perfect analogy but you get the point. You have an overwhelming segment of citizens who aren't in jail or under suspicion of any crime expressing their concerns about police as it relates to racial profiling, misuse of force, and police misconduct but those concerns are by and large ignored in favor of focusing on ramping up police sweeps on citizens and pulling over motorists who "look" suspicious and escalating conflicts with citizens if they fail to conform immediately - the very opposite actions of what the majority is calling for an end to. As the once despised but now revered Dr. King once said, "A riot is the language of the unheard." |
This is Michael Brown all over again. Everyone got all upset over that "sweet kid's" death when in reality he was a violent criminal who reached into a police car for an officer's gun. A lie started the whole "hands up don't shoot" thing yet protesters still use it. So I'm sure we'll be seeing "IT WAS A BOOK" in many protests to come. |
Yes. The media isn't reporting it, but he did prison time for assault with a deadly weapon. |
Does this incident sound like that of Michel Brown? |