BBM
Police officers go through almost continuous training. Long hours put in training. But since you obviously know what pressure they are under let's try this.
I will tell you what. You join the police force and when a man pulls a gun on you then you can just politely ask him not to shoot you.
How about you face a drug crazed person out of their mind with a knife and you stand there and politely try to reason with them.
Or let's try this. You face a man with a gun pointed at the head of a child and try to disarm him by politely requesting he let the child go and not kill anyone.
Ever heard the old phrase "don't judge me until you have walked a mile in my shoes"? Maybe you need to walk a mile in a police officers shoes or boots whatever the case may be.
JMO
BBM
Police officers go through almost continuous training. Long hours put in training. But since you obviously know what pressure they are under let's try this.
I will tell you what. You join the police force and when a man pulls a gun on you then you can just politely ask him not to shoot you.
How about you face a drug crazed person out of their mind with a knife and you stand there and politely try to reason with them.
Or let's try this. You face a man with a gun pointed at the head of a child and try to disarm him by politely requesting he let the child go and not kill anyone.
Ever heard the old phrase "don't judge me until you have walked a mile in my shoes"? Maybe you need to walk a mile in a police officers shoes or boots whatever the case may be.
JMO
BBM
Police officers go through almost continuous training. Long hours put in training. But since you obviously know what pressure they are under let's try this.
I will tell you what. You join the police force and when a man pulls a gun on you then you can just politely ask him not to shoot you.
How about you face a drug crazed person out of their mind with a knife and you stand there and politely try to reason with them.
Or let's try this. You face a man with a gun pointed at the head of a child and try to disarm him by politely requesting he let the child go and not kill anyone.
Ever heard the old phrase "don't judge me until you have walked a mile in my shoes"? Maybe you need to walk a mile in a police officers shoes or boots whatever the case may be.
JMO
BBMSo the police just shoot without confirming anything? Just shoot, ask questions later seems to be the motto of the US police.
I wonder if anything will happen to the police in this case or if will go the same as the case of the poor woman in Minnesota.
Unbelievable.
Call of Duty player, 25, is arrested for swatting hoax where cops shot his 'online gaming rival' dead after he 'called 911 pretending to be the victim and said he'd shot his father and was holding his mother and brother hostage'
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...y-player-25-arrested-fatal-swatting-hoax.html
BBM
I agree that there are too many cases of LE mistakes. One case is too many, but this is not a perfect world and I think it’s very unfair to say that shooting first is the “motto” of US police.
Come on folks, let’s think this through instead of having a knee-jerk “police are bad (or incompetent)” reaction (and yes, some are, no argument there). Police respond to a presumed hostage situation such as this, putting their lives on the line, and there isn’t the luxury of standing around “confirming anything.” The object is to save lives.
A man appears at the door, seems to police to ignore directions and appears to reach for his waistband. Things are happening fast. What does anyone expect LE to do? Interview the man? There are supposedly hostages who need help. What if this was real and you were a hostage? Would you want them to hesitate? There would be cries of police incompetence if they didn’t take immediate action to protect hostages. Hostage negotiators are not usually first responders, so given what we know, I don’t see that LE was out of bounds in this case. Do you honestly expect perfection of LE every single time they go out on a call to help people in danger?
This is a horrible tragedy caused by the person who made the fake 911 swatting call and no one else. There is no reason to automatically presume this is a trigger-happy police response, and it’s pretty disrespectful to LE everywhere to do so IMO.
Hence why civilized country’s don’t shot to kill and then ask questions later. The cop is responsible for killing a innocent man as the victim was not a threat to him.
Of course this particular cop is responsible for killing an innocent man. Im sure he is devastated too and will always live with it. Thats not the point I was making.
I was responding to someone painting all U.S. LE with a broad brush, saying their motto is shoot first, ask questions later, ignoring the man who caused them to be there in the first place. I dont think most cops want to or do shoot to kill and ask questions later. I hate that it happens at all. But, on the one hand, we expect them to save us from a murderer, but then we criticize when they act according to their training and instincts and make an error. The only way to prevent that is to disarm LE IMO. There will always be human error or a cop who shoots when he shouldnt. As I said, we dont live in a perfect world.
What civilized countries are you referencing? And how do they handle volatile situations? What can U.S. LE learn from them? Specifics please, not generalities. Otherwise its not a reasonable discussion. Thanks.
I am from the UK and the police are not armed and innocent people don’t have to live in fear that they will randomly be murdered for doing absolutely nothing wrong by people who are supposed to protect them.
From a newspaper article
The Metropolitan Police carried out some 3,300 deployments involving firearms in 2016. They didn't fire a single shot at a suspect.
It's a world away from the United States, where cops killed 1,092 people in 2016, according to figures compiled by The Guardian.
Funny that as the victim was not a threat and had no weapon found on him.
American are a joke when it comes to guns even the police can’t be trusted to use them accordingly it seems.
BBMI am from the UK and the police are not armed and innocent people don’t have to live in fear that they will randomly be murdered for doing absolutely nothing wrong by people who are supposed to protect them.
From a newspaper article
The Metropolitan Police carried out some 3,300 deployments involving firearms in 2016. They didn't fire a single shot at a suspect.
It's a world away from the United States, where cops killed 1,092 people in 2016, according to figures compiled by The Guardian.
BBM
I agree that there are too many cases of LE mistakes. One case is too many, but this is not a perfect world and I think it’s very unfair to say that shooting first is the “motto” of US police.
Come on folks, let’s think this through instead of having a knee-jerk “police are bad (or incompetent)” reaction (and yes, some are, no argument there). Police respond to a presumed hostage situation such as this, putting their lives on the line, and there isn’t the luxury of standing around “confirming anything.” The object is to save lives.
A man appears at the door, seems to police to ignore directions and appears to reach for his waistband. Things are happening fast. What does anyone expect LE to do? Interview the man? There are supposedly hostages who need help. What if this was real and you were a hostage? Would you want them to hesitate? There would be cries of police incompetence if they didn’t take immediate action to protect hostages. Hostage negotiators are not usually first responders, so given what we know, I don’t see that LE was out of bounds in this case. Do you honestly expect perfection of LE every single time they go out on a call to help people in danger?
This is a horrible tragedy caused by the person who made the fake 911 swatting call and no one else. There is no reason to automatically presume this is a trigger-happy police response, and it’s pretty disrespectful to LE everywhere to do so IMO.