Cop in America doing a bad job, again

I think I get it now, you are actually pro police and have been using reductio ad absurdum to prove the point. Very clever and well played.
People shouldn’t have to fear for their lives when pulled over by cops. Nowhere else in the world is this a life or death situation except in the U.S.
 
Why are police dealing with speeding tickets anyway? Or any small infractions really. You don't need the people who are trained to deal with armed violence for that - that's where it goes wrong.

Wouldn't it be better to split up responsibilities between organizations whose staff are actually trained for their job? Like bylaw/infraction officers, mental health first respondents (both of which exist already but need expanded mandates and budgets), neighbourhood officers (people that circulate by bike so they have an idea of what's happening in neighbourhoods and people have someone from their public service to talk to who's easily accessible) - and finally a service that deals with armed situations (which is the only one that would need to carry weapons). Not just in the US, of course.
 
People shouldn’t have to fear for their lives when pulled over by cops. Nowhere else in the world is this a life or death situation except in the U.S.

I disagree with none of that. That still does not mean that LE does nothing to provide for the safety of society.

Why are police dealing with speeding tickets anyway? Or any small infractions really. You don't need the people who are trained to deal with armed violence for that - that's where it goes wrong.

Wouldn't it be better to split up responsibilities between organizations whose staff are actually trained for their job? Like bylaw/infraction officers, mental health first respondents (both of which exist already but need expanded mandates and budgets), neighbourhood officers (people that circulate by bike so they have an idea of what's happening in neighbourhoods and people have someone from their public service to talk to who's easily accessible) - and finally a service that deals with armed situations (which is the only one that would need to carry weapons). Not just in the US, of course.

I agree with this. Police should not be involved in traffic (tickets, accidents, etc.). Many cities do have a parking enforcement that is sperate from LE, but I don't know of anyone that does it for traffic.
 
A thing can be two things. You are absolutely correct that more resources will lead to safer neighborhoods. That does not mean that law enforcement plays no role in keeping people safe. The threat of tickets keeps some people from speeding who otherwise would. The threat of arrest keeps some people from driving drunk who otherwise would. And so on and so on. Proper and legal policing helps keep people safe.

To be fair, one could argue that it is the laws and not the law enforcement that keeps people in line.
 
To be fair, one could argue that it is the laws and not the law enforcement that keeps people in line.

One could argue that. One would be wrong, but one could argue that. Humans as a whole do not do well with rules unless they know there is a potential for consequences should they ignore the rules. Just think of any rec league footy match you played in where the ref crew didn't show. Carnage, absolute carnage.
 
One could argue that. One would be wrong, but one could argue that. Humans as a whole do not do well with rules unless they know there is a potential for consequences should they ignore the rules. Just think of any rec league footy match you played in where the ref crew didn't show. Carnage, absolute carnage.

The consequence is enshrined in the law as well. Speeding and red light bylaws, for example, can be enforced by technology with very little human involvement (I understand they usually have some guy who is stuck at a desk role doing QA)

My personal opinion is that LE does not spend enough time doing traffic enforcement.
 
Why are police dealing with speeding tickets anyway? Or any small infractions really. You don't need the people who are trained to deal with armed violence for that - that's where it goes wrong.

Wouldn't it be better to split up responsibilities between organizations whose staff are actually trained for their job? Like bylaw/infraction officers, mental health first respondents (both of which exist already but need expanded mandates and budgets), neighbourhood officers (people that circulate by bike so they have an idea of what's happening in neighbourhoods and people have someone from their public service to talk to who's easily accessible) - and finally a service that deals with armed situations (which is the only one that would need to carry weapons). Not just in the US, of course.
It's all about generating revenue, sadly. Tickets paid.
 
One could argue that. One would be wrong, but one could argue that. Humans as a whole do not do well with rules unless they know there is a potential for consequences should they ignore the rules. Just think of any rec league footy match you played in where the ref crew didn't show. Carnage, absolute carnage.

You get some random to ref instead, and it turns out fine.
 
If you really think the majority of police/public interactions is represented by what’s in this thread you are definitely living in the suburbs of reality.

Literally all my interactions with the cops in the US have stunk.

Why do you think black people don't call the cops in the US? We're paranoid idiots?
 
One could argue that. One would be wrong, but one could argue that. Humans as a whole do not do well with rules unless they know there is a potential for consequences should they ignore the rules. Just think of any rec league footy match you played in where the ref crew didn't show. Carnage, absolute carnage.

Switzerland and the Nordic countries give a persuasive argument against your second point. They all have a very low police presence per capita, and both are among the countries with the lowest crime rates in the world. Contrast that to countries with really large police forces and a really heavy emphasis on enforcement, such as the US and Israel, and it's hard to argue that more police and stricter enforcement leads to less violence or crime.

I think that police forces that assume their role relies on violence and violent enforcement of law leads inevitably to more violence. A good ref does not enforce the letter of the law on every occasion.
 
Switzerland and the Nordic countries give a persuasive argument against your second point. They all have a very low police presence per capita, and both are among the countries with the lowest crime rates in the world. Contrast that to countries with really large police forces and a really heavy emphasis on enforcement, such as the US and Israel, and it's hard to argue that more police and stricter enforcement leads to less violence or crime.

I think that police forces that assume their role relies on violence and violent enforcement of law leads inevitably to more violence. A good ref does not enforce the letter of the law on every occasion.

Look at this librul lefty soft-on-crime commie, wants to let the crimnuls run riot.
 
Literally all my interactions with the cops in the US have stunk.

Why do you think black people don't call the cops in the US? We're paranoid idiots?

No I don't think people whose views are formed by negative interactions are paranoid idiots. Not only that, but I think those views are justified by studies and data that show that the interactions and outcomes that black or brown person have with LE are more likely to be negative than those by white people. It's not paranoia when it can be proven. We have too much policing in this country, and beyond that the policing we have is relatively poor based on poor training and hiring practices. Our police forces are responsible for things they have no business being responsible for and they are often not held accountable for violent and biased actions they commit.

My argument here was never we police correctly in this country, just that policing provides some good. I am not arguing for a zero sum viewpoint, I am arguing against it.
 
True, but there is still a ref.

Right. So get someone else than the cops to hand out traffic tickets. In fact, when you use those camera thingies you won't ever meet a cop, that's a nice system. Annoting when you get the letter, though.

You can probably do something equivalent with most police work.
 
Right. So get someone else than the cops to hand out traffic tickets. In fact, when you use those camera thingies you won't ever meet a cop, that's a nice system. Annoting when you get the letter, though.

You can probably do something equivalent with most police work.

yep, completely agree.
 
just heard about this at the anarcho-syndicalist commune



He clearly wasn't afraid for his safety and took the opportunity to kill an animal for his own pleasure knowing he could manipulate the facts afterwards to get away with it.

The last type of person who should be in a position of authority.
 


Not quite exactly how Nazi Germany started but by Jove them Nazis would be proud.


Take it for what you will, but officers aren’t happy about this getting pushed down either.

There used to be a time, not that long ago where the LAPD and the NYPD were the epitome of Law Enforcement. The standard other agencies modeled themselves after. Kids grew up wanting to belong to one of these elite agencies.

Not so much anymore.

This type of woke authoritarian mandates are no longer slippery slopes, this is an avalanche.

Yes, Social Media is a great investigative tool to use against criminals. But now they want Officers to gather this information on stops, whether an infraction or arrest is made or not? Yeah, no.

#NotToday #LAPD #ThisIsNOTTheWay
 
Take it for what you will, but officers aren’t happy about this getting pushed down either.

To be fair criticism of this would be criticism of the brass who decided on this approach and not so much line officers, who probably fecking hate the additional work. I'd even be inclined to suggest many line officers are uncomfortable doing it.
 
To be fair criticism of this would be criticism of the brass who decided on this approach and not so much line officers, who probably fecking hate the additional work. I'd even be inclined to suggest many line officers are uncomfortable doing it.

Our field interview cards mirror lapd's, and has the section to put social media profile. The article makes it seem like officers are "ordered" or "directed" to write fill out this info, but I highly doubt that's the case. There is a section for social security numbers too. Sometimes people freely give their SSN and social media profiles, sometimes they don't and that's fine. Officers do need to be careful in "demanding" this or any info other than what's necessary to run a basic criminal history check.
 
Wasn’t the question

Such a fecking weird question, though. What are you after? You're either implying that it has to be some American coppers, or you want to know specifically who it is if it isn't some thin blue liners from New York.

Let's turn it around. The best cops are the Ghanaian ones. Prove me wrong.
 
:lol: I'd love to know when the lapd was the epitome of law enforcement

Was just thinking the same. I guess they feel like they inspired the others with images of their officers 'accosting' Rodney King?

Somewhat of trendsetters for 3 decades of images of police brutally.
 
Such a fecking weird question, though. What are you after? You're either implying that it has to be some American coppers, or you want to know specifically who it is if it isn't some thin blue liners from New York.

Let's turn it around. The best cops are the Ghanaian ones. Prove me wrong.

what’s “fecking weird” about the question? What I’m after is a simple answer to a simple question. Figured i wouldn’t get one.
 
what’s “fecking weird” about the question? What I’m after is a simple answer to a simple question. Figured i wouldn’t get one.

But there is no simple answer to the question, and you know that. What did you want, Timbuktu, Mali?
 
Was just thinking the same. I guess they feel like they inspired the others with images of their officers 'accosting' Rodney King?

Somewhat of trendsetters for 3 decades of images of police brutally.

The 90’s were definitely a turning point for the department. Rodney king, the riots, OJ trial, rampart scandal. All those events resulted in being held under a court-ordered federal consent decree where the department answered to the DOJ, and change was FORCED. As you can imagine prior to that, the lapd (or any police department in the nation) was like the Wild West. It forced them to change hiring standards, reporting procedures, training, documentation, internal investigations, integrity audits for example.

Today, at least amongst the large metropolitan departments, it is widely considered to be the leader in policing standards. Other large departments like New York and Chicago, and even my local la county sheriffs are still “behind the times” because they haven’t been forced to change or address any corrupt behavior. So yes I’d say they are “trendsetters” in policing today.
 
The thread is about policing in the USA so no.

This is so weird on two levels:

1) So what if this is about policing in the US, that doesn't mean that the "epitome of policing" have to be American. This is utterly bizarre on its own.
2) Even if it had to be confined to the US, which again makes no sense (imagine for a moment someone in the Afghanistan thread claiming that the Taliban is the epitome of government. After all, it has to be an Afghan government seeing as the thread is about Afghanistan), just pick a random place. Bumfeck, Alabama, is the epitome of policing, not the lapd. Now what? It's meaningless.
 
This is so weird on two levels:

1) So what if this is about policing in the US, that doesn't mean that the "epitome of policing" have to be American. This is utterly bizarre on its own.
2) Even if it had to be confined to the US, which again makes no sense (imagine for a moment someone in the Afghanistan thread claiming that the Taliban is the epitome of government. After all, it has to be an Afghan government seeing as the thread is about Afghanistan), just pick a random place. Bumfeck, Alabama, is the epitome of policing, not the lapd. Now what? It's meaningless.
If it’s so weird for you and bizarre feel free to move along. I wasn’t even asking you.