It’s this: while demanding empathy for the dangerous job of a policeman in an editorial in the Washington Post, a cop explains what he gets to do, with a complete lack of empathy for the citizen’s position.
Even though it might sound harsh and impolitic, here is the bottom line: if you don’t want to get shot, tased, pepper-sprayed, struck with a baton or thrown to the ground, just do what I tell you. Don’t argue with me, don’t call me names, don’t tell me that I can’t stop you, don’t say I’m a racist pig, don’t threaten that you’ll sue me and take away my badge. Don’t scream at me that you pay my salary, and don’t even think of aggressively walking towards me. Most field stops are complete in minutes. How difficult is it to cooperate for that long?
I’ve had a few traffic stops. I’ve always been polite — this guy has some power over me, and can cost me money and time, which seems like threat enough. But I had never considered the possibility that the policeman who pulled me over for a burnt-out headlight could feel justified for shooting, tasing, pepper-spraying, or hitting me with a stick if I called him a rude name.
I’m not endorsing calling a policeman a racist pig, but if someone is angry and does, is it really appropriate cause to pull out your gun and shoot them? Officer Dutta seems to think it is. That’s what’s objectionable: that the police have acquired an attitude that justifies excessive force in response to physically weak actions — that calling them a rude name warrants whipping out every tool in their arsenal to kill, maim, or subdue miscreants. When someone is killed for jaywalking (or possibly shoplifting) by a policeman, I think it’s clear that a line has been crossed — that the attitude that the police have complete authority and discretion to use their weapons without being limited by reasonable concerns has led to police who treat crime in a community as an opportunity for a military-style assault.
Community members deserve courtesy, respect and professionalism from their officers. Every person stopped by a cop should feel safe instead of feeling that their wellbeing is in jeopardy. Shouldn’t the community members extend the same courtesy to their officers and project that the officer’s safety is not threatened by their actions?
Yes, that’s fair. But it’s not an issue. The issue is that on the citizen’s side, we can’t respond even with an argument to the police without inviting disproportionate response from an entitled asshole in a uniform.
Officer Dutta’s op-ed did not reassure me. It simply says that we’re supposed to be very, very nice to the police, and if I take a step in the wrong direction, or ask an awkward question, or express my annoyance, he gets to shoot me half a dozen times. Because his fucking job is so hard that he gets to use lethal shortcuts to deal with nuisances that make his life a little more difficult.
Even white people can get shot in the head for a DUI.
It took six years to get our wrongful death lawsuit settled, and my family received $1.75 million. But I wasn’t satisfied by a long shot. I used my entire portion of that money and much more of my own to continue a campaign for more police accountability. I wanted to change things for everyone else, so no one else would ever have to go through what I did. We did our research: In 129 years since police and fire commissions were created in the state of Wisconsin, we could not find a single ruling by a police department, an inquest or a police commission that a shooting was unjustified.
This is what happened to the police officer:
The officer who killed my son, Albert Gonzalez, is not only still on the force ten years later, he is also a licensed concealed-gun instructor across the state line in Illinois—and was identified by the Chicago Tribune in an Aug. 7 investigative story as one of “multiple instructors [who] are police officers with documented histories of making questionable decisions about when to use force.”
You know why people may disrespect the police? Because they’ve earned it.
In case you’re wondering what a lawyer thinks of Dutta’s argument, heeeeere’s Popehat!
Pteryxx says
relevant – Digital Cuttlefish – “Don’t Challenge Me”: Advice for a Police State
After the short poem, Cuttlefish summarizes the legal decisions – up to the Supreme Court – that specifically protect the right of citizens to be rude to the police.
City of Houston v Hill for example, in 1987:
David Wilford says
Here’s another take on the subject:
http://www.thismess.net/2014/08/cult-of-compliance-disability-and-race.html
gshelley says
This seems to me to be pretty much what we would say to someone who is robbed at gunpoint – Do what the person holding the gun tells you, don’t try and fight or defend yourself.
The cop is essentially saying that of course there are laws the police are required to follow, and people have rights guaranteed by the constitution, but he has a gun, and if he feels like ignoring those, the victim needs to shut up and take it, then complain about it afterwards.
I can’t help but think that the way an unarmed person deals with a criminal ought to be different to the way they deal with someone who is supposed to be enforcing the law.
fmitchell says
Also somewhat relevant: Charles Stross, “The Ferguson Question”.
As one commenter noted, though, U.S. police never really subscribed to John Peel’s principles. Heck, I recently earned a Criminal Justice degree (from a for-profit college, so cube of salt), where we learned a lot about evidence handling and research on criminal behavior. Apart from a brief historical mention we never discussed John Peel, much less his theory of public policing. No doubt it’s been superseded by the “Mace/taze/shoot them all, let the D.A. sort it out” approach in Ferguson.
robertfoster says
The subtext of Sunil Dutta’s article seems to be that he can stop you at anytime, for any reason, or for no particular reason and you must accept it meekly and if you don’t he has the right to tase you, beat you, and haul you off to jail. I suspect that he’d consider making eye contact a punishable offense. This partly explains why I avoid cops at all times in all places. I don’t know who to fear more, criminals or cops. The criminal will just take your wallet or your car, but the cop can ruin your life on a whim. Or just shoot you dead for the hell of it..
Onamission5 says
Hey Dutta, you know what’s harsh and impolitic? Giving a beat down to someone or fucking murdering them because they didn’t hit the ground fast enough. Treating every black citizen as if they are out to get you, personally. Throwing grenades into baby cribs. Shooting little kids in their sleep. Cornering protesters, giving them no means by which to retreat, telling them to disperse, and then gassing, shooting, and/or arresting them when they can’t. Dragging my friend’s stepdaughter out of her house by her hair then assaulting her on the sidewalk when you went to the wrong house in the first place, and calling that “resisting arrest.” Hanging around an all night bakery making passes and refusing to leave even though you are making the woman working there alone very uncomfortable and interfering with her ability to do her job. Pulling over a designated driver on a lone stretch of road and grilling her for half an hour as if she’s in an old timey cop show, making threats against her about what you’re going to do to her if you find out she’s lying about being inebriated. Keeping a social worker and her minor-aged charges on the side of a highway during the peak of summer heat for four hours, illegally searching their person and possessions, refusing to allow any of them to use the bathroom, all because that social worker had expired tags on her vehicle and some of the kids she was driving home were in the system. Driving your cruiser across the wrong side of the street in order to block the path of a woman who is 8 months pregnant and walking home with her groceries, then demanding she give you all variety of personal information including a full account of her day, her place of employment, and her home address, so that you can show your trainee “how it’s done.”
Protect and serve. Keeping the peace. I don’t think those phrases mean what Dutta thinks they mean. I think a more apt turn of phrase is “menace to society.”
Seven of Mine, formerly piegasm says
How does the same person type both of those quoted paragraphs without their head exploding from the contradiction? “Community members deserve courtesy, respect and professionalism from their officers…” but don’t you fucking dare even look at me cross-eyed or I will use every gadget on my tool belt on you.
Warren Senders says
It’s particularly interesting that this piece was written by Sunil Dutta, who is very much not a generic cop (he’s even got a PhD in biology!).
I interacted briefly with Sunil many years ago in the context of Indian classical music; he is a reasonably well-known exponent of the Indian equivalent of “early music” – instrumental and vocal traditions dating back a thousand years or so. As I said, not your ordinary garden-variety cop.
I think he has misread this situation very badly, though. That op-ed’s not something to be proud of.
Pteryxx says
gshelley #3:
Sadly there’s a corollary in the stories of rape and abuse survivors.
(warning, obviously)
Namely, that only the victim in a given violent incident is in a position to guess whether fighting back, defending oneself, or trying to escape is going to give them better or worse odds of survival than submitting would. When the attacker is after you and not your money, just being cooperative and obeying doesn’t mean you’ll survive, either.
Sunday Afternoon says
Years ago I used to play the Judge Dredd RPG thinking it was fantasy, not prophecy.
frugaltoque says
Dear Mr. Police Officer,
Did one person call you a racist pig? Or did a lot of people call you that? Because, if a lot of people called you a racist, you might want to look into why they’re doing that and if maybe you’re “field stop”ping (?) a disproportionate number of black people.
We had this happen in Toronto during the G20.
“I need to search your bag”
“No, you don’t. That’s illegal. Am I being arrested?”
“Doesn’t matter. I’m searching your bag.”
It was illegal for the officers to search people’s bags, especially well away from the demonstrations, without an arrest being made. Those people certainly had the right to question the officers and the officers didn’t have the right to assault them for asking questions.
Officer Dutta apparently feels differently. “I’m going to violate your rights and, if you protest, I get to hurt you.”
Warren Senders says
It’s hard to believe the same guy wrote this one:
tfkreference says
On Minnesota Public Radio this morning, they interviewed a police union rep about Minneapolis’s plan to have officers wear cameras. One of his concerns was that the cameras don’t capture everything – like the “look in someone’s eye.” Seriously, he said that.
Ryan Cunningham says
McDonalds employees handle abusive comments every day without shooting/macing/tazing anyone. Should we expect less of our police than fast food employees?
frugaltoque says
The benefit of the camera would be that the cops, wearing them, would get some satisfaction out of playing the “heavy sigh” and “Look what I have to put up with” cards.
numerobis says
In Montreal, demonstrations by young people generally get met by police who cite them all with P-6 citations for demonstrating without a permit. Fallout from the maple spring protests; the provincial law against demonstrating was struck down, but the municipal by-law still stands.
When city workers riot in city hall, of course, the police stand by and watch:
http://www.montrealgazette.com/touch/story.html?id=10128893
The hypocrisy is galling. I’m generally in favour of the city workers — the provincial and city governments want to default on pension obligations. But maybe we could fuck the police and that’d be ok with me.
Cuttlefish says
Thanks, Pteryxx @#1–I was just coming here to point to that. And there is no excuse for cops being unaware–the story was covered in Police Magazine, after national media attention for “your constitutional right to flip off cops”.
https://proxy.freethought.online/cuttlefish/2014/08/19/dont-challenge-me-advice-for-a-police-state/
Pteryxx says
Response to Dutta’s editorial from a lawyer:
(twitter)
(My transcription) Image of posted text reads:
Lou Doench says
I’m about as white as you can get, but I was playing disc golf so I guess that makes me a hippy? Anyways, I had a disc go out of bounds onto the park road on a frustrating tournament day. As i trudged over to collect it from the road an approaching Escalade was heading right for my disc. I waved to him and signaled and pointed and he cruised right on by paying no attention to me or my poor frisbee (which he squished btw). Until I flipped him off as I collected my disc from the road. Then he comes backing down the road and out of the (unmarked) car pops a Cincinnati cop all full of bluff and bluster demanding an apology else he will end my day early. Not having time in my social schedule to get arrested I sufficiently groveled before him I suppose because he was mollified by my humiliation. That’s right, a cop out of the blue threatened to arrest me for making a rude gesture. The sense of smug entitlement required to think that you are allowed to bring the full force of the state down on a citizen because they made a rude gesture (to someone I thought was a civilian) is appalling.
Would have been a seriously bad idea to arrest me under those circumstances btw. Not only did I have a foursome of witnesses, I actually have friends in the CPD and my family has friends in city gov. Plus I’m lily white, it would have made shitty tv. That is my privilege I suppose.
Moggie says
Apologies if this has already been posted in one of the other threads – I haven’t managed to keep up lately:
Brooklyn man wins $125,000 settlement after claiming he was arrested for recording stop-and-frisk
It’s a story which has played out many times, in many places: someone records police activity, as he is legally entitled to do, the cops object, arrest him, rough him up a bit and delete the photos. But note the (alleged) comment made by one of the cops: “Now we’re going to give you what you deserve for meddling in our business and when we finish with you, you can sue the city for $5 million and get rich, we don’t care,” Lt. Dennis Ferber said, according to the suit filed in Brooklyn Federal Court.
Why should the cop care? He works in a culture of impunity. Probably the worst “punishment” he’ll face is suspension with full pay, or getting moved to a desk job for a while.
carlie says
And they have to wear nametags so that you know who you’re dealing with, which the Ferguson police are actively refusing to do.
frugaltoque says
re: McDonalds employees
Aren’t they also more likely than police to experience an on-the-job fatality? At least bartenders and wait staff are.
johnwoodford says
Perhaps the LAPD should change its motto from “To Protect and to Serve” to “Oderint dum Metuant.”
Alverant says
So now we can’t even THINK the “wrong” things in front of an officer? Who’s to say if someone is walking aggressively? Last week I read about how a mall cop maced a guy in the face for walking aggressively when the guy was just trying to make his way around a protest. BTW the guy who was maced was black while a white guy was shouting threats and obscenities at the protesters and nothing happened to him.
ledasmom says
If “he MADE me hit him” isn’t an acceptable excuse from my children, how can it possibly be an acceptable excuse from a grown-ass policeman (or, possibly, a grown ass-policeman)?
chimera says
For those of us who don’t speak Latin, Google translator says “Oderint dum Metuant” means “Hate when the ends”, uhm, uh, something like “Our purpose is to hate”?
shala says
The translation is “Let them hate, so long as they fear.”
robertbaden says
Diabetics are also getting afraid of cops.
We may not be capable of a coherent response if we are having
a medical emergency. Cops may assume we are drunk.
Dunc says
Judge Dredd was intended to be a satire of Dirty Harry. In one of the early scripts, Dredd was supposed to execute a man for jaywalking. The script was rejected as being too heavy-handed and over-the-top.
Yup, that’s where we’re at.
funknjunk says
In another thread about this Op-Ed, someone said he was going to go “Full Clark” if he read another article like this. So I had to follow the link, to Popehat, which is eminently readable: http://www.popehat.com/2013/12/23/burn-the-fucking-system-to-the-ground/
carlie says
scienceavenger says
@27 Yeah, and we REALLY want our cops to emulate the ancient Romans.
It’s really time for a complete overhaul of our system of law and order. Start with an independent government agency to handle physical evidence in a scientific manner, and to oversee all police behavior.
Marcus Ranum says
I’ve said elsewhere: being a cop is an inherently immoral profession.(*) Why? Because it requires you to swear to uphold a set of rules that you cannot possibly completely agree with (more to the point: many cops really, obviously, don’t understand them all, anyway) – in other words you have to agree to compromise your own morals constantly. Furthermore, you have to accept that a significant number of those rules that you swear to uphold will not apply to you. Literally you are lawbreaker and law-enforcer in one, a walking contradiction. Have you ever heard of a cop arresting itself for speeding? You never will.
Cops have to be authoritarians and exceptionalists or they’d be not-cops. Cops are self-selected from the ranks of immoral people, then a rough attempt is made to get them to accept a legal framework in which to contain themselves.
(* the other inherently immoral professions I know of are marketing and military. Marketing because it requires you to knowingly promote something as better than you know it to be, and military because it requires you to waive your moral agency regarding violence – waive it to a state, which are all known to use violence aggressively)
twas brillig (stevem) says
re OP:
Dutta’s op ed:
I think this paragraph was his “red flag”; not justifying the behavior, just describing what bad cops typically do (so be careful). I guess that’s my only point, that that particular paragraph is not justification, but the rest of the op ed rambles all over. On and on about how he dealt with difficult situations and was a “good cop”, but says over and over how important it is to treat cops with respect and do whatever they tell you to do. And if they were wrong, get a lawyer and go to court and sue them, later. He is essentially saying, “Don’t generalize the behavior of the Ferguson cops to all cops, they’re not all murderers.” whaile also saying, essentially, “Do generalize the behavior of the F* cops, we cops all have too many ‘toys’.”
Marcus Ranum says
My first scary cop incident was in Philadelphia in 1978, when a friend of mine and I were walking by a cop and I said “Ooops,” and whirled 180 and started walking back the way I came. Minutes later, we were still explaining to the cop (who was patting us down and had us standing with our hands against a wall) that I had said “oops” because I realized I had forgotten to put a quarter in the parking meter. So the cop walked us back and verified that I had, indeed, forgotten to put a quarter in the meter – so he kept us “wise ass kids” there until a meter reader was summoned and wrote us a $25 ticket.
When I got home and told my dad about it, he said “Philly cops are killers, you’re lucky you didn’t mouth off to him.”
davek23 says
Coming from the UK, I am constantly boggled at the seeming assumption in the US policing system that cops have the right to give orders to anyone at any time for any reason and they have to obey, no matter what. The job title is “Police officer”, not “King of the world and emperor of everything”.
Marcus Ranum says
That “Burn the Fucking System to the Ground” article referenced above is really great. The problem is, always, if you destroy the establishment, how do you prevent something worse from immediately establishing itself. History shows us again and again how nature points up the folly of man – revolutions don’t work, we wind up worse off. Getting on our knees and praying we don’t get fooled again doesn’t work, either, because there’s always a Robespierre or a Stalin or a Hamilton waiting in the wings to make their move.
rationalinks says
I don’t believe that what Officer Dutta says in the article reflects just his opinions, but my anecdotal experience says that this has become a culture issue among LEOs.
I’m as pasty white as they’ve come and I’ve had several run ins with cops who think that they are above the law. A few examples:
I was at a friend’s house and my car was parked on the street (legally). As I’m leaving I notice a cop looking through the windows of my car (it was a station wagon). As I approach, the cop tells me he must search my car. I tell him no, not unless he has a warrant (I really did have nothing to hide). The cop gets belligerent and tells me he doesn’t need a warrant because he “knows” I’m hiding something in it. I again tell him no and that if he wants to search my car he needs to get a warrant. The cop proceeds to grab me and throw me to the ground and handcuffs me. He digs through my pockets and finds my keys and proceeds to search my car. He finds nothing. Cop runs my license and does all that stuff, I’m still face down on the street in front of my friend’s house. Cop gruffly pulls me up and slams me against my car and un-handcuffs me. He tells me that I’m lucky he didn’t throw my ass in jail and that next time I should do what I’m told.
Second time, a few years later, I’m driving down the highway, doing the speed limit (which is admittedly an unusual occurrence for me). It’s kind of late and I’m on my way home from doing some late night work. Flashing lights and a cop pulls me over. Cop comes up and tells me he’s arresting me for drunk driving. No field sobriety test, no breathalyzer, nothing. I tell him I haven’t been drinking to which he responds “bullshit, I can smell it on you and in the car”. This is a lie, I’ve had nothing to drink and I’m anal about keeping my car clean. I call him a moron. He proceeds to pull his gun and say “what did you call me?”. He then goes off on some tirade about…and I’m not making this up…”insulting a police officer” being an felony. Long story short, I ended the night with a speeding ticket, failure to produce a license (which I did produce), and reckless endangerment. At the hearing, all charges were dropped.
So yeah, I think this is a cop culture thing and not a “bad apple ruining the bunch” thing.
michaelrivero says
Civil Rights are a matter of principle, and I would like to remind this officer that the United States Supreme Court ruled in John Bad Elk vs United States that when the police are acting outside the law the citizen has a legal right to resist, up to and including the use of lethal force.
David Marjanović says
I declare it time for a fun experiment!
Let’s take the following quote out of all context except the fact that it comes from a policeman:
Never mind the threat of death and other violence that I’ve cut away. The above partial quote alone shows Dutta hasn’t understood he’s living in a democracy – in a place where the argument from authority is not an allowed method to make people do things, in a place where his authority (and, as he even mentions, his salary) come from the very people he’s talking to. He hasn’t understood he’s doing – just like his president! – a service job, not exerting authoritah that comes from above. Why wouldn’t he argue with people!?! They’re his fellow citizens, his fellow voters. This isn’t Starfleet where everyone has a rank and can just be ordered around by everyone who has a higher rank.
On a far more harmless occasion, I’ve discovered that there are police officers right here in Germany who share his attitude. *sigh*
Already “to protect and serve” shows the culture of fear behind it all*: you need protection, because there’s eeeevil out there. “BE AFRAID. BE VERY VERY VERY VERY VERY VERY VERY AFRAID.”**
The (quaint) German equivalent is die Polizei, dein Freund und Helfer – “the police, your friend and helper”!
* All. The USA as a whole, it seems sometimes… well, often.
** Caption by whitehouse.com under a photo of Cheney’s snarling resting face.
Marcus Ranum says
Dutta hasn’t understood he’s living in a democracy
You apparently haven’t understood that the US is not a democracy.
chigau (違う) says
I keep seeing parallels between police departments and the Roman Catholic Church.
Sunday Afternoon says
@davek23:
(I’m from the UK too, but have been in California since 1998). It’s not just the cops: I ran into an arsehole fireman recently. I was working an event where there is often need for first aid, and the local fire dept was providing the necessary coverage.
They work in pairs which is fine, but what was not fine was while one fireman was treating someone injured with grazes, the other fireman was standing blocking the only access I had to an area I was working (my role was essential to the smooth-running of the day’s events and required me to regularly move among 3 different locations). To say he was non-plussed when I requested that he stand aside so he didn’t block the only access to the area was an understatement.
magistramarla says
My son was very, very lucky about 15 years ago that the cop who pulled him over wasn’t too trigger-happy.
My son was driving a group of his ROTC buddies home from school in my big white station wagon.
The boys were of several races – black, Hispanic, Asian and white.
The police pulled my son over and made all of the boys lean against the car. My boy foolishly tried to reach into his pocket for his wallet and ID, and was threatened by one of the cops.
The cops then freaked out about weapons in the back of the car. The “weapons” were wooden gun stocks. This group of boys was the high school’s elite ROTC drill team. They were bringing the stocks to our house to have a cleaning and shining party in preparation for a huge competition the following day.
After all of this was explained and the cops were convinced that the boys were harmless, they were finally told that an incident had been reported involving a group of young men in a large white car in another part of town. We later heard about it on the news – it was a white SUV.
When I think about that incident and what is going on today, I’m thankful that my son wasn’t hurt or killed.
paax says
I would like to remind this officer that the United States Supreme Court ruled in John Bad Elk vs United States that when the police are acting outside the law the citizen has a legal right to resist, up to and including the use of lethal force.
methuseus says
David Marjanović@#39
I believe that when I was in grade school I learned that this is what police in the Soviet Union and East Germany told people, and that some people disappeared after hearing it. That was maybe 25 years ago. It really makes me sad to see this written by an American officer.
Trebuchet says
Meanwhile, the utterly clueless mayor of Ferguson, MO, says there’s no racial divide in his town.
http://www.politico.com/story/2014/08/ferguson-mayor-james-knowles-race-110147.html
Pteryxx says
paax #44: that was in 1900, and according to Wikipedia out of date.
unclefrogy says
from another thread I post this link
http://kottke.org/14/08/policing-by-consent
it still is a radical idea
I had two reactions to the article by Dutta
well what a surprise he is LAPD
but the advice is good in that legally or morally or not that is how the cops are likely to react and expect you to react. In all my interactions with them I tried to remember that and treat them with caution. That they are just as likely to be over hyped up aggressive people who might have other personal issues unrelated to what is happening now that may cause them to over react.
uncle frogy
Pteryxx says
A series of tweets by Crommunist this morning, starting here:
SallyStrange says
Being a fairly attractive white woman in the USA does have one or two perks. No, it’s not having people buy drinks for me. I wish! It’s being treated leniently by cops. I was once pulled over for forgetting to turn on my lights when leaving a parking lot. Result: some joking around, “Don’t forget your lights next time.” I had a small baggie of weed sitting on the passenger seat, barely hidden from sight under my handbag, the whole time.
Another time I was pulled over and I actually had been drinking. I justified it to myself–I’m not that drunk, I’m just going 3 blocks–but in reality I was that drunk. I failed the sobriety test. Just the standing and reciting, no breathalyzer. Result: the cop gave me a ride home and I went back to retrieve my vehicle the next day.
A little while ago, I went to the 24-hour laundromat late at night. The cops were just finishing kicking out a couple of angry-looking men. What did I do? I went straight up to the cops and asked if there was a problem, because I felt confident that they were actually interested in ensuring my safety. Yup, indeed. “Those guys were just a little drunk, ma’am, this area is normally fine. I wouldn’t worry about doing your laundry here.”
Compare and contrast: my long-time on-again off-again sweetheart/boyfriend/best friend is black. While he was in college, he was driving back from an event, I forget what, late at night, in rural Georgia with three friends of his, all young black men. At a certain point, one of them noticed, “Hey, I think someone’s following us.” What? They’re all nervous, this is KKK country. This goes on for a while. They’re not sure if there’s a car there or not because its lights are out. On a moonless night in the middle of nowhere. Suddenly the car turns its lights on. My sweetie is startled and swerves the car as a result. Hey, it’s a cop! They’re pulled over. A long harangue ensues and a traffic ticket for unsafe driving. The friends are drunk but my sweetie, the designated driver, was not. The cop refused to believe him and kept them there for over an hour.
They were all scared shitless. And no wonder. Every time we’re together and there’s a situation where we have to deal with authority figures, or even just hotel clerks or gas station attendants, he insists on staying in the car whenever possible.
*sigh*
We do live in a police state, and it’s a white supremacist police state, and I have no idea what we can do about it. Well, I have some ideas but very few seem realistic and climate change is going to destabilize everything very shortly anyway.
Menyambal says
It’s also revealing that the cop who wrote the article thought that he had to point out what his job entails, and what to do when dealing with a cop.
Yeah, we the people are who you do your job on, so we kinda know — it’s not like we all live in cities in the sky while cops deal with Morlocks — plus we watch TV and sometimes talk to each other.
And, thanks, but we already figured out to not set off a cop. The trick is that there really isn’t any way to avoid bad cops getting worse.
I think he didn’t mean the article to sound as bluntly directive as it sounds, but there’s part of the problem. He is so used to being bossy that he doesn’t have to respect people any more.
Christopher says
The portuguese know how to deal with sadistic cops/rent-a-cops
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jagvYIMJyzU
If the cops in the US keep acting like they are an occupying army, pretty soon people will start treating them like an occupying army: anyone associated with the occupiers is a valid target. And unlike forign military occupiers, local cops have to go home every night within driving distance. They have to eat, sleep, and shit outside the protection of a military base, vulnerable amongst those they occupy.
Perhaps Americans will revive one of our great civic traditions: torturing those who violated the civic trust:
http://cdn2-b.examiner.com/sites/default/files/styles/image_content_width/hash/fe/27/fe27d9dba94d64ff2700c5eb904e28be.jpg?itok=MWgUwmVV
Pierce R. Butler says
Funny how the US media now hardly ever refer to dictatorships as “police states” any more.
Jackie says
robertbaden,
That happened to my dad. He was diabetic and his blood sugar was low. He kept missing his turn and in the state he was in, didn’t know why. So, he’d drive back around only to miss it again. The cop who pulled him over handcuffed him and had him sitting on the ground, assuming he was drunk. Dad insulted him and was told that was assaulting an officer. finally the cop ran through a list of questions that included “Are you diabetic?” Dad ended up in the hospital. This was in Indianapolis. I wonder how that would have played out if he had not been a white man?
Pteryxx says
Some arguments against mandatory police cameras, at least without serious oversight – and not just because cops sabotage them. ThinkProgress
opposablethumbs says
My OH is permanently guilty of being Visibly Not White and Audibly Not British. What SallyStrange just said is familiar; police and border control officials etc. have routinely changed their attitude to him when they see me turn up and hear my accent. I used to think when we first met that my OH was maybe using a little poetic licence when describing situations he’d encountered; I know better now. (it’s a pale shade of things in the US, for which I’m grateful; the only armed (and body-armoured) police we’ve ever had to deal with were at an airport, not as standard issue in any street)
Jackie says
Being a cute white chick doesn’t always help either. Granted, I’ve seen a friend talk her way out of trouble because she was pretty, blond and had perfected the look of, “The light shining in my eyes comes from the hole in my head”. But, I’ve also been pulled over by a cop who threatened to have my car impounded and force me to walk home (miles from home), with a baby in 90+ degree heat because I had lived in my new town for over 10 days and had not changed the address on my driver’s licence. He was being intimidating just for the thrill. This was before cellphones were common. I’d have been s.o.l. if he’d have gone through with his threat.
Another time a friend of mine received flowers from a cop who had pulled her over. He had used her licence to learn her address. He thought she was hot and wanted her to go out with him. How creepy is that? She had to drive through that area often, knowing she had jilted a guy who was happy to used his position unethically. She didn’t get the speeding ticket she rightfully deserved, but damn. I’d much rather have the ticket.
Paul K says
In 1975 I was in tenth grade. I went to a pretty crappy school, but remember one really excellent history class and teacher. The class was on Frontier history of the west, and the teacher spent some time talking about guns and the American love of them. He also had a St. Paul cop come in and talk to us about what to do if confronted by someone with a gun. He didn’t distinguish between cops and robbers. He just said it’s a very unsafe idea to argue with anyone that you know has a gun. When confronted with a question about what cops are supposed to do, he said, yeah, they should never pull a gun on you without some very clear and well-defined reason (which he described; they were very limited), let alone shoot you. He made it very clear that it would be absolutely wrong for them to do so. But he also said that that wouldn’t help you once you’re dead. He also told us that, in more than 20 years as a police officer, he’d never even come close to pulling his gun.
Less than a month later, I was walking across a school parking lot with my brother. We saw the flashing lights of a police car around a corner of the school and stopped to consider another route to where we were going. A cop came around another corner of the school, pulled his gun out and aimed it at us, and yelled, just like in the movies, ‘Stop, or I’ll shoot!’ We were already stopped, but we got the point and put our hands in the air.
I won’t tell the whole story, but soon my brother and I were face down on the ground with our hands on our necks, and the cop was ‘frisking’ us by kicking us in the ribs. He had both hands on his gun, and it was aimed at all times either at my head or my brother’s, and my brother said belligerently, again, just like in the movies, ‘What’s the charge?’ The officer and I both yelled at the same time, ‘Shut up!’
This happened right across the street from my house, and my dad looked out the window and saw what was going on. To his credit, he came over to confront the officer, who was handcuffing us. My dad told him we had just left the house a minute or two earlier, and the cop told him, ‘Go home; you’re stoned.’ (My dad worked nights; he was in a bathrobe and did look disheveled and tired.)
It turned out that this was all over a stolen, and abandoned, car. I’ve never done anything to be arrested for, let alone at gunpoint, but this is only one of the three times that I’ve had cops pull their guns on me, though one didn’t actually take it all the way out of its holster. I am very large, and used to have very long hair, so that must explain it.
Paul K says
I’m also white as they come, and know it’s far worse for others.
rghthndsd says
There is certainly something wrong what Officer Dutta said, but in attempting to make the issue more black and white you have made yourself into a straw man. This interpretation of the quote is ridiculous.
Inaji says
Inaji says
rghthndsd:
Oh? Perhaps you could shut up long enough to do some reading, which was linked in the OP: http://www.popehat.com/2014/08/19/sunil-dutta-tells-it-like-it-is-about-american-policing/
chigau (違う) says
rghthndsd 61
Did you read this?
methuseus says
Inaji@62
Apparently it wasn’t raided? St. Loius Public Radio spoke with someone there and it wasn’t, but they are trying to get verification if anywhere is being raided.
http://news.lalate.com/2014/08/20/st-marks-church-not-raided-in-ferguson-today/
Seven of Mine, formerly piegasm says
rghthndsd @ 61
Words mean things. Getting shot is one of the consequences Dutta listed for not doing what he tells you if he stops you. Calling him a racist pig is one of the things he said not to do if you don’t want to provoke any of the violent responses he warned of. None of the “don’ts” he listed is actually violent so, if not calling him a racist pig, which one of the “don’ts” is, in your esteemed opinion, the one he actually would pull out his gun and shoot someone for?
rghthndsd says
Inaji, I don’t see your point. There is nothing in there that makes me think if you asked Officer Dutta “Is it justified to shoot someone who is angry and insulting you?” he would say “Yes”. In fact, the article you linked to makes me think precisely the opposite.
Perhaps I am missing something? Maybe you could be more specific.
rghthndsd says
chigau, Seven of Mine: This is precisely what I’m talking about. The interpretation you’re using extremely literal and is not how I would interpret the quote at all. The only people I could imagine interpreting the quote this way are those who are trying to win a debate based on mere technicalities.
sirbedevere says
Not to defend the police behavior described here, but it occurs to me that perhaps the police wouldn’t need to feel potentially endangered by every civilian they interact with were it not for the proliferation of firearms among the American populace. Of course, we know they aren’t even going to suggest addressing that issue, right?
Rowan vet-tech says
@67-
If I said to you “If you don’t want to get bitten by my dog, just do what I tell you. Don’t lean over her, don’t try to pet her, don’t try to pick her up.” would you think the second sentence was completely unrelated to the first?
Because, frankly, that would make you an idiot. The first sentence is a list of consequences. The second sentence is a list of actions that will spark the consequences.
Marcus Ranum says
If you pair large scale camera surveillance with facial recognition technology federal agencies already use, there’s a huge potential for privacy and other civil liberties violations, Fakuory said. The person next to you in the mall sees you but doesn’t know who you are but a passerby or even the police with Google Glass can quickly pull up your social network profiles.
What, without a warrant?
Seven of Mine, formerly piegasm says
Things which are apparently the same: shit you actually said and mere technicalities.
rghthndsd says
@70 – I would interpret your statement in a very literal fashion. I do not think such an interpretation of the quote from Officer Dutta warrants such a literal interpretation.
rghthndsd says
Err… I do not think the quote from Officer Dutta warrants such a literal interpretation.
Rowan vet-tech says
Why? What’s the difference? If he’s offering advice on how not to get assaulted by the cops, shouldn’t his list be accurate? He includes real things, why do you claim he is including fake things?
opposablethumbs says
rghthndsd, Why not?
What on earth makes you think there’s a difference between rowanvt’s example and Dutta’s?
Seven of Mine, formerly piegasm says
rghthndsd
If he meant something else, he should have said something else. This may come as a surprise to you, but people aren’t psychic. We have nothing but his words to go on and his words say that getting shot is among the possible consequences for doing a number of things, one of which is calling him a racist pig. #dealwithit
rghthndsd says
It is pretty clear to me that he’s making a list of some bad things that could happen to you, and then he’s making a list of some things that might cause those bad things to happen. To think that he is saying for every cause one of the bad things will happen certain seems to me to be quite a stretch. On the other hand, with your warning, it is clear that your bad thing (getting bit) is an immediate consequence of the action (attempting to pet).
Moreover, the first quote in the linked article makes it quite clear that the interpretation that shooting is justified for angry name calling is utterly false.
chigau (違う) says
rghthndsd
Interpret?
I quoted what he said.
rghthndsd says
@77: “If he meant something else, he should have said something else.” Such a quote can be used to justify any extremely literal interpretation of a sentence. Certainly you are not suggesting that we should all be completely literal when we write.
“We have nothing but his words to go on and his words say that getting shot is among the possible consequences for doing a number of things, one of which is calling him a racist pig.”
Anytime you read, an interpretation is being made. This sentence does nothing to address that fact. I am merely claiming that the interpretation being purported by some here is rather silly.
rq says
Uh, Officer Dutta wrote a string of words. How else am I to take them, if not literally? Do you, rghthndsd , have a magic ball that lets you inside his head, and allows you to see the one, true, metaphorical interpretation he may have actually meant? Do you?
If not, then remember that words mean things. When people write things down, they mean what they’ve written down, unless they’re a poet or author putting on flowery language to be forever horribly remembered in English class. Officer Dutta is trying to be clear and specific, which means his words should be taken quite literally. Because if we all have to start thinking metaphorically? Whew. So many interpretations!
So how would you interpret it, rghthndsd , if not literally? How do you read those words?
Saad says
Oops, I thought I clicked on a police response to Ferguson thread. Must have wandered into the ISIS thread instead.
The Mellow Monkey says
SD Police Say Taznt 8-Year-Old Native Girl Was Justified
What I’m gathering from all of this is that cops must be the biggest chickenshit bullies in the world, to use this kind of force on children and claim it’s justified.
chigau (違う) says
???
Which article are you reading?
Seven of Mine, formerly piegasm says
You’ll have to forgive us if we’re unimpressed by your assessment of the situation.
rghthndsd says
I certainly can’t claim that my interpretation is correct! I think it is, and I try to support this with evidence, but just like anyone else it is still definitely an interpretation. I think looking at not only this quote but the others as well, it paints a very clear picture that he would disagree with the sentence “Shooting is justified for angry name calling”.
Of course, I still very much have a problem with what Officer Dutta is saying (with my interpretation).
Saad says
rghthndsd,
That means what it says. In fact, he even solidifies that by starting with “even thought it might sound harsh…”
Tell me your interpretation of the above quote.
rghthndsd says
@84: Sorry, I was under the impression it was all the same link. This is the one I was talking about:
http://www.popehat.com/2014/08/19/sunil-dutta-tells-it-like-it-is-about-american-policing/
rghthndsd says
@87: Yes! This I very much have a problem with. My interpretation: “Do what I say, or else something bad will happen”. This is something we should be talking about, rather than making his quote into a straw man.
Rowan vet-tech says
I don’t think any of us are saying it ‘justifies’ being shot… but that it can cause you to get shot or beaten. In my list, petting my dog doesn’t justify you getting bit. It causes you to get bit.
chigau (違う) says
It is considered polite to use a commenter’s name when addressing them.
The comment number is good but not alone.
Rowan vet-tech says
And part of “do what I say” is “Don’t call me a racist pig.”
Onamission5 says
It’s not do what I say or something bad will “happen.” It’s do what I say or I will do something bad to you, including but not limited to shooting you.
Bad acts don’t float around in the ether waiting to attach themselves to people unawares when they happen to be impolite to police. Victims aren’t beating and shooting themselves. The police are the ones beating and shooting their victims.
Saad says
rghthndsd #89
And then he explicitly lists five bad things that he will do. What is keeping your eyes from seeing those words?
rghthndsd says
@91 Chigau, thanks for letting me know.
@90 Rowan, perhaps I am misreading when PZ says
If you see this differently than I do, then maybe you could clarify?
Onamission5 says
Sorry, my #93 is directed @rghthndsd #89.
Police violence isn’t a passive accident. Violence is an action one person inflicts upon another. Passive voice neither necessary nor useful, except maybe as a matter of deflection.
rghthndsd says
Saad, I think I have addressed this in 78 and 86. I could reiterate, but that doesn’t feel like it would move us forward.
Rowan vet-tech says
Dutta says that calling an officer a racist pig is one of several things that might end up with an officer shooting or beating you. It’s right there in those two sentences, clear as day.
dianne says
Hey, Dutta, want to know something? I deal with the public too. I deal with people who are angry, who yell at me, threaten me, call me every name they can think of, threaten to sue me. I do this with a deadly weapon in my hand. A deadly weapon that no one would even know that I’d ever used. Here’s what I do in retaliation when someone yells at me, harasses me, or disobeys me: nothing. Nothing whatsoever. It’s called being a minimally competent professional. If you can’t control yourself well enough to NOT tase or pepper spray or shoot someone who is not obeying you then you’re not a minimally competent professional and need to have your badge and gun taken away.
Oh, and if you come to me some day for your medical care, I might be unpleasant. I might even refuse to see you in a non-emergency because I may conclude that I can’t treat you objectively enough. But I will not, ever, refuse to treat you in a life threatening emergency or do less than my best for you because you’ve refused to obey me. If police want respect, they can earn it. You have not.
rq says
rghthndsd
What’s your interpretation, then, based on your evidence?
He lists bad things that
cops generally do to peoplemagically happen to people who interact with cops. One of these things is “get shot”.Then he lists some things
for which cops generally do these thingsfollowing which these magical things tend to happen. One of these things is “calling [him] a racist pig”.He never specifies which magical event occurs after which magical act, and it is clear that he believes that any of those
actionsmagical events may occur after any of those misdemeanours.Which means it is safe to assume that, under some circumstances, calling him a ‘racist pig’ would magically get you shot.
Now, what’s your logic?
rghthndsd says
@Rowan 98: I am not certain I am following what you’re saying. Let me try to make it a bit more specific.
Calling an officer a racist pig may lead to other events which, if escalation occurs to the point where the officer feels his life or others is in danger, could end up getting you shot.
Is this an accurate portrayal of #98? Do think think this is the same as the statement
because I see them as being very different.
dianne says
In the full article, Dutta gives an anecdote in which he stopped a man who was threatening to set a car doused in gasoline alight by diverting his (the suspect’s) attention with a question about his family. Dutta seems to think this makes him look better. It doesn’t. It makes him look worse. Basically, he just demonstrated that he is capable of defusing a situation without violence but that he simply doesn’t always care to bother. It’s not that he’s incompetent or untrained, he simply doesn’t want to bother. Hideous.
Nerd of Redhead, Dances OM Trolls says
It isn’t going to move forward until you provide the words to back up your interpretation of Officer Dutta. Cite those words. You are too vague to move forward, even in your own mind.
Tethys says
Officer Dutta clearly and very literally is quoted listing various methods of violence up to and including lethal force as things that he might do in response to anything less than absolute compliance including being disrespectful to him. You may not be taking it literally because you, unlike the recently murdered Mike Brown, have never had to worry that the police might decide to kill you and call it resisting arrest.
rghthndsd says
@rq 100: His first quote from
http://www.popehat.com/2014/08/19/sunil-dutta-tells-it-like-it-is-about-american-policing/
makes it crystal clear that he would not agree that shooting is justified for mere name calling. But of course you say:
which is rather unclear. What kind of circumstances are you referring to? Could one such circumstance be the person calling him a ‘racist pig’ is also pointing a gun at him? Ok, certainly I am stretching the circumstance here most likely beyond what you had in mind! But my point is that by putting in this “weasel phrase” you make it completely unclear what type of situation you are referring to.
rq says
rghthndsd
Well, the circumstances are up to Officer Dutta to decide. Maybe the other person has a gun. Maybe Officer Dutta is having an impatient day. Either way, as dianne pointed out, he has shown himself capable of defusing the situation without resorting to violence, never mind lethal force.
So, basically, he contradicts himself, without realizing it. Because he never specifies which of those violent things (getting shot, being tasered, etc.) will happen after which small acts of disobedience (asking questions, responding too slowly, calling him names, etc.). So it is safe to assume that they all apply to them all, as it were. Because you never know, and just to be safe, he demands total and absolute obedience and compliance.
rghthndsd says
@Nerd of Redhead, #103: As I have mentioned previously, it is this quote:
To me this says very clearly that Officer Dutta prefers to handle situations without shooting people.
@Tethys #104:
The second half of your assessment is indeed accurate. However I have tried my best to keep my interpretation open and adjust it if I see it to be invalid. In any case, I see this to be diverting the discussion away from trying to understand what Officer Dutta was saying and focus instead on me personally – something I think is more of a distraction than anything else.
rghthndsd says
@rq, 106:
Again, I find this leap you take to be quite ridiculous, especially when it is clear that Officer Dutta prefers to resolve a situation without use of force.
Charles Evans says
How did this cop pass the psych evaluation? He is not fit to be a police officer.
rq says
You have obviously then not been adjusting it for those people, like Mike Brown, who (daily?) experience police brutality for speaking up or speaking out in a way that might seem unpleasant to the officer. If Officer Dutta is so good at being patient and kind and honest, why, then, does he need to make such a list of threats? Why not just stop at ‘please don’t call me a racist pig’? Why preface that with ‘if you don’t want to get shot [etc.]’?
rq says
rghthndsd
If Officer Dutta prefers to resolve issues without using force, then why is he listing measures of force in his article at all?
Also, do you think he is writing only about himself?
rghthndsd says
@rq 100:
This appears to me as an attempt to change the subject. However part of my point in objecting is that this ridiculous interpretation distracts from the real problem which you describe in the quote above. It gives the people who argue that people brutality isn’t a problem ammunition – they can then go and say “See these people who think the police are a problem? They think police go around shooting people who call them names. They’re ridiculous, don’t listen to them.” I would agree with the first part of that last sentence, but not the latter half!
rghthndsd says
My apologies, my last post was a reply to 110.
rghthndsd says
@111 rq: This is a great question! The way I have been thinking of it, in Officer Dutta’s mind he tells someone to do something, they resist, he escalates, they escalate back, and this continues until use of force is necessary. I have big problems with this, if I am right – in Officer Dutta’s mind he is always justified in escalating the situation whereas another person is never justified for opposing him.
But this is a far cry Officer Dutta thinking that he is justified for shooting someone for calling him names.
rq says
rghthndsd @112
Ooooh, you’re tone-trolling! We’re not being charitable enough in our interpretation, therefore people will not listen to us, so we should be more charitable. Hah!
@114
… And yet he so loves not using violence, as you yourself pointed out. If someone resists him, why should he be doing the escalating, if he’s so good at de-escalating? Why would that even cross his mind, if he knows he’s such an awesome cop that he never uses violence? If his reason for escalating is that someone called him names, then yes, in the end, calling him names will (in his mind) justify that person getting shot (presumably by Officer Dutta), so interpreting the quote as ‘if you don’t want to get shot, don’t call me a racist pig’ is entirely accurate. This from same officer who, according to you, would prefer not to use violence (and he presents some great examples). So why is he talking about violent and lethal methods at all?
If you can tell me why Officer Dutta has to implicitly threaten violence in his article, even though he loves resolving conflict without violence, I will give you an internet cookie.
rq says
rghthndsd
Oh, and also this:
So you do have a magic ball that lets you see into his mind. Please share!
Because the rest of us, we’re just working on the words that he wrote. No fair you having the mindreading advantage!
Saad says
Nobody… nobody reads this quote
and thinks, “Oh, he’s listing things he won’t resort to in the face of someone calling him a racist pig.”
That’s not called an interpretation. That’s called an alteration.
rghthndsd says
@rq 112: I don’t exactly know what you mean by “tone-trolling”. However my point is that people are much less likely to seriously consider something someone says if they also know that person is saying other things which are ridiculous. Do you disagree with this assessment?
I would agree – Officer Dutta is clearly in the wrong here.
If you are stating that Officer Dutta’s one-ups-manship approach is more likely to lead to the use of force and this is horribly awful, then I completely agree. At least I think that’s what you’re saying here. Again, this is a far cry from saying that Officer Dutta thinks that it is appropriate to shoot someone for name calling.
rghthndsd says
@rq 116: I surrounded the passage you quoted with “The way I have been thinking of it” and “if I am right”. I read your post as a misquote and think it may have been deliberate – although I certainly hope this wasn’t the case. Please try to avoid such misquotes in the future.
rq says
rghthndsd @118
Yea, I do so disagree with that assessment. Because I often say things that are ridiculous, and yet, somehow, people still take me seriously, because somehow, I manage to communicate the important points as necessary. Funny how that works.
You know who’s sounding ridiculous here? You are. You’re really fishing to try and make a point, and somehow it’s not working out for you. Shame, that.
Also, you don’t know what Officer Dutta thinks, and I don’t know, either. I can, however, read his words. And I’m not the only one interpreting them as I am, which might make you think a little bit about how you are interpreting them.
And if you want to say, next, that Officer Dutta’s words don’t mean what he has written them to mean, but you don’t actually know what he actually means, then Officer Dutta needs to learn to communicate more clearly before getting his articles published and popularized on the internet, and there’s no point in continuing this conversation, because neither one of us will be correct in any of our interpretations.
rq says
rghthndsd
Exactly, the way ‘you have been thinking of it’ and ‘if you are right’, picturing things in Officer Dutta’s mind. Which means you must know more about his mind than me. Why worry about what goes on in his mind if his words are in front of you? Reaching, here.
rq says
rghthndsd
Sure, kind teacher, I will take your words to heart and use them wisely. You read it as a misquote? Heh. Maybe you should avoid such phrases in the future. “In Officer Dutta’s mind”, heh. “If you are right”. Pretty big if, there, without actualy knowing the innards of Officer Dutta’s mind.
Nerd of Redhead, Dances OM Trolls says
Sorry, it doesn’t say he can’t shoot people. He can. His preference is not ability to do something. What he is saying is if you escalate the interaction with a police officer, not necessarily him, the officer can respond with what is necessary, even shooting you. Compliance by you doesn’t escalate the interaction. Typical bully bullshit.
rq says
rghthndsd @[everywhere]
Anyway, as I said, you’re obviously more concerned with not letting Officer Dutta look bad than reading his actual words. I’m out of this conversation. Please talk to the empty chair, if you so wish. I will not be replying (to you).
Steve says
This cop needs to read John Bad Elk v. US.
Tethys says
It looks like rghthndsd is far more interested in ignoring the fact that Officer Dutta is demonstrating the mindset of an occupying military force, rather than a civilian servant whose primary goal is ostensibly to “Protect and Serve”.
rghthndsd says
@rq 124: I am really confused, because with my interpretation I think Officer Dutta looks really really bad. I’m only saying that you’re interpretation makes him look like an evil supervillain – and is just as fictitious.
@123 Nerd of Redhead: 100% agreed.
rghthndsd says
@Tethys 126: I’d actually say he is somewhere in the middle – and perhaps leaning a little more toward the civilian servant side. I think Nerd of Redhead’s use of the word “bully” (with a gun) is quite apt.
Seven of Mine, formerly piegasm says
You think bully with a gun is leaning more toward the civilian servant side? Interesting way of looking at it…
Wes Aaron says
I’ve met some officers at a traffic stop and many when I worked in a convenient store. In both cases you find that the officers fit two categories and strangely it seem that the ones who are gung ho are more likely to abuse their authority because they have to make a difference. I cross several cities in my normal day to day and the cops of each city are different. Those working in cities with good income seem to be less edgy even passive vs those working in low income. But the funny part is the ones working in low income usually have a sense of purpose (call it pride) and they are there to better the community. Unfortunately like all pride it blinds them to the humanity around them. Only once have I ever been cussed out by a cop and it was in a low income area. I don’t blame the people living in low income areas, but what I find is that the cops tend to think the citizens are bad or need a stern hand to follow the law. The reality is that if they just treated people with respect regardless of race or appearance there would be less tension. When people feel the cops are fair and aren’t looking for a way to punish them their more relaxed and less aggressive.
Well I guess it’s kind of a long way of saying it, but, if the cop is friendly in his approach to all citizens then people are less likely to respond poorly. During the conflicts in Ferguson Lieutenant Johnson waited till the last minute to put on his gas mask and positively involved himself in the community, even at the protests he would approach people calmly and engage in positive conversation, and it showed vs the gun happy officers with a sense of purpose trying to force everyone to follow their orders at gun point. What I saw was one man who looked at them as people and a bunch of cops who saw them as criminals.
This is the training officer’s need, trained how to be human in difficult and hostile situations, only then can there really be a change.
dontpanic says
carlie@31
Yeah, that a reoccurring fear I have for my son. At 16 he’s 6’2″ and built like a linebacker, but he’s neuro-atypical, clumsy and reacts badly to shouted orders (freezing or doing the wrong thing). He is white, so he has that going for him. But otherwise, I greatly fear for him if/when he has some LEO interaction in the future. [Sigh]
Christopher says
I wonder how he both got a PhD and passed the police entry IQ test that culls anyone with half a brain:
http://abcnews.go.com/US/court-oks-barring-high-iqs-cops/story?id=95836
smrnda says
I’ll add that being white and female means sometimes, if you are out walking say, at night, a cop might pull over and ask you if you would like a ride. If you politely decline, the cop may *then* decide that since you have rebuffed his chivalry, he wants to see an ID and pat you down, accuse you of doing or having drugs, and such. It’s like the “Nice Guy” who is legally authorized to make arbitrary arrests of women who aren’t feeling it.
anteprepro says
Seconding smrnda. Cops may seem lenient to white women in some circumstances, but because they are women, they also have to deal with a whole subset of horrors that men of either race usually don’t have to deal with.
Also, great to see yet another Glorious Warrior has barged into a thread about Ferguson in order to quibble about irrelevant tangents, in defense of their Holy Police Overlords.
Here’s a protip for all the handwringers: If you aren’t actually a racist or an knee-jerk authoritarian who just loves the police force just so damn hard, yet you are still insisting on spending time and energy obsessing over a minute detail that seems to detract from our criticism of the events of Ferguson, but is also such a minor issue that it doesn’t actually effect anything, true or false, then I suggest you ask yourself why you are bothering. Because the effect is obfuscation. The effect is distraction. The effect is annoying and derailing and looking like someone who is deliberately digging up whatever desperate excuse they can to defend the events in Ferguson. Why are you bothering? What are you doing? What is your actual goal? Is it worth it?
Odds are, if you are honest and actually a half-way decent human being, you will realize that it isn’t actually worth it. Quibbling over bullshit tangents and hyper-parsing text is not an endeavor that is so inherently meaningful that is worth bringing up in the context of an in depth and passionate discussion about race and police brutality. It is not at all tactful to make that your sole focus in the context of such discussion. In the context of such discussion, such obsession with minutiae over the huge fucking issues on the plate sends an incredibly bad message about your priorities, and it suggests either tone deafness or active agenda, attempting to the undermine those dealing with those issues.
Something to keep in mind, for the rare souls who aren’t actually trolls but still decide to barge in here to play a game of Professional Logician anyway.
robertbaden says
Anteprepro,
So I suspect my women cousins have to deal with what white women deal with, plus the effects of racism on their safety.
anteprepro says
robertbaden: Depressingly true, I am afraid. I imagine that women of color have to be among the strongest people in this country, and probably regularly deal with the most vile of shit.
Ichthyic says
Whoa.
similar story for Missouri?
Ichthyic says
the escalation and intimidation approach seems to be the standard officer training in the states.
It was a rather large shock to me to see how differently cops here in NZ are trained.
basically the exact opposite:
instead of intimidation, it’s smiles and a willingness to chat.
instead of escalation, they are specifically trained in how to DEescalate situations.
it’s been quite the eye-opener.
Pteryxx says
Dunno about 129 years but MSNBC just showed a reporter asking McCulloch if he had ever prosecuted a police officer, and he epically waffled “Uh – uh – I don’t know about any shooting” (paraphrased) for several seconds.
Menyambal says
Dutta is on CNN right now.
Pteryxx says
via a commenter at Greta’s:
Nobody Knows How Many Americans The Police Kill Each Year
Pteryxx says
Colorlines today on Eric Holder’s investigation:
Ichthyic says
He was born in 1951; I’m surprised he hasn’t already learned how futile it all is to work within a system that is designed to protect authority and privilege.
Still sticking with my prediction:
Wilson will not be convicted of any felony.
He WILL get taken to civil court, and that is where Holder will get his “victory”.
…and nothing will change.
Ichthyic says
FWIW, for people who want to know who Holder is, there’s a decent wiki:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Holder
Ichthyic says
he sure knows what the story is. Maybe I’m wrong this time, maybe he’s really the Elliot Ness this whole mess needs.
hope so.
alfredkarius says
A police force like America has, disqualifies any claims it has of being a democracy. It is more like the police force of a classical tyrannical regime. Anyone with Officer Dutta’s attitude should be disqualified from being a policeman in a democratic country. He is one of those sickos that gets some kind of sexual thrill by having absolute power over people.
How is it possible that all those rights that American citizens are supposed to have (#18) can simply be ignored by the police force whose duty it is supposed to be to protect those rights?
Kagato says
Interestingly, Dutta’s statement can be seen as reasonable and accurate advice… if you start from the standpoint that the police are unaccountable, uncontrollable thugs, and you have to assume your safety is in jeopardy if you don’t stay the hell out of their way.
Just as if the police were the worst bully in the school, and the
governmentprincipal turns a blind eye:Pteryxx says
via MSNBC just now – Two new lawsuits have been filed against the Ferguson PD related to another death, that of Jason Moore. His case was mentioned as part of the reason the people of Ferguson don’t trust prosecutor Bob McCulloch.
USA Today
Ichthyic says
I’m hoping the protests will starting including “recall McCulloch” along with the “hands up” signs.
it sure is looking like the entire infrastructure there is in need of a housecleaning.