CrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Fri Apr 23, 2021 10:09 am
Cascadia wrote: ↑Fri Apr 23, 2021 10:05 am
CrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Fri Apr 23, 2021 10:01 am
Yes, it is often that the bad jumps in logic are largely part of the divide.
When something like this happens, I can't help myself but to first look at the legal issues, but I also think it is important to understand them and not overreact when where, something like this, doesn't end up in a charge or conviction. There are legal reasons why it will (likely) not, and there will be anger that I think is counterproductive.
But the overall conversation should stay. Laws and policy are made by humans, and we can change them.
Right. I don't think the officer will be (or should be) charged in the death of Ma'Khia Bryant. From a legal perspective I'm presuming (not an expert on law) that his use of deadly force is justified and legal.
What I would like to see happen is for cops to stop fucking killing people when there are ways to deescalate the situation. It's impossible to predict an alternative future, but I think this situation with Ma'Khia Bryant could have easily ended without someone dying.
edit: I'd also like to see the first discussion of the incident to not be "He/She deserved it. #JUSTIFIED!"
Yes, there is a very large disingenuous side that looks at this, says "Justified!" and then wants to move on to the next conversation and sees everyone else as just bitching and moaning.
I do tend to believe we have the best justice system in the world. It is also far, far from perfect as every system has flaws.
I absolutely wonder if it is past time to tweak it to help account for its biggest flaw: the susceptibility to and drastic effects from human error. Those answers, I don't even know where to start.
I mostly agree. Although Canada and New Zealand may have better justice systems, if only slightly. I think the US legal system gets it right most of the time. I think our sentencings need reworked, but that a different debate.
I don't have all the answers to solve these problems either but I think two things need to happen in order to start making progress.
1. A massive update to our police trainings, policies and vetting of new officers
2. Divest some funds from police departments to either
a. invest in other forms of public safety
b. invest in special police units that are specifically trained on how to deal with non-violent and mental health issues.