Rice was an unspeakable tragedy as was Castille.
Castile was shot by a hispanic? Systemic racism?
Rice was pointing a real looking fake gun at people on a playground.
Rice was an unspeakable tragedy as was Castille.
Castile was shot by a hispanic? Systemic racism?
Rice was an unspeakable tragedy as was Castille.
Castile was shot by a hispanic? Systemic racism?
Interestingly, racism can occur even when the officer the same race as the suspect.
Interestingly, racism can occur even when the officer the same race as the suspect. Imagine you're a black cop and you have a patrol in a mostly black, inner city neighborhood with extremely high crime. Day after day you're faced with younh black men committing crimes that you have to arrest them for. You even have coworkers who have had guns pulled on them by young black men. In this situation, even though you're black, you can still have a stereotype form in your head that these young black men in your patrol area are trouble. You then pull over a young black man driving with an expired tag. He reaches for his wallet, you think he's pulling a gun, and you shoot him. Turns out he was a student at a local college just driving through the area.
In this fact pattern, you, a black cop, still had your judgement impaired by racial stereotypes just based on your work.
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Rice was pointing a real looking fake gun at people on a playground.
Interestingly, racism can occur even when the officer the same race as the suspect. Imagine you're a black cop and you have a patrol in a mostly black, inner city neighborhood with extremely high crime. Day after day you're faced with younh black men committing crimes that you have to arrest them for. You even have coworkers who have had guns pulled on them by young black men. In this situation, even though you're black, you can still have a stereotype form in your head that these young black men in your patrol area are trouble. You then pull over a young black man driving with an expired tag. He reaches for his wallet, you think he's pulling a gun, and you shoot him. Turns out he was a student at a local college just driving through the area.
In this fact pattern, you, a black cop, still had your judgement impaired by racial stereotypes just based on your work.
There's also things built into the system like patrol patterns that may have racial biases and so lead to more encounters with minorities. More encounters = more people being killed.
Whether all this is true in any individual case or even at all is another question. It's just possible is all I'm saying.
Prove it.
Rice was pointing a real looking fake gun at people on a playground.
My next door neighbor had an air rifle, he saw a cop coming down the street and ran to hide it behind a car fearing he would get in trouble. If we didn't live in a middle class neighborhood with a low crime rate, odds are he would have been shot. But we are both white and in a relatively well off area, the cop didn't shoot him, and instead the cop just told him to be careful with it.
Did he point the rifle at him?
Did it look like a real rifle?
Rice was pointing a real looking fake gun at people on a playground.
Castile was shot by a hispanic? Systemic racism?
This isn't systemic. It is experience and data based probabilities
Did he point the rifle at him?
Did it look like a real rifle?
Air rifles look pretty dang realistic.
He didn't point the rifle, he ran with the gun behind cover. Something just as intimidating if we weren't white boys in a middle class neighborhood.
Air rifles look pretty dang realistic.
He didn't point the rifle, he ran with the gun behind cover. Something just as intimidating if we weren't white boys in a middle class neighborhood.