Neverending **** the Police thread.

Are all these examples posted against white victims further proof of a system racist issue?

Or is it maybe something else?
 
Trump may not know how to deal with a pandemic when given a 2 month head start, but at least he knows to how reassure the public that he'll promote equal justice for all.
 
Are all these examples posted against white victims further proof of a system racist issue?

Or is it maybe something else?



There is systemic racism but the police are a problem for people of every race. I will be the first to tell you if George Floyd was white he would still be dead but 99.9% less people would care. Maybe he wouldnt be at that point in his life if he was white. That MIGHT be relevant. As quoted by a former cop in the GQ article its getting to a point where cops are less likely to shoot black people. But as I keep trying to say, this shouldnt be about the handful of murders by police on black people every year. This should be about the millions ****ed over by a meat grinder of a criminal justice system and overzealous police enforcing far too many morality laws. In our hysteria to give police what they asked for to fight crime we made pretty much everything illegal. There will almost always be some kind of technicality cops can use to retaliate against people using the excuse of protecting and serving. We do absolutely nothing to track bad arrests and our court systems treat a night in jail for a false arrest like "heres 20 bucks and a coupon for a happy meal" because they say there is little harm done. Thats god damned ****ed up imo. Being arrested and spending a night in jail aint worth 50 bucks to me. We give millions of dollars to the people who act a fool when cops are in the wrong and get the **** kicked out of them but give **** to the people who do the right thing and fight it through the courts.
 




Kudos if they did the right thing and arrested the criminal without trying to cover it up. Crime by cops will never go away 100%.
 
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Wtf
 
For years, legislators, community leaders and others have wanted to know: How many black Americans have died while being apprehended, arrested or transported by law enforcement officers? And how does that number compare with the number of men and women of other races and ethnicities killed each year in police custody?

No one knows the official answers to those questions. It has been five years since Congress passed the Death in Custody Reporting Act of 2013, which went into effect in December 2014, but federal officials have not yet gathered the data and made it public. Rep. Robert C. “Bobby” Scott of Virginia introduced the legislation, created based on an earlier law that expired in 2006 and had required states to submit quarterly reports on deaths in police custody.

The new law requires the Attorney General to collect from each state as well as all federal law enforcement agencies “information regarding the death of any person who is detained, under arrest, or is in the process of being arrested, is en route to be incarcerated, or is incarcerated at a municipal or county jail, state prison, state-run boot camp prison, boot camp prison that is contracted out by the state, any state or local contract facility, or other local or state correctional facility (including any juvenile facility).”

Earlier this year, two members of Congress — the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, Jerrold Nadler of New York, and the chairwoman of the House Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism and Homeland Security, Karen Bass of California — wrote a letter to the Inspector General requesting an investigation into the Department of Justice’s failure to implement the Death in Custody Reporting Act of 2013.

A 54-page report from the Office of the Inspector General chronicles problems the U.S. Department of Justice has had implementing the law. It notes that state-level data collection “will be delayed until at least FY 2020,” which ends Sept. 30, 2020.

The report, released in December 2018, also points out that the Department of Justice “does not have plans to submit a required report that details results of a study on DCRA [Death in Custody Reporting Act] data. DCRA required that such a report be submitted to Congress no later than 2 years after December 18, 2014.”

https://journalistsresource.org/stu...-justice/deaths-police-custody-united-states/
 
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For some reason I remember that being voluntary. As in police departments have the option to report the info but nothing forcing them.
 


Here is the Kern County Sheriff talking about the George Floyd vicious murder.






Here is how he really feels. We know who the bad apples are.
 
"I asked him what it was like in South Africa right before apartheid ended and he said it was chaos in the streets. There were riots and car bombs etc, but the amount of people caring hit critical mass and there was nothing they could do to stop it. The people had momentum and apartheid ended. Critical mass. Thats what we have to hit. Once enough of you care, there will be nothing they can do to stop that change"


Dave Chappelle
 
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The answer is obvious. All right wing conspiracy theories end ip being true.
 
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