• cogman@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Don’t you love how a cop who drunkenly threatened his girlfriend with his pistol and has multiple discipline actions on record for excessive violence is still allowed to be a cop?

  • Dark Arc@social.packetloss.gg
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    7 months ago

    This is my take as an Akron resident:

    1. We have a new community controlled local police oversight board.

    2. The officer was called with the pretext that someone had been brandishing a firearm / pointing a gun at houses.

    3. You can’t see very well what the officer could see because the view is obstructed. It’s entirely possible that the kid complied but accidentally pointed the gun towards the officer.

    4. The officer shot exactly 1 time and shot in a non-lethal manner (the hand was shot). This was not a murder attempt, this was in a way the extra mile, the kid will hopefully make a full recovery.

    5. The fake gun is not an orange tipped fake, it’s very similar to a real looking gun. The kid also was not with friends “playing pretend” or anything like that.

    6. As soon as the kid started yelling the officer immediately deescalated the situation and moved towards first aid.

    7. The officer does have a messy history, particularly when alcohol is involved and when off duty, but was entirely sober at the time of the shooting and has never been known to be drunk while on duty.

    8. We have had issues in the past few years locally particularly with teen violence. They’ve been trying to solve it, but some kids are carrying guns and robbing people, some kids have been carrying guns to protect themselves from the other kids, and evidently some kids are carrying fake guns too.

    I’m glad this kid got to walk away with their life. I hope their hand isn’t too messed up and I hope they don’t have too much mental distress. They never should’ve walked around in public with a toy gun and “showed it off”, and I hope they never do this again.

    If the officer really did something wrong, I’m sure we’ll get to the bottom of it, but as it stands, I think the officer reacted reasonably.

    • seang96@spgrn.com
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      7 months ago

      Not trying to discredit or anything but in #4 1 shot is surely good compared to emptying his clip, but shooting or aiming a gun at somebody, the intent can’t be “non-lethal”.

      • Fredselfish@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        If you can be shot and killed for possession of a gun then we don’t have the second amendment right to a gun.

        We need to address this. Because our second amendment rights are being violated especially if you are black.

        The far right keep telling us we have this right any time we try pass any type of guy law. Yet cops kill people with guns and even with toy guns or no.

        When do we get the right to defend ourselves from these thugs?

        • BassTurd@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          The 2nd amendment is a farce and the US would be a much better place if it were abolished.

          • octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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            7 months ago

            While there is much to debate about the 2nd amendment, so long as we continue to claim we have one, possession of a gun alone makes no sense as justification to shoot somebody.

            Either we have a second amendment or we don’t. We don’t have one if every person with a gun is immediately fair game for execution by police.

            • nilloc@discuss.tchncs.de
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              7 months ago

              Possessing a gun, and brandishing a gun are very different.

              I’m not here to defend the cop or 2A (neither should exist in there current form), but the kid was brandishing, which is super dangerous with both real and real looking guns.

          • PrettyFlyForAFatGuy@feddit.uk
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            7 months ago

            I think everyone here would agree with you however whether the second amendment should be abolished or not is not the subject of conversation.

            This person does have a second amendment right to carry a firearm.

            You should not be able to shoot someone for exercising their right to carry a firearm.

      • KevonLooney@lemm.ee
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        7 months ago

        Also, there’s houses all around them. Any shot could easily injure or kill someone else. This wasn’t a “good shoot”. It could easily have resulted in tragedy.

      • CptEnder@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Yeah the first thing you learn about firearms whether you’re hunting or in the military is do not flag someone unless you are prepared to kill them. Even if you don’t intend to.

        I agree though it is good to hear the cop managed to only shoot one round.

        • JonEFive@midwest.social
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          7 months ago

          Yep. 2 very simple rules for dealing with guns

          1. A gun is always loaded (even when it’s not)
          2. Never point your gun at something you don’t intend to destroy
      • Subverb@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        I agree with you and want to strengthen your argument in the future when talking to gun folks, so I want to correct you so that gun nerds don’t roll their eyes and dismiss you out of hand in the future.

        It’s not called a clip, it’s called a magazine.

        To gun folks it’s an important distinction.

      • Christer Enfors@lemm.ee
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        7 months ago

        Not trying to discredit or anything but in #4 1 shot is surely good compared to emptying his clip, but shooting or aiming a gun at somebody, the intent can’t be “non-lethal”.

        I’m honestly confused by what you mean here. Cops in my country will intentionally shoot people in the leg as per policy in certain situations, such as when someone threatens them with a knife from certain distances. So it seems to me you can indeed point a gun at someone with non-lethal intent.

        • seang96@spgrn.com
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          7 months ago

          Look at the other responses. The golden rule in firearms training (police, military, or for personal use) if you aim at someone with a gun it’s with intent to kill.

          Aiming for the leg can hit an artery. Aiming for the leg can cause a misfire and hit somebody else or ricochet. Any number of things can happen and if you get shot there is a decent chance of dying. Also, it’s common practice if your shooting someone to aim for their chest. It’s the easiest place to hit and less likely to hit somebody else because your less likely to miss.

      • Dark Arc@social.packetloss.gg
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        7 months ago

        I disagree that there’s no such thing as a “non-lethal” intent when it comes to shooting. You should never point a gun at anything you don’t want to kill is the advice to prevent tragedy – it’s not some “law” about what happens.

        No shooting is ever a good thing, especially in an urban area. Nobody is happy this happened (and I’d preemptively wager the officer is second only to the kid and his family). If you watch the video that officer didn’t come off as “angry” looking to start a fight or for someone to “make his day.” This wasn’t like the videos where a cop walks up to someone sitting on a motorcycle gun drawn or shoots someone sitting in their truck.

        The reality is that he had a real reason to believe that kid was a threat to his life, had very little time to react, and he wouldn’t be the first police officer we’ve lost if he did nothing and it turned out to be a real gun (which again, he had every reason to believe it was one). In a lot of department’s training that kid would’ve been shot in the chest – not the riskier shot of the hand (I’m not entirely sure this guy didn’t “break policy” specifically in an attempt to make sure this kid lived).

        The right answer here is ultimately to get the guns out of the hands of these kids; that’s a problem that goes far beyond this particular police officer though and has a lot of complex issues.

        The new mayor is a big community policing advocate … maybe if this officer had known this kid the reaction would’ve been better. But ultimately, the underlying problem is this kid had something indistinguishable from a firearm (under the mistaken assumption that, that would make him somehow safer – he says in the video he’s carrying the fake gun to feel safe) and that’s what started this whole chain of events.

        The whole thing is a tragedy, through and through.

    • PoopDelivery@sh.itjust.works
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      7 months ago
      1. The officer shot exactly 1 time and shot in a non-lethal manner (the hand was shot). This was not a murder attempt, this was in a way the extra mile, the kid will hopefully make a full recovery.

      It’s hard to tell if the shot was intentional. The office is talking to the kid and exiting his vehicle when he shoots him. Cops aim at your center, not your hands.

      1. The fake gun is not an orange tipped fake, it’s very similar to a real looking gun. The kid also was not with friends “playing pretend” or anything like that.

      Orange tips haven’t stopped police from shooting people in the past. They’ve even claimed criminals paint orange tips on real guns. If he were playing with friends police would probably be responding to reports of an armed gang.

      1. The officer does have a messy history, particularly when alcohol is involved and when off duty, but was entirely sober at the time of the shooting and has never been known to be drunk while on duty.

      I’m not seeing anywhere that the cop had his BAC tested, or that he was tested for any substances after this shooting.

      1. We have had issues in the past few years locally particularly with teen violence. They’ve been trying to solve it, but some kids are carrying guns and robbing people, some kids have been carrying guns to protect themselves from the other kids, and evidently some kids are carrying fake guns too.

      I’m not sure what your point is. Should police treat teens in your area as threats because some are carrying real guns?

      This kid will absolutely have mental distress and is probably going to be terrified of cops forever. And if the officer did do something wrong and they get to the bottom of it, then what? This cop has already proven he’s a danger and hasn’t faced any real consequences.

      • Dark Arc@social.packetloss.gg
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        7 months ago

        It’s hard to tell if the shot was intentional. The office is talking to the kid and exiting his vehicle when he shoots him. Cops aim at your center, not your hands.

        It would be one heck of a coincidence if this kid just so happened to get shot dead in the middle of the hand that was holding the fake gun.

        Orange tips haven’t stopped police from shooting people in the past.

        The point isn’t that they haven’t stopped it. The point is this toy gun wasn’t one of those toy guns; the officer had no clear marking to go off of. You can go on to say “he would’ve shot him anyways” but that’s your bias, not anything we can know for sure either way.

        I’m not seeing anywhere that the cop had his BAC tested

        The point is that wasn’t an allegation against the officer by the kid, any other officers, or in any of his prior incidents/suspensions; i.e., there’s no reason to believe that was the case here based in reported facts.

        I’m not sure what your point is. Should police treat teens in your area as threats because some are carrying real guns?

        The point is that this isn’t Mayberry and there was reason for the officer to believe that this teenager they’d never met, in an area that’s had problems with this, posed a real threat to them. People under 25 are (sadly) responsible for the majority of violent crime in the city currently.

        This cop has already proven he’s a danger and hasn’t faced any real consequences.

        Well, we’ll see. The citizen oversight board is new and untested. The mayor is similarly new and untested (but passionate about the issue). The office of chief of police is in transition and currently unfilled.

        • PoopDelivery@sh.itjust.works
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          7 months ago

          It would be incredibly hard to intentionally shoot someone in the hand in this type of situation. I don’t think his hand was the intended target. The cop hasn’t even fully exited his cruiser when he shoots. It says he shot him within seconds of the encounter.

          The cop isn’t acting like the kid is a threat to him. He rolls up maybe 15 feet away, directly in his line of sight, talks to him through the window, and starts to exit his cruiser. He didn’t observe from a distance, or seek cover, or call for backup. He needlessly put himself in danger if he thought this kid was going to try to kill him.

          • Dark Arc@social.packetloss.gg
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            7 months ago

            It would be incredibly hard to intentionally shoot someone in the hand in this type of situation.

            Yes, but the fact of the matter is that he was shot in the hand. It’s entirely possible this cop has spent a lot of time at the range and intentionally made that shot.

            This was one bullet in a (relatively rare) case of firearm discharge by an officer in Akron. The chances of that one bullet being fired and one bullet accidentally hitting exactly where it needed to are pretty low.

            It was also pretty close range (which makes this easier), if he was aiming for center mass and hit this kid’s hand, he would have to be an incredibly bad shot.

            He didn’t observe from a distance, or seek cover, or call for backup. He needlessly put himself in danger if he thought this kid was going to try to kill him.

            It’s pretty clear he either didn’t think this was the kid or wasn’t expecting to have (what looked like) a gun pointed in his general discussion.

            It’s also pretty clear that backup was not far away based on there being other cops on the scene within seconds of the shooting.

            That was still plenty of time if it was a real gun for that officer’s family to be attending a funeral right now.

    • TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      have a new community controlled local police oversight board.

      Who apparently are apparently not willing or allowed to provide actual oversight?

      officer was called with the pretext that someone had been brandishing a firearm / pointing a gun at houses.

      And all police officers should know that witness testimony is more often wrong than not.

      You can’t see very well what the officer could see because the view is obstructed. It’s entirely possible that the kid complied but accidentally pointed the gun towards the officer.

      I don’t know why you give someone with a history of violence, that includes brandishing a firearm at their own girlfriend the benefit of doubt?

      The officer shot exactly 1 time and shot in a non-lethal manner (the hand was shot). This was not a murder attempt, this was in a way the extra mile, the kid will hopefully make a full recovery.

      Essentially saying that he panicked and has poor aim. No one is taught to shoot “in a non-lethal manor”, you always aim for center mass.

      The fake gun is not an orange tipped fake, it’s very similar to a real looking gun. The kid also was not with friends “playing pretend” or anything like that.

      I’m sorry, is it illegal for him to be carrying a toy gun, or even a real gun? This is America, we are allowed to open carry, or conceal and carry with proper licensing. Did the officer ask if he had a weapon on him? Did he ask about licensing? Or did he just give a vague command for him to raise his hands?

      soon as the kid started yelling the officer immediately deescalated the situation and moved towards first aid.

      Most people don’t have to hear cries of anguish to avoid murdering children. Most people would do anything possible to avoid shooting children… Are we congratulating people for de-escalating problems they escalated in the first place?

      officer does have a messy history, particularly when alcohol is involved and when off duty, but was entirely sober at the time of the shooting

      The problem is he should have never been back on duty in the first place. He got suspended, fired, reinstated, suspended and when he returned from suspension, he was put back on suspension within a month.

      locally particularly with teen violence. They’ve been trying to solve it, but some kids are carrying guns and robbing people, some kids have been carrying guns to protect themselves from the other kids, and evidently some kids are carrying fake guns too.

      So we have a problem with children with firearms? And the solution is… to arm a man child with more firearms than the children, and somehow less violence happens?

      They never should’ve walked around in public with a toy gun and “showed it off”, and I hope they never do this again.

      I played with toy guns when I was little, hell I played with real guns when I was little. This is not a crime, and even if it were, would summary execution be appropriate?

      Why do you hold children to a higher degree of responsibility than a police officer?

      officer really did something wrong, I’m sure we’ll get to the bottom of it, but as it stands, I think the officer reacted reasonably.

      He shot a child… One who was legally following his orders. In what circumstances is this not something wrong?

      • Dark Arc@social.packetloss.gg
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        7 months ago

        I don’t know why you give someone with a history of violence, that includes brandishing a firearm at their own girlfriend the benefit of doubt?

        Because I try and give everyone the benefit of the doubt; even people who reply with a condescending tone. I also acknowledge that people make mistakes and people’s personal lives and professional lives are different things.

        Essentially saying that he panicked and has poor aim. No one is taught to shoot “in a non-lethal manor”, you always aim for center mass.

        Plenty of people go to a range and practice shooting. You’re making a lot of assumptions about skill here that are entirely your own bias.

        I’m sorry, is it illegal for him to be carrying a toy gun, or even a real gun? This is America, we are allowed to open carry, or conceal and carry with proper licensing. Did the officer ask if he had a weapon on him? Did he ask about licensing? Or did he just give a vague command for him to raise his hands?

        You are not allowed to go around and point a gun (real or not) at buildings. It’s called public menacing and it’s illegal. That is what the call was about.

        And all police officers should know that witness testimony is more often wrong than not.

        There is a big difference between eye witness testimony (i.e., remembering the facts and identifying people) and inaccuracies in reporting (I saw a car driving way too fast, I saw a person rob my grocery story, I saw a person shoot someone – these aren’t things people often get wrong).

        The rest of this I’m not touching it’s loaded with biases, condescending tone, and disregard for the particulars of the situation.

        • TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee
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          7 months ago

          Because I try and give everyone the benefit of the doubt; even people who reply with a condescending tone. I also acknowledge that people make mistakes and people’s personal lives and professional lives are different things.

          Seems like you are more focused on giving that doubt to the officer than the boy who was shot…

          Plenty of people go to a range and practice shooting. You’re making a lot of assumptions about skill here that are entirely your own bias.

          Lol, I go to the range to practice. You know where they put the targets on the dummies…not on the hands. Firearms are not nonlethal weapons, anyone with any training knows this. When you learn to shoot, you are always told to shoot center mass.

          You are not allowed to go around and point a gun (real or not) at buildings.

          Any what evidence says he was pointing at building? A phone call from some random lady does not validate him shooting a child.

          What if I randomly called the police on you and told them you pointed a gun at me, where would you like to be shot?

          There is a big difference between eye witness testimony (i.e., remembering the facts and identifying people) and inaccuracies in reporting (I saw a car driving way too fast, I saw a person rob my grocery story, I saw a person shoot someone – these aren’t things people often get wrong).

          That is semantic reasoning, there is no inherent difference between the two. Also, people file false police reports constantly.

          not touching it’s loaded with biases, condescending tone, and disregard for the particulars of the situation.

          Lol, like you don’t have a condescending tone to your writing? The difference being is that your claims actually deserve condemnation.

          • Dark Arc@social.packetloss.gg
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            7 months ago

            I stated what was going on, and what my take on it was with the local context. Have a nice day. You’re clearly not interested in an intelligent or otherwise nuanced conversion.

            • TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee
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              7 months ago

              I stated what was going on, and what my take on it was with the local context.

              And I explained with nuance, just how ridiculous each of those takes were.

              You’re clearly not interested in an intelligent or otherwise nuanced conversion.

              Lol, says the person who won’t engage with criticism because they’re not presented in a way that massages his ego. Convenient.

              Stop the bullshit virtue signaling, your beliefs are more volatile than any criticism I’ve laid at your feet.

              Especially considering the whole “you can fuck off” comment that you deleted. Coward.

        • octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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          7 months ago

          The rest of this I’m not touching it’s loaded with biases, condescending tone, and disregard for the particulars of the situation.

          He shot a child… One who was legally following his orders. In what circumstances is this not something wrong?

          Not even that one?

    • Veraxus@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      At the very best, this is gross negligence on the officers part. At worst, it’s attempted murder. Even if a person has a real gun, that is not a justification to execute them on the spot or to even discharge lethal weaponry in any manner.

      This cop belongs in prison.

    • SeaJ@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      Thanks for the breakdown. I’m very surprised he shot him in the hand since that is very much against training. A toy gun without an orange tip is pretty hard to tell it is fake from 10m away.

      • neuropean@kbin.social
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        7 months ago

        Yup, ordinarily it’s shoot to neutralize the threat. Looks like his shot saved the kids life.

          • TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee
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            7 months ago

            You see officer, I robbed the man because I knew if I didn’t I would kill him. I deserve a medal for stopping a murderer.

            • Soulg@sh.itjust.works
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              7 months ago

              Ok I agree that the prior post was weird but this line of logic given the situation is absolutely fucking braindead

    • sepulcher@lemmy.ca
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      7 months ago

      Very rational take.

      It doesn’t surprise me you get a good deal of downvotes.

      • Dark Arc@social.packetloss.gg
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        I’m not surprised either but I thought folks would appreciate the local context.

        This is an issue our community is truly trying to address (it was something the new mayor was quite passionate about in his campaign and the community police oversight board was something he pushed for/got done when he was a city council member).

        I (personally) have found that while Akron has made national news for police related shootings, the shootings often are far more nuanced than say, those out of Columbus, OH or what happened with George Floyd.

        • juicy@lemmy.today
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          7 months ago

          You and people like you are the reason cops have no accountablily in this country and this state, speaking as another Ohio resident.

          • dogslayeggs@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Person 1: tries to rationally explain all the events that happened to give context to the story.

            Person 2: YOU’RE THE REASON WHY COPS KILL EVERYONE!!!

            • blind3rdeye@lemm.ee
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              Yeah, there was an attempt to rationally explain the events, and the person’s conclusion was that “the officer reacted reasonably”. i.e. They think shooting a totally compliant unarmed child was a reasonable action.

              The thing is, most of us here disagree with that assessment. There are a myriad of other ways that the police officer could use which don’t involve using a lethal weapon on a child. These type of incidents cannot be treated as just bad luck. They are systematic, problematic, and unacceptable. To conclude that ‘the officer reacted reasonably’ is unsatisfactory. That kind of conclusion is what supports police to act with no accountability.

            • juicy@lemmy.today
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              7 months ago

              Eh, read the article and read all their comments and tell me they’re being reasonable. There’s a certain kind of white person–and yes, race matters because black people have first hand experience of how awful the police are–who grew up being told that cops, firefighters and soldiers deserve our respect, admiration and honor. And no matter how much evidence to the contrary they are confronted with, they find a way to maintain that belief that cops are essentially good, honorable people. Yes, there is an occasional “bad apple;” yes, sometimes mistakes are made; yes, some cities have systematic problems in their police departments; but the police in their town are good honorable folks. Not perfect–nobody is, but they are doing their best to serve and protect in a dangerous world, and we should be grateful to have them out their protecting our families. When something happens, they always give the benefit of the doubt to the cops, never the citizen. They’re like the willfully ignorant wife of an abusive step-father.

          • Dark Arc@social.packetloss.gg
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            7 months ago

            “People like you” are the reason why I have to block people and get disgusted with social media.

            There’s nuance in everything, which is something you clearly don’t understand, and I have no interest in discussing anything with you further.

            • TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee
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              7 months ago

              nuance in everything, which is something you clearly don’t understand

              Nuance doesn’t automatically support your argument, just because things can be more detailed than originally assumed, doesn’t mean that those details support your argument.

              The fact that the police officer in question has already been fired for dangerous behavior and has been suspended since his union got his job back is a piece of nuance you have consistently downplayed or ignored.

              Every rebuttal people have supplied for your claims adds to the nuance of an opinion, as it has been extrapolated upon. You’re just utilizing nuance like it’s a magical spell whenever you paint yourself into a stupid corner.

              You don’t care about nuance, you don’t care about polite discourse, you just want to lick boot.

    • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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      7 months ago

      When my sister in law isn’t a firefighter or ambulance attendant - really really - she’s a cop. Hero or bastard? How’s that fit in your wheel of judgement?

      • Bluefalcon@discuss.tchncs.de
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        7 months ago

        My issue is cops killing innocent people everyday with no consequences. Shot an unarmed person, it’s ok. You can quit and move to a new department to do it again. Rape women in your custody, it’s ok, we will just make a law saying you can’t do that. Fuck all cops.

        • orrk@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          nah, be like the Mississippi sheriff and execute your mistress because she got pregnant, then be upset that the FBI arrests half the fucking department on counts of assisting the sheriff in his coverup, considering the people who hate the FBI and why, one has to assume they are genuinely competent police

        • Nogami@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          The fuck all cops? Heck ya. The same people who say this run screaming for help to cops as soon as shit goes sideways. Makes me laugh.

      • Gabu@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Rightwingers aren’t people, so it’s okay for police to shoot them :)

  • Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 months ago

    When I was little it was completely normal for kids to fuck around the neighborhood with toy guns. Cap guns, water guns, whatever. And we “shot” each other and random people with them. This was even before they started putting bright orange barrels on everything.

    And you know what happened? Nothing. Nobody freaked out. Nobody called the police. Nobody died. Kids being kids. Times sure have changed.

    • LifeOfChance@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Maybe, maybe not. The problem that skews this thought is you didn’t have 24/7 news coverage shoved in your face from tv and social media. You wouldn’t know if it were happening unless it was local to your town or it gained national coverage.

      • orrk@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        news coverage? you think that’s the reason for cops being trigger happy? no, it’s worse, way, way, worse.

        go look up “killology” a fucked ideology that is mandatory teaching is most of america’s police departments, whose focus is that everyone is an existential threat, and the police “sheepdogs” wage an unending war against the evil “wolves” hiding in the innocent and stupid populace “sheep”, and that you should in pursuit of purging the “wolves in sheep’s clothing” not be afraid to kill, in fact it’s encouraged

  • tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    Tavion Koonce-Williams was shot in the wrist on April 1 in Akron by Officer Ryan Westlake, a nine-year department veteran, who was responding to a call about a person pointing a gun at houses. Akron police said the gun Tavion had been carrying was a “facsimile.”

    • gAlienLifeform@lemmy.worldOP
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      7 months ago

      “Tavion is heard multiple times saying: ‘It’s a fake … I just wanted to be safe,’” Okolo said in a statement Monday, adding that “at no point was that toy gun pointed at anyone’s home, at any individual, and certainly not any member of the Akron Police Department.

      In the video, Westlake is seen at 7:11 p.m. in his patrol vehicle slowing down upon seeing Tavion walking on a block.

      “Hey, where are you coming from, can I see your hands real quick?” Westlake asks through the open window as he begins to get out of the vehicle.

      Westlake then reaches toward his department-issued weapon and points it at Tavion, and a shot is fired seconds later.

      • grue@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Westlake then reaches toward his department-issued weapon and points it at Tavion, and a shot is fired seconds later.

        That fucking exculpatory passive voice again. I am sick and tired of the media’s pro-authoritarian editorializing!

      • tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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        7 months ago

        How did anyone know he had a (fake) gun if he wasn’t walking around with it in his hand?

          • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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            7 months ago

            Look, you can look through my post history if you don’t believe me, I’m no simp for cops or authoritarians, but this is kind of a bullshitty line of reasoning. Maybe it’s because I was raised around guns and was taught gun safety, or I have a friend who was a deputy (he quit under Trump for ethical and moral reasons), but what you’re proposing isn’t all that simple. It’s like asking someone to discern if a dollar bill is a counterfeit by showing it to them from out of arm’s reach for five seconds without warning them first; sure, some dollar bills, like the one my kid made, will very clearly be fake, but even a half decent fake would pass the sniff test under those conditions. For some folks, a subset of monopoly money might pass under those conditions. There’s a much greater personal risk involved in assuming a gun is fake than assuming it’s real; after all, enough people have been shot by “fake”, “unloaded” guns purely by accident.

            A personal story: I’m a paramedic. Once we got called to someone having altered mental status. When we get there, it’s an older guy who’s clearly acutely confused; he came out to the ambulance, pointed at a component on our door, and asked if it was a camera (it very clearly was not) and then went inside without waiting for an answer. He was agitated, talking nonsensically, confused, and not following commands. As I’m trying to calm him down enough to get him to come with us, he wanders into the kitchen, and I follow. He stands next to what is very clearly the grip of a pistol sticking out from under some paper; only the barrel and slide are hidden. I wedged myself in between him and the pistol and blocked his access to it. My partner later came back to check and found it was an airsoft pistol. Mind you, I’ve played airsoft, I’ve used airsoft pistols, but for all I could tell in the moment, it was a real gun. Now, do you think it would have been smarter for me to stop and closely examine the pistol first? Doesn’t it make more sense to assume the more dangerous possibility until it’s ruled out?

            • Zombiepirate@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              My point is that the cop (who shouldn’t even be on the force anyway with his history) didn’t do any investigation, didn’t see him brandishing, didn’t even talk to the kid before he assumed he was a threat.

              If we have a right to carry guns in this country (which SCOTUS says we do, right or wrong), then shooting someone for suspected possession of a gun is using violence against a person who is exercising their rights. However, for some reason I just can’t put my finger on, conservatives rush to defend the police in cases like this.

              I understand your point, and it’s well made, but I was saying something different in my post.

              • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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                7 months ago

                Hmmm… Alright. That’s not what I got out of it, sorry for the miscommunication. Yeah, cops harassing, arresting, and murdering people for exercising their constitutional rights is whack.

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            7 months ago

            You do have a point. What would happen if someone with a real gun shot up a school, and during the investigation it showed the killer interacting with a security guard at the front of the building, who would later say, “they said it was fake so I let them through”

            • jorp@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              It’s good to be skeptical but I’ll never understand being skeptical in service of bootlicking. Why are you doing mental gymnastics to absolve this scumbag cop of any responsibility? You’re going out of your way to defend a piece of shit cop while simultaneously trying to find a reason to justify shooting this kid.

              Maybe you need to ask yourself why you’re doing that.

              • Fosheze@lemmy.world
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                7 months ago

                I think what they’re trying to get at is that if you see a gun, you assume it’s real until proven otherwise.

                Should police be shooting people just for having a gun in a country where we have a legal right to bear arms? No, of course not. But saying that the cop should have immediately known it was fake is a BS argument. They have no way to know that and when in doubt, it is always a real loaded firearm. Firearm safety 101 is literally to always assume every gun is loaded and live until proven otherwise.

                If you’re going to argue at least use reasonable arguments that don’t make all of us in the ACAB crowd look dumb. Like the fact that this cop was known to have a drinking problem and a history of domestic violence which should have disqualified him from being a cop. Plus police shouldn’t be shooting people for meerly posessing a weapon in a country where that is a legally protected right. Plus the kid was nowhere near the gun when the cop shot him.

                • jorp@lemmy.world
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                  7 months ago

                  What unreasonable arguments are you referring to? I didn’t make any arguments, I just asserted that the cop is a scumbag (for reasons you highlight) and said that the other user should not be bending over backwards to defend the cop.

                  Like you say, he acted stupidly and was not justified in firing on the kid. Trying to put blame on the kid is an attempt to defend the cop. We would not be tolerant of the same user pointing to a woman’s outfit in a thread about rape.

              • tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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                7 months ago

                I’m not actually trying to defend the cop or the teenager. I’m certainly not “going out of my way.”

                Cops shouldn’t have guns.

            • Zombiepirate@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              What school allows even fake guns in?

              The lengths conservatives will go to to excuse police shooting a black kid who wasn’t breaking any law is astonishing.

              Do we let cops just shoot anyone they suspect was brandishing?

              • tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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                7 months ago

                Im not a conservative.

                Cops shouldn’t even have guns. Guns shouldn’t even exist.

                • Zombiepirate@lemmy.world
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                  7 months ago

                  Sure, but they do have guns and guns do exist.

                  Apologies for assuming you were a conservative, I’ve seen you around and you do seem to have mostly reasonable takes; but defending cops shooting a kid for having a toy is an objectively bad one.

                  Agreed that the only real solution is fewer guns though.

  • Blaster M@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Parents, teach your kids gun safety, even with toy guns. Just because it’s a toy doesn’t mean it can be waved around as such. If the kids learn to respect what it means to carry at a young age, maybe these kind of incidents would be less common.

      • Blaster M@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        This is a tough call… yes, it is needed that cops not be a cowboy and quick draw in every situation. However, in some areas, that won’t work, because the kids will be pulling, and firing, actual guns. It’s a two way street with these kinds of things.

        And I stand by what I said about parents teaching kids gun safety early on, especially with toy guns. I am not victim blaming. This is just good parenting sense.

    • Zombiepirate@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Dude had a fake gun, walking around pointing it at people.

      You mean the child had a toy gun? What was he even doing outside acting like a kid, anyway?

      Open and shut case, shoot the mofo.

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        7 months ago

        It’s kinda crazy to think about, as a kid twenty some years ago I used to run around with friends up and down the street with you guns in our hands and we never got the cops called on us. We were white, of course.

        • Zombiepirate@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Same.

          I had a toy uzi that looked just like the real thing.

          I wouldn’t buy my kids a similar toy these days for a number of reasons, but I don’t think I deserved to be shot on sight.

        • TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          We had bb guns. They launched actual projectiles and looked almost exactly like small caliber lever action rifles. I don’t think you could kill much (maybe mice?) with them but they’d send varmints running. When I got a little older, airsoft became a big thing. Some of those were super realistic and they were definitely more powerful than the old Daisy at the time. We never had the cops called, but we were white in a very rural white place.

          Now I feel like Grandpa Simpson rambling with a story that isn’t going anywhere.

        • Zombiepirate@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          But apparently you want to give the cop the death penalty for shooting someone in the hand, which I think most people wouldn’t support.

          I’d love for you to point to where I (as a person very open about my opposition to the death penalty) said this. I’d like to edit my post so that other people don’t have the same misunderstanding.

        • iAmTheTot@kbin.social
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          7 months ago

          But apparently you want to give the cop the death penalty for shooting someone in the hand

          Yo I’m gonna need a citation on this one fam

      • Auli@lemmy.ca
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        7 months ago

        Only if not white. Have you seen how patient they are with white people compared to people of color.

        • vind@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          White mass shooters get handcuffed and treated with baby gloves but a brown kid with a toy gets shot within seconds.

    • BakerBagel@midwest.social
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      7 months ago

      You know that you dont have any rights to a fireman if the police are allowed to shoot you on site for possessing one, right?

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        7 months ago

        You know that you dont have any rights to a fireman if the police are allowed to shoot you on site for possessing one, right?

        I need to know where I get my Constitutional carry fireman :D

            • neoman4426@fedia.io
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              7 months ago

              … You do realize that by this analogy closing the box just traps hope (whatever its analog would be) in the box with all the negatives already escaped right? That’s like the whole point of Pandora’s Box. Argue a different analogy if you think this one inapplicable, but within the framework of the analogy the consequences of the “close the container after the evils have escaped” plan is well established