Siao7 wrote:
RaggedMan wrote:
Siao7 wrote:
RaggedMan wrote:
Siao7 wrote:
This is weird for me. In Germany there have also been school shootings (even a hospital shooting) in the past 20 years. The police is also armed, much like in the States.
So looking at the (Wiki admittedly) stats, there have been 800+ deaths by police officers in the US, while in Germany there have been 2... Germany is not a small country either, at 80+ million people, it's about a quarter of the population in the US. But the difference between the numbers is huge. Not sure how many of them are unarmed, but how does this explain this difference? Are the police more trigger happy in the States or the German police more efficient?
Police shootings are definitely something that needs to be addressed here. Part of the problem to finding a solution to it though is that it's not tracked in any meaningful way. There is no national database that every law enforcement agency has to report every officer involved shooting to so there is no easy way to study the what, why, when, and how of them to see where the problems lay. Without such a database we don't know how many are justified shootings where there was a tangible threat to the officer and how many were overreactions to a situation.
In my opinion part of the problem is that there is no baseline level of education and training. Most large city and state police forces have very vigorous training academies and have psychological batteries that need to be passed and many also require some college education. Federal agencies like ATF and FBI require 4 year degrees to even be considered. But many local and county sheriff type departments only require a basic background check and some training which varies from on the job training to having to go through the state police academy.
This has become exasperated since 9/11 as local authorities were drawn in to "The War on Terror" and given a greater remit to police things that fall outside of their expertise and given access to more surplus military equipment.
The last bit is very true. In London the most famous incident like that was the shooting (and killing) of an innocent guy in the tube by the police in the aftermath of the London bombings in 2005.
But would the police be so trigger happy if there were not afraid that the suspects have guns (since guns are so easily available)? It is a bit of a vicious circle I think
That last bit does play into it in my opinion. Over the last 10 years or so more people have started to keep guns in their vehicles whether they're legally allowed to or not.
But here's the thing. Although there's no hard number on how many people own guns in this country, due to the lack of a national registry, the highest estimate I've seen in a poll was 34% having a gun in their home which accounts for adults who haven't personally bought a gun but live with someone who has. So even though we do have a lot more people who have guns than elsewhere in the world it's nowhere close to being a majority and it's a matter of thinking that the threat is greater than it actually is.
Granted the above is based on polling data and won't account for illegal guns but I think that there is a mindset that perceives that threat is greater than it is. Which isn't to say that there isn't a threat to police, there was an officer killed in a near by county just today when dealing with a domestic dispute.
But then on the other hand an officer in West Virginia recently won a wrongful termination suit who said he was fired for
not shooting someone who was threatening suicide because his girlfriend told them the gun was unloaded. The fired officer wouldn't shoot this armed man because he thought he was trying to commit suicide by cop (yes, sadly that is a thing) and instead tried to deescalate the situation. The man was eventually killed by another officer and it was found that the gun the man had in his hand was indeed unloaded. The county sheriff decided that the officers action put others in danger and fired him.
Agreed, the police force don't really get the credit they deserve sometimes. And a few rotten apples always give a bad name. It is a difficult job, not for everyone, and I am not jealous that they have to take life-changing decisions in short times. They do give themselves a bad name very often though, ysome overzealous officers that use their power unnecessarily, as it happens in every industry.
I remember a chat with a crowd control officer during a football game and we were asking them why are they so aggressive and use so much violence sometimes. He certainly had his point of view: you have 200 officers "guarding" 5,000 drunken fans (can't remember the exact numbers now) from the train station to the football field, swearing and yelling at them, throwing bottles, the lot. If the officers don't show an aggressive "don't mess with us" face they will be overran easily and god knows what happens.
But I think we digressed, this is for a different topic maybe, the school shootings don't have to do much with the police force shooting unarmed people. It is rather the accessibility to guns that makes it feasible for an angry teenager to go from posting on youtube his angry views against "the school or the system" to actually go and do something despicable.
Maybe veered off of school shootings but still within the gun debate so still related. Especially since gun advocates are pushing "more guns in schools" as the solution of choice which brings the law enforcement discussion right back to school shootings.
Back in the early-mid 80's I was stationed at the Marine Barracks in DC and while that unit's primary function is to stand around and look pretty for dignitaries and act as recruiting fodder there is also the secondary mission of crowd/riot control for the Capitol building. Things have to get pretty bad before they resort to literally calling in the Marines, the last time I think was in the late 60's-early 70's, but we did train extensively for the purpose with full riot gear and bayonets attached. Once while I was there we had to spend an entire weekend on standby ready to go when the Klan had a march planned. The turn out was much smaller than expected and the counter protesters were quiet so nothing ever came of it, thankfully.
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You're welcome, it is a very interesting thread indeed. And the fact that posters that are gun owners can give us their insights is also fascinating.
Whenever these discussions come up here, whether it be gun control or politics, I try to leave my opinions out of my responses as much as possible (which can be hard at times) and answer the questions that are asked by the non-Americans by giving insight into the why or how of the topic. Often it goes well beyond simply addressing what seems to be a root issue (2nd amendment in this case) because the adjustments made there can have ripple effects and cause problems in other unrelated areas. Not that the ripple effect unique to the US I just try to provide info about why it works that way here.
Edit: I misquoted, or actually didn't complete my thought, a stat earlier when I said 34% having a gun in the home. I read through 2 surveys from Pew and one stated the 34% for households and the other 30% for gun owners with 64% saying there was one in the household. I haven't had the time to go back and reconcile those two stats yet because that's a pretty big difference.