shockedcanadian
Diamond Member
- Aug 6, 2012
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I'm quite surprised that some locations in Canada, understanding that the world is changing and America is no longer naive to the fact we are viewed as more closely aligned with the former Soviet Union or East Germany than we are America have decided to be more transparent.
The police industry is untouchable here as it had been for decades in the UK and Australia. Change is VERY slow but the tariffs and calling out of nations by JD Vance might wake us up.
We are by the far creepiest police state in the West who claims to be a "democracy" and "defender of human rights". This has to change before be go bankrupt.
Ontario will remain unaccountable. Until this changes, we are going to have to sacrifice some industries.
One of B.C.'s police watchdogs—the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner (OPCC)—has launched the Discipline Decisions Digest, a public database that shows substantiated allegations of misconduct against police officers and corresponding disciplinary measures.
"Transparency is a fundamental pillar for police accountability and enhancing public confidence in policing," said Prabhu Rajana in a statement from the OPCC.
The organization defines substantiated allegations as proven allegations.
It will include information from the 12 municipal police departments that fall under the OPCC's jurisdiction, as well as the Metro Vancouver Transit Police, the Stl'atl'imx Tribal Police Service, and the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit B.C.
The database does not include the names of individual officers associated with the allegations but displays which police department they belong to.
The police industry is untouchable here as it had been for decades in the UK and Australia. Change is VERY slow but the tariffs and calling out of nations by JD Vance might wake us up.
We are by the far creepiest police state in the West who claims to be a "democracy" and "defender of human rights". This has to change before be go bankrupt.
Ontario will remain unaccountable. Until this changes, we are going to have to sacrifice some industries.
One of B.C.'s police watchdogs—the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner (OPCC)—has launched the Discipline Decisions Digest, a public database that shows substantiated allegations of misconduct against police officers and corresponding disciplinary measures.
"Transparency is a fundamental pillar for police accountability and enhancing public confidence in policing," said Prabhu Rajana in a statement from the OPCC.
The organization defines substantiated allegations as proven allegations.
It will include information from the 12 municipal police departments that fall under the OPCC's jurisdiction, as well as the Metro Vancouver Transit Police, the Stl'atl'imx Tribal Police Service, and the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit B.C.
The database does not include the names of individual officers associated with the allegations but displays which police department they belong to.