Toddsterpatriot
Diamond Member
So NOW what? What changes with the Chauvin verdict?
Higher crime rates.
Higher crime rates.
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So NOW what? What changes with the Chauvin verdict?
Higher crime rates.
Nothing. Negroes will still commit crimes at rates far exceeding everyone else. Cops will still have to deal with black thugs who think they can get away with crime. If anything they’ll think they are even more immune to accountability. So more black criminals will continue to get shot by cops for not obeying orders.Two thoughts on it: First, I suspect we'll see some changes in the rules of policing, and that would include training and accountability. There seems to be enough momentum for this to happen, but I don't know that it's going to definitely going to improve anything.
Second, we're still light years from having "an honest conversation on race" in this country, so this process is going to be rough, loud, divided and ugly. Seems to me that we have to make advances on race relations -- the big picture -- before anything positive sticks.
Do you acknowledge that not all of them are intent on murdering "innocent" black men? Does it ever occur to you that once that job becomes so potentially destructive of the cop's life and future, the best and brightest will walk away and leave it to the real racists? The reality is that cops tend to react based on what they KNOW, statistically, is the greatest threat to their lives.After that happens to about 3 or 4 of them in a row, the rest will miraculously whip themselves into shape.
So NOW what? What changes with the Chauvin verdict?
Higher crime rates.
I disagree.
"Crime rates" are reflective of the number of reported crimes. Fewer are going to bother making a report in the new paradigm.
I saw a breakdown of the “Blue Wall” where police protect their own.Two thoughts on it: First, I suspect we'll see some changes in the rules of policing, and that would include training and accountability. There seems to be enough momentum for this to happen, but I don't know that it's going to definitely going to improve anything.
Second, we're still light years from having "an honest conversation on race" in this country, so this process is going to be rough, loud, divided and ugly. Seems to me that we have to make advances on race relations -- the big picture -- before anything positive sticks.
WTF are you talking about, you utter mope.Training ain't it.Two thoughts on it: First, I suspect we'll see some changes in the rules of policing, and that would include training and accountability. There seems to be enough momentum for this to happen, but I don't know that it's going to definitely going to improve anything.
Second, we're still light years from having "an honest conversation on race" in this country, so this process is going to be rough, loud, divided and ugly. Seems to me that we have to make advances on race relations -- the big picture -- before anything positive sticks.
They've been training and training and training and training, for decades on decades now and it hasn't done a damn thing, the brutality has only gotten worse.
The thing that will stop these racist bastards in their tracks is punishment.
After that happens to about 3 or 4 of them in a row, the rest will miraculously whip themselves into shape.
- They get convicted and do hard time to life for these offenses.
- Have their money taken away. (aka they're able to get the pants sued off of them)
240 people have been killed by cops in 2021 and only 30 of them are blacks.
If you were genuinely concerned about police injustice you would be demanding that a murder charge in the case of Tony Timpa, or the Navy veteran who died in February. Both died from cops kneeling on their necks, but were not black, so nobody gave a fuck.
Where is the source for that info? Or did you pull that 7:1 ratio from the crack on your backside?240 people have been killed by cops in 2021 and only 30 of them are blacks.
Floyd was coddled for over 17 minutes before Chauvin put the knee on him. That is a lifetime in a police response. And police need to become available for other calls. The city needed to have others respond to attempt to take Floyd to jail or the hospital and off the street. You saw the video as he was not complying. Cops have brought this on themselves as the worst of them make the rest look bad. And the way things are going, the anger gets law enforcement ha snot hit bottom.Training ain't it.Two thoughts on it: First, I suspect we'll see some changes in the rules of policing, and that would include training and accountability. There seems to be enough momentum for this to happen, but I don't know that it's going to definitely going to improve anything.
Second, we're still light years from having "an honest conversation on race" in this country, so this process is going to be rough, loud, divided and ugly. Seems to me that we have to make advances on race relations -- the big picture -- before anything positive sticks.
They've been training and training and training and training, for decades on decades now and it hasn't done a damn thing, the brutality has only gotten worse.
The thing that will stop these racist bastards in their tracks is punishment.
After that happens to about 3 or 4 of them in a row, the rest will miraculously whip themselves into shape.
- They get convicted and do hard time to life for these offenses.
- Have their money taken away. (aka they're able to get the pants sued off of them)
That's why you need to watch unfiltered news like Newsmax to get the facts and not the emotions.WTF are you talking about, you utter mope.Training ain't it.Two thoughts on it: First, I suspect we'll see some changes in the rules of policing, and that would include training and accountability. There seems to be enough momentum for this to happen, but I don't know that it's going to definitely going to improve anything.
Second, we're still light years from having "an honest conversation on race" in this country, so this process is going to be rough, loud, divided and ugly. Seems to me that we have to make advances on race relations -- the big picture -- before anything positive sticks.
They've been training and training and training and training, for decades on decades now and it hasn't done a damn thing, the brutality has only gotten worse.
The thing that will stop these racist bastards in their tracks is punishment.
After that happens to about 3 or 4 of them in a row, the rest will miraculously whip themselves into shape.
- They get convicted and do hard time to life for these offenses.
- Have their money taken away. (aka they're able to get the pants sued off of them)
240 people have been killed by cops in 2021 and only 30 of them are blacks.
If you were genuinely concerned about police injustice you would be demanding that a murder charge in the case of Tony Timpa, or the Navy veteran who died in February. Both died from cops kneeling on their necks, but were not black, so nobody gave a fuck.Where is the source for that info? Or did you pull that 7:1 ratio from the crack on your backside?240 people have been killed by cops in 2021 and only 30 of them are blacks.
Better yet. Stop electing functioning retards to political offices.Until they quit hiring high functioning retards and toxic boymen at the police dept nothing changes. If anything the cops are going to get more brutal because many will look at it like their side lost.
Better yet. Stop electing functioning retards to political offices.Until they quit hiring high functioning retards and toxic boymen at the police dept nothing changes. If anything the cops are going to get more brutal because many will look at it like their side lost.
So NOW what? What changes with the Chauvin verdict?
Two thoughts on it: First, I suspect we'll see some changes in the rules of policing, and that would include training and accountability. There seems to be enough momentum for this to happen, but I don't know that it's going to definitely going to improve anything.
Second, we're still light years from having "an honest conversation on race" in this country, so this process is going to be rough, loud, divided and ugly. Seems to me that we have to make advances on race relations -- the big picture -- before anything positive sticks.
Training ain't it.Two thoughts on it: First, I suspect we'll see some changes in the rules of policing, and that would include training and accountability. There seems to be enough momentum for this to happen, but I don't know that it's going to definitely going to improve anything.
Second, we're still light years from having "an honest conversation on race" in this country, so this process is going to be rough, loud, divided and ugly. Seems to me that we have to make advances on race relations -- the big picture -- before anything positive sticks.
They've been training and training and training and training, for decades on decades now and it hasn't done a damn thing, the brutality has only gotten worse.
The thing that will stop these racist bastards in their tracks is punishment.
After that happens to about 3 or 4 of them in a row, the rest will miraculously whip themselves into shape.
- They get convicted and do hard time to life for these offenses.
- Have their money taken away. (aka they're able to get the pants sued off of them)