Sorry for not attending the thread more quickly, but I have been busy of late (and I also wanted to leave time for more input).
I disagree that that is their purpose, strictly speaking. Their purpose is to enforce the law, regardless of whether or not those laws are just. A wild example would be if it was the law that police had to beat up civilians — Pinprick
Enforcing the law is the instrument by which they fulfill their
purpose, which is the protection and service of the nation and its people, (visa
The Constitution). Police swear oaths to the constitution when they enter into service. You're right that in practice police are enforcing laws, but ideally (ideologically,
constitutionally) the laws they enforce service the constitution, which services the people. The best example would be police protecting someone's right to protest (the gravity of failure in this is may precipitate a constitutional crisis).
Sure, there’s risk involved in every profession. But what you seem to be proposing is for the safety requirements to be scaled back, so that the job is less safe. I’ve never seen this done, and I’m not sure how that type of action could be justified. Especially if the employer has previously shown that the previous safety requirements were effective. — Pinprick
I'm not advocating for more danger for police in a vacuum; the issue is complicated. There is no fathomable limit to the amount of measures police could take to increase their safety, and at some point, it can only come at the expense of civilian safety. There are also diminishing safety returns (and sometimes negative returns) when police use extraordinary and violent measures to jealously protect their own safety. The protests we're seeing right now are happening almost precisely because police jealously place their own safety above all else (and they are predictably making it worse by doubling down on brutality).
If the nature of current laws and police institutions lead to an outcome where thug-like enforcers freely instigate potentially life threatening altercations with innocent civilians. If broad cultural, legal, and institutional reform is required for us to have a situation where police don't need to wear jackboots, then that's what we must do. The American punitive (in)Justice system is a stupendous waste of life to begin with. De-funding those police departments which fuel the entire industry with fresh meat and blood seems like an excellent starting place to prepare for change. Dissolution and reconstruction if necessary says I.
I think you’re generalizing or misunderstanding what I mean. I’m not saying police should be more violent, just that they shouldn’t be less safe, or have less safety. — Pinprick
(I intended to leave a footnote clarifying that I was not meaning to conflate your own position with my rebukes of the list of reasons you provided, just looking to flesh out my own position against the full spectrum of possible arguments).
I agree with you that police shouldn't be less safe, but if we live in a world where we can only have very safe police at the expense of risk to civilians, then we should be limiting police-work to only the most essential functions. The point at which increased police safety disproportionately reduces safety for civilians seems well passed, and that's something we must change. The fact that police and civilian safety are pitted so at odds from the get-go is a symptom or effect of more deeply seeded problems in the culture and institution itself (the laws and regulations which guide and bind police, the culture that galvanizes them and upon which they operate, and the culture of mutual fear and resentment between police and civilians in general). I would say it's a classic freedom Vs security dilemma, but it's not even that, it's security vs security, and in some cases life vs life.
Again, I’m not justifying brutality, I’m justifying safety. I would argue that police brutality doesn’t make police officers more safe, it makes them less safe. — Pinprick
100% agree.
The aforementioned and well entrenched problems that I have mentioned (those that give rise to brutality, and those that brutality itself incites) are what give me the most pause regarding the subject of "change". Short of systemic reform, I don't see us reaching escape velocity from the black-hole that vast swaths of American police culture has become.
I agree as well, but wanted to add that often police officers are ex-military. I’m guessing military training is light on compassion and patience, so even if police training incorporated this into its training the act of unlearning the military training is difficult. Also, I think both military and law enforcement professions attract a certain type of personality; those who want authority and/or control. This type of personality seems incompatible with compassion and patience in general. — Pinprick
I agree. For relatively low pay for the amount of stress being dealt with, I would imagine that the people who thrive the most as police officers are those who get a kick out of it (what kind of kick is the rub; do they want to be heroes or do they just want to have power?) Those police bringing in large numbers of
bad-guys are probably well favored in their internal hierarchy as well. This is a pretty big problem if we want to have a police force we can be proud of.
And the racism... It's almost as if power-tripping police know that black people are less likely to have a real lawyer (not the 5 minute
McAttorney™ their constitutional right pays for), or that because black people have genuine cause for alarm when approached by police, they may be more likely to make any kind of force-justifying action or statement. It's also as if many of them seem to think that there will be no consequences for their behavior; that broader society
just won't care enough to hold them accountable (the outwardly racist America of yesterday is still too close for comfort in too many precincts, but evidently the times are a changin'). Some police and politicians worry about criminals slipping through the cracks in their machine, but what about the innocent lives that fall into it? In some geographies, these cracks have become chasms.
Inaction seems to now be a non-option. There's no camera-free rug left under which America's (and beyond) remaining bull-shit can be swept. I think that police brutality and crime in general are symptoms of wider economic and social realities that unaddressed will generate unrest to the point of revolution. We either start here or eventually we're in for a bit of a fall.