>> I still maintain that that was an act of oppressive authority.
Of course, it was, Valis.
Yes, an individual (Morse) is singularly responsible for the act, but under whose aegis did he act? The Inglewood Police Dept. They trained him, put him on the street (apparently just a couple of weeks after a similar incident in which he "allegedly" beat another man was beaten into a coma and hospitalized); and they will back him. They already have, haven't they? Isn't he on leave WITH PAY?
Wendy,
I don't mean to beat a dead horse, but...
Police are supposed to be our servants and protectors. Law-abiding citizens should have nothing to fear from them. Even those who might be driving around with suspended licenses (as the dad was, according to reports) should not expect to be dragged from their cars and beaten by a half-dozen police.
When police officers clearly step over the line (adrenaline charged or not; feeling threatened by a hand-cufffed teenager or not) and act in illegal and unethical ways, every single citizen has the right to be alarmed, not just for the victim of the abuse, but for the rogue cop's NEXT victim; and we should be very interested in holding the officer fully accountable for his acts.
I think you miss the entire point in characterizing such concern as "sideline cheerleading" or that we are "judging" anyone. Who are we cheerleading? Who are we judging? We just saw the same tape YOU saw. For some reason and without any more information than anyone else, you seem to lean toward the defense of the cop's actions. That's your right. It's just that others have the right to view the video differently than you do.
When U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft issues a statement calling the violent arrest of the black youth "troubling"; when the Justice Departments assistant attorney general for civil rights is sent to assist in an investigation by the FBI; when the mayor of Inglewood said that "there was no question" that the officer in the case would be fired; when four separate law enforcement agencies are investigating (the FBI, the Inglewood Police Department, the L.A. County Sheriffs Department and the L.A. County D.A.s Office); then it's safe to say that the "arrest" went a little awry and our concern is a little more serious than "sideline cheerleading."
Alarm seems to me to be an appropriate reaction.
Further, you said
until you have ever been in a professional situation, and yes you are trained on how to react to violence, you have no experience to speak of and your condemnations are shallow.
I strongly disagree. For one, the governing body could use a very similar excuse for their misdeeds. They could say that, "well, you weren't in our shoes, so don't judge." What a crock.
I say: not all people need to be or *should* be police officers, just as not all people need to be judges, nurses, cab drivers... whatever. The problem with being a pathetic excuse of a police officer is that you have the full weight and authority of the law behind your words and acts AND you carry a loaded weapon with the authority to use it. Apologizing later for your "mistakes" doesn't always undo the damage.
Morse, because of his acts, has brought into serious question whether he is fit to serve as an officer of the law in his community. He should be a professional wrestler of hand-cuffed, mentally challenged teenagers. Seems he'd be good at *that*.