Simon,
While everyone would love the tally to be zero, that simply isn't going to happen....
I'm not naive enough to demand perfection, but as a U.S. citizen, I am concerned about the militarization of the police because it ultimately puts all of our civil liberties at risk.
The separation between civil and military authority is implicit in our constitution; it was one of, if not the single biggest driving force behind the 2nd amendment; (Although that idea is a little archaic now...) and it was formally codified into law via the Posse Comitatus act of the late 19th century.
-And there are good reasons for this. If you've seen the Netflix series on Waco, then you've seen what happens when a civilian standoff is treated as a military situation. --Everybody dies.
It's not the fault of any one president or administration, but over the last 30 years of so this barrier has been gradually circumvented. The police have not only been equipped with the weapons, vehicles and gear of soldiers, there has been a corresponding change in attitude whereby police conceive of themselves as “at war” with communities rather than as public servants concerned with keeping their communities safe.
On the battlefield perhaps it's okay to cut loose with a fully automatic rifle when a captive enemy startles you with a sneeze or moves his hands in the wrong way, but that is not okay with the citizens of your own community who are not your enemies. In war maybe it's okay to toss a flash bang into a playpen where a toddler is sleeping. Personally, I don't think it's ever okay, but war, by its very nature is different and bad things happen.
This is what's broken. I can't think of any other country in the free world where police drive through affluent neighborhoods with military style rifles. (This is not an ordinary AR. It is a select fire variant produced specifically for the police.)
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Hell, I can't think of any other country in the free world where the police routinely carry rifles of any sort and certainly not through neighborhoods with very little crime. Personally, I'm much more in fear of the guy on the motorcycle here than I am of a criminal and it shouldn't be that way.
There are several other threads going right now where graphic and bloody examples of what I'm talking about have been posted, (i.e. The police treating suspects as enemy combatants rather than as citizens of their own community.) so hopefully the point has been made.
The situation with George Floyd is tragic and maybe justice will be done, but the police response in the wake of his death has been even more telling. (If that's possible)