I've been pulled over for a number of BS reasons that were used only so the cop could try to find something else. I've also never been involved in any major or minor crime. Never even shoplifted a candy bar or anything of that nature.
I was once ticketed for failure to maintain my lane while driving with orange cones on both sides of the lane. The cop was trying to find something else and this was all because I was a young person out at two or three in the morning. Some of my friends and I had a weekly Halo night where we'd play crazy late. I didn't have the nicest car at the time so I'm sure that's another reason I was singled out.
Nobody is saying there isn't blame outside of police, but bad cops get the publicity and too often are protected by Unions or those that claim to be good cops. There is definitely an issue within law enforcement. It does sometimes attract people who will absolutely abuse their authority. I've seen videos of cops who think everything they say is gospel even when confronted with actual laws and regulations from the lawyer they're harassing. I've seen people who know cops will show up for whatever reason and have the laws/regulations printed out or have an actual book with them in there and the cops think that whatever they think, say and do is right no matter what the laws and regulations actually say.
Yes, these are the minority, but they're allowed to get away with it far too often. Just because you have a badge, doesn't mean you get to willfully ignore the rights of citizens. If police departments did a better job of policing their own, we'd have fewer issues. If they got rid of these types, there would be fewer issues.
These issues could also be dealt with by ending qualified immunity. Make cops have to deal with their actions. Maybe make cops have to carry some sort of insurance to cover times when they overstep. And I'm not saying every time a cop oversteps makes them a bad cop. Sometimes we make poor decisions in moments and that doesn't make us bad people. But they should still have to worry about such actions. Sometimes, I think it's easy for some cops to go too far because they know they're protected. And if it's deemed that they did something wrong, they still don't pay the price. Instead, the tax payers do as they're the ones that end up paying the settlements for bad cops or bad actions.
I was once ticketed for failure to maintain my lane while driving with orange cones on both sides of the lane. The cop was trying to find something else and this was all because I was a young person out at two or three in the morning. Some of my friends and I had a weekly Halo night where we'd play crazy late. I didn't have the nicest car at the time so I'm sure that's another reason I was singled out.
Nobody is saying there isn't blame outside of police, but bad cops get the publicity and too often are protected by Unions or those that claim to be good cops. There is definitely an issue within law enforcement. It does sometimes attract people who will absolutely abuse their authority. I've seen videos of cops who think everything they say is gospel even when confronted with actual laws and regulations from the lawyer they're harassing. I've seen people who know cops will show up for whatever reason and have the laws/regulations printed out or have an actual book with them in there and the cops think that whatever they think, say and do is right no matter what the laws and regulations actually say.
Yes, these are the minority, but they're allowed to get away with it far too often. Just because you have a badge, doesn't mean you get to willfully ignore the rights of citizens. If police departments did a better job of policing their own, we'd have fewer issues. If they got rid of these types, there would be fewer issues.
These issues could also be dealt with by ending qualified immunity. Make cops have to deal with their actions. Maybe make cops have to carry some sort of insurance to cover times when they overstep. And I'm not saying every time a cop oversteps makes them a bad cop. Sometimes we make poor decisions in moments and that doesn't make us bad people. But they should still have to worry about such actions. Sometimes, I think it's easy for some cops to go too far because they know they're protected. And if it's deemed that they did something wrong, they still don't pay the price. Instead, the tax payers do as they're the ones that end up paying the settlements for bad cops or bad actions.
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