IdleRich
IdleRich
Tofu up in tofu spaceTrue NYC hipsters would meet up in tofuspace or something, surely?
Tofu up in tofu spaceTrue NYC hipsters would meet up in tofuspace or something, surely?
True NYC hipsters would meet up in tofuspace or something, surely?
At the risk of sounding cynical, is it possible these how factors are linked? E.g., do you think these remedial actions might have encountered much greater pushback from police unions if the guys involved had been white?As has been pointed out elsewhere, it's interesting how forcefully the Memphis police department condemned the behavior of the unit, how quickly the officers were fired and charged, and the unit disbanded. Some have called it the model for how a department should react to such a crime.
Also as mentioned, this incident is unusual in that the officers were Black. There's plenty of obvious police brutality here to protest, but the racial element becomes more neutralized.
The phrase "nose to tail", in the context of food, will never fail to be redolent of The Human Centipede.Dunno Tea, think that's an outdated cliche. for a few years now, it's been all about tattooed hipster butchers and nose-to-tail restaurants.
At the risk of sounding cynical, is it possible these how factors are linked? E.g., do you think these remedial actions might have encountered much greater pushback from police unions if the guys involved had been white?
Let's review. You, a person who notoriously attacks the idea of systemic racism in policing at every turn, offered an "intuition", based on zero evidence, that suggests problems with special police units are not systemic but the fault of "bad eggs". When challenged to provide literally any evidence, you instead expanded the goal posts to include all task forces of any kind anywhere and invoked a self-evidence fallacy ("so obvious it almost goes without saying").There are new task forces spun up every day in this country. Tens of thousands have existed in this country. Probably hundreds of thousands. The sample selection bias as to which groups go viral is obvious; why would we have heard about a competent group of cops? The variance point is so sociologically obvious as to almost go without saying, let alone defending; it's a big part of the localism vs federalism conflict. If you're gonna stick your head in the sand and pretend you don't understand what I'm saying, be my guest.
Did the George Floyd stuff result in any changes? Chauvin went to prison and a lot of people got out in the streets, but I haven't heard anything about systemic changes within policing.
It's almost as if they shouldn't have had such a unit at all in the first placeAs has been pointed out elsewhere, it's interesting how forcefully the Memphis police department condemned the behavior of the unit, how quickly the officers were fired and charged, and the unit disbanded. Some have called it the model for how a department should react to such a crime.
This is your little fantasy world, none of it happened lolLet's review. You, a person who notoriously attacks the idea of systemic racism in policing at every turn, offered an "intuition", based on zero evidence, that suggests problems with special police units are not systemic but the fault of "bad eggs". When challenged to provide literally any evidence, you instead expanded the goal posts to include all task forces of any kind anywhere and invoked a self-evidence fallacy ("so obvious it almost goes without saying").
Very clearly version and I are both talking about nominally elite anti-gang/violence/gun etc police units that have a mandate to go out and semi-autonomously pursue results without the normal level of oversight applied to police officers. Not all task forces of any kind. Obviously you know this, so presumably you're just unable to come up with a real answer, which again I invite you, or anyone, to do: find some examples of successful special police units of this type, i.e. where they've decreased violent crime while also managing not to get disbanded for corruption and brutality.
As has been pointed out elsewhere, it's interesting how forcefully the Memphis police department condemned the behavior of the unit, how quickly the officers were fired and charged, and the unit disbanded. Some have called it the model for how a department should react to such a crime.
Also as mentioned, this incident is unusual in that the officers were Black. There's plenty of obvious police brutality here to protest, but the racial element becomes more neutralized.