About proof of immediate danger, I want to point out that it's based on what the cop can observe at the time. If a suspect is uncooperative and reaches into their pocket, then the officer either makes a right decision or a wrong one. The actual contents of the pocket don't retroactively make the decision right or wrong.
Of course, if it was a stick of gum, the officer has to live with that, and with being vilified for shooting an unarmed person. A person who *turned out* to be unarmed.
And if this is how it's going to be, then we're better off without police. Part of the job and the reason they command so much respect (in similar fashion to a soldier) is that they face danger and risk on behalf of society, in order to make society safer for everyone else. But if they are trained and considered justified to kill anyone who gives them any possible reason to believe they might become dangerous, then they are having the exact opposite effect on society. They're making it more dangerous, and obstructing reasonable justice. If every police officer I encounter is in constant suspicion of me and looking for any slightest out of place movement as cause to shoot me, then it's perfectly reasonable for me to see them as a greater danger to my well-being than any criminal.
If that's the case, then I can't help but suspect that you're the type who doesn't see anything wrong with a suspect ending up dead if they so much as breath in some way that displeases an officer.
And I'm the one trolling here?
I mean, I sorta am, in that I'm offering a dissenting (moderate, really) position in thread dominated by the other position - And yes, I'm seeking a response. But I'm hoping that the entrenched position will be disrupted, and maybe actual discussion will start again.
But no, that absurd strawman isn't my position. I'm sorry if that's where I'm required to fall in your personal narrative.
I've been paying very close attention to and debating the topic of police corruption and brutality for a long time. There are generally a few camps and the comparisons between them are normally quite stark.
Camp 1: Those who believe there's something wrong with the police. Whether it's training, culture, the very concept of police, or whatever. And yes, most in this camp are not graceful in how they express it, and that's unfortunate.
Camp 2: Victim-blamers. Their response to every single case will be to analyze the suspect's behavior, and if there is the slightest twitch that isn't perfect, their final unmovable thought will be "The suspect shouldn't have done this. That's what you get when you ____ around police." Even the most blatant abuse of force cases will have these people. If the suspect so much as hesitates to ask what they're being arrested for, there will be people whose comment will be "Well yeah, maybe the officer shouldn't have fired 10 shots into them and then waited an hour to call for medical help while the victim was still alive and bleeding. But if they hadn't hesitated to ask the officer a question, instead of dropping straight to the ground, then the officer wouldn't have done that."
Camp 3: The police are human, too! "This whole thing makes me uncomfortable, so let's just move on, ok? I know that this really LOOKS like a case of cold-blooded murder, and it's the 10th one this month. And that several cases were closed this month where overwhelming evidence indicated that the officer lied egregiously to the courts and media, his buddies planted evidence, the officer has a deep history of racism that effected his policing, and his legal defense that he feared for his life was accepted on the basis that the suspect advanced on the officer half a step while turning around to face him. But you're not a police officer, so you can't judge what it's like for them to face so much stress and danger every day, and you can't let cases like these, even though they're alarmingly common and always receive the support of fellow officers, color your perception of the whole police force."
And let me just throw this out there about the argument that law enforcement is dangerous work, and therefor police are justified in being fearful.
When law enforcement makes it onto this list, I will accept that argument. As far as I'm aware, it's never been on that list.
Furthermore, the fact that he survived is an outlier, people surviving being shot in the leg, head, torso or shoulder does not change the outcome of shooting someone in the leg, head, torso or shoulder - they're going to die, unless they're lucky, or perhaps they get to a hospital in time.
Ok, for the most part I agree with your statements about the use of guns, LW. But I have to correct you on this one. I've read multiple times that survival rates for gunshot wounds are actually pretty high. Something like 2/3rds. I know you won't accept this without some citation, so
here's a quick one. Top result if you google "gunshot survival rates".
What does this mean for us? In my opinion, it means that when police decide to shoot, that they aren't automatically justified in unloading their clip as quick as they can. If they're actually in a gunfight, then sure. But if it was just a reaction to some aggressive motion or an unknown like reaching into a pocket or something, then rapid fire is not justified and shooting should cease as soon as the suspect stops acting threateningly. In all these stupid cases where the officer misread of suspect's actions and there was zero threat, this would ideally mean the suspect only gets shot once or twice. And once the suspect has been shot, they should stop treating them as if they're already dead. Almost every case I've seen has police officers not even checking the victim's wounds and placing a higher priority on handcuffing the incapacitated suspect and putting up tape than calling for medical attention.
There was one case some years ago, I believe I talked about it here, where a mentally ill teenager was shot and killed in front of his family. The kid was still alive, begging and bleeding on their living room floor. And the officer didn't tend to him whatsoever. Didn't summon medical assistance for a very long time. And refused to allow the family anywhere near him. Other officers showed up and blocked off the area outside, while the officer who did the shooting stayed inside and literally guarded over the kid as he died, forcing the family to watch helplessly. IIRC, it was about 2 hours before the kid received medical attention, and then it was too late. Later on, the father supposedly dug up that it was official department policy to refuse medical treatment to a severely wounded suspect, basically because it's easier to defend the case in court when the victim is dead.