Meh... it's just a few bad apples </sarcasm>
The way it works is that there's an awful lot of bad cops, with an awful lot of good ones mixed in. The bad ones can do more than the good ones, and people always remember the bad ones because that's how peoples minds work. It's like customers. If a person gets good customer service, they'll tell one or two of their friends. They get bad customer service, they'll tell all their friends to avoid that place.
Excellently well-made point.
Most objectively beneficial police activity is nearly invisible to the wider public: apprehending and discouraging petty crime, investigating public and domestic disturbances, directing traffic and providing road safety etc, because these are the norm; these fit the institution's attributions.
When, however, something like this happens it's widely circulated because not only is it an act of violence, but an act of violence perpetrated by those on whom the very responsibility of preventing them lies.
Actually, no, it's a pretty shit point. Good cops can't exist in departments that have too many bad cops. It's impossible. They either become criminals themselves, start protecting criminals, or leave the police force. There is a reason for the saying about bad apples - the department either has the choice of forcing bad cops out, or becoming 100% bad cops (with some worse than others). Most departments make the second choice, not the first one (there
are some good departments in the US, and I don't mean to say there are, but it's not a case of an awful lot of good cops mixed in with an awful lot of bad cops, it's a case of bad departments corrupting every police officer that works with them and good departments forcing out their bad cops as soon as they are identified).
Conversely, police forces are then tempted to suppress the spread of the story, because it damages the image of the entire institution and undermines public trust, something that police are reliant upon in conducting their activity.
Their suppression damages their image and undermines public trust more than anything else they could do. If they really cared about their image, why wouldn't they just get rid of the bad cops? No, I'm not buying this - it doesn't make any sense. The police know what they need top do to maintain their image, and some police forces do it (which is why we don't hear about them). They also know what they need to do to prevent incidents like the police abuse listed here from happening, and some police forces do it, which is doubly why we don't hear about them.
The police forces where incidents like this happen are the ones that don't give a shit if things like this happen, because the most important thing is protecting police officers, not protecting the public. In light of that, their behavior - planting drugs, covering things up, destroying evidence, refusing to prosecture their own - makes perfect sense, a lot more sense than "trying to protect their image in the public mind".
If you want to be efficient, you have to unite peoples. Racism is used to divide Americain, from an external point of view that much is clear.
First a quick review of the cases in the first post show that whites are far from immune from police violence.
Second, racism is hard to prove, and it's pretty obvious that given the over-criminalisation of black youth in America, policemen will be instinctively more cautious around them.But if you replace the problem about abuse of power by the police, you'll get support from peoples that would not feel concerned about the racism problem and keep the support from liberals.
If you really want people to stop talking about racism,
why the fuck are you the one who keeps bringing it up?
Also, why should black people support the movement to stop police from abusing white people? Because if discussions of race aren't brought up, that's basically the most they can hope for, since that's what happens, well... every single time.
But fine, whatever, stop talking about race, since you're the one driving that discussion and shitting up the thread with it.