The only solution to police violence is to disarm the police. And so disarmed they must be.
Yeah, it's not proven that the "only solution" is that. In Australia we
have armed police, but police shootings are extremely rare. Which suggests it's more about the culture than what equipment the cop turns up with.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Police_firearm_use_by_country#AustraliaNote there was a high point of 10 people shot in Australia 1 year by police, and a low of 1 person shot (but that was only 2 years before the one with 10, so there's no real trend there), with the most common outcome being 3 people killed per year.
Also as for Virtz's assertion that police homicides aren't an issue, because they are lower than the total number of homicides. Well, let's consider the stats. there are 1000 shooting deaths by US police per year, out of a total homicide rate of about 15000, and about 2/3rds of all homicides are by firearm. So a full 10% of firearm homicides are by the police, contributing 0.5 deaths per 100,000 people out of the total US murder rate of ~ 5.0 deaths per 100,000 people. 0.5 deaths per 100,000 people is about average for the
total homicide rate of many European nations. So the American police kill about as many people as
all the murderers in a typical European nation, on a per-capita basis.
If you compare the total homicides vs police homicides in UK and Australia, you're looking at the police causing about 1% of homicide deaths, rather than something approaching 10% of homicide deaths caused by police in the USA. So the argument that we should look elsewhere for blame because you're "more likely" to be killed by someone who's not a cop doesn't really hold water. The police killing people is a big issue far below the point where they are responsible for 50% of all deaths.
Sure, other non-cop people kill more people than cops do, but that's a completely unrelated issue. You can't "pre-arrest" individual citizens. But the police are public servants. You definitely have the democratic right to prevent them from doing the same. Arguing that it's not a problem because it's "less" is like arguing that employees stealing stock is not an issue that should be focused on because customers steal more stock than employees do.