• PugJesus
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    10 months ago

    Yes, tell me more about how brave cops are. You know, the cops that, in the US, have no legal obligation to protect you, to know the law, or enforce the law.

    One might as well speak of brave taxi drivers for all the relevance bravery has to the job. A vocation with more injuries and fatalities than being a LEO, I must note.

    • PugJesus
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      10 months ago

      The worst part is, I’m far less anti-cop than most Lemmy users, probably. I’m convinced that there are a great many good cops and good departments, despite the decay of responsibility of the American police (and their often-unsavory origins as strikebreakers). I also believe that professional policing forces, while not technically vital, are an extremely useful service that should attract men of honor and be regarded as such.

      But repeating copaganda is not the way to empower the good cops out there. The way you empower good cops is by making more good cops - and you make more good cops by creating strong institutions of accountability and using them. Empowering cops without accountability is not a way to make good enforcers of the law - it’s a way to make thugs out of ordinary men.

        • @trashgirlfriend@lemmy.world
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          210 months ago

          Dream on, I guess.

          Policing has always been a profession focused on protecting capital and authority.

          Nothing short of absolutely scrapping the system of policing will do what you want.

          • @BlackSpasmodic@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            110 months ago

            While we’re at it, let’s scrap that system that uses cops to protect capital. Put the people at the top of that system on the bottom of the new one