• @MeaanBeaan
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      511 months ago

      Their justification for it is such an open and obvious lie too. He might get bored and quit? Because he’s too smart? Makes zero sense. On the list of jobs one might do I don’t think being a cop would rank very high in the boredom rankings.

      • @michaelmrose
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        611 months ago

        Are you judging the profession based on television? The majority of cops sit somewhere for a long ass time waiting for something to happen then when it does its mostly something boring like hauling a drunk driver in, writing a speeding ticket, or responding to a domestic violence call to either play therapist or MAYBE haul the guy off for the night knowing that nothing will happen except a tearful reunion.

        On TV cops fire their guns twice in 30 minutes whereas in reality 68% NEVER fire a firearm in their career. There are almost a million officers in the US you have no doubt seen many in passing. Did it seem like on average they are out doing exciting things?

        • @fidodo
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          1011 months ago

          The bigger flaw in the logic is that since when do dumb people get bored less easily? If anything they get bored more easily because they’re not observing potentially interesting things in mundane scenarios.

          • @adrian783
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            -611 months ago

            do you not understand the concept of “overqualified”

            • @Maggoty
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              411 months ago

              No such thing when we’re talking about people making life and death decisions. In the military we were told the deadliest weapon is your brain. Once again Cops want to cosplay but not put the work in.

      • @Maggoty
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        311 months ago

        You’d be surprised. Unless you’re in very specific parts it’s a lot like the military. Boredom for 99 percent of the time and 1 percent “action”. Add on to that, the second they find out you’re a “smart guy” you’re going into an office job where you stare at spreadsheets all day.

    • @adrian783
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      -411 months ago

      this comes up again and again and it’s always only this one case. iq and being a good cop is not even directly related so I wish people would stop bringing this up as some sort of gotcha.

      • @michaelmrose
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        1011 months ago

        Actually IQ is correlated to problem solving which literally makes you a better everything just not obviously by itself. While this case is an extreme example of scaring off smart people there are lots of less direct ways you can discourage them from joining your ranks. Promoting idiots to positions of power and allowing them to erect dysfunctional systems that people l lower on the totem pole aren’t allowed to change, punishing anyone who snitches on their fellow cops misbehavior, and promoting your idiot cronies are all pretty effect and pervasively practiced.

        • @adrian783
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          11 months ago

          just because your IQ isn’t 125 doesn’t mean you’re an “idiot”.

          what are the less direct ways?

          • @michaelmrose
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            111 months ago

            what are the less direct ways?

            Did you need to re-read the post?

      • @Kbobabob
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        611 months ago

        Are you saying that you don’t have an issue with stupid/dumb cops?

        • @adrian783
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          011 months ago

          I don’t, I have a problem with bad cops.