• @dumpsterlid
    link
    English
    477 months ago

    They have to put the shooting range used for the final test underground not because an outdoor shooting range is infeasible for most police departments but rather because there are a lot less oak trees and thus less acorns and it hugely reduces the chance of trainees and officers randomly panicking and shooting each other.

    You can laugh at this policy (how dare you laugh at our hero’s in blue!) but the reduction in accidental gun violence from police in training has been remarkable and police departments are considering trying to do traffic stops in similar underground facilities to reduce the risk to patrol officers actually out on the job.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    417 months ago

    [Meme transcription: 3 orangutans sitting on an interview couch. One asks, “Where acorn?”]

    • StametsOP
      link
      117 months ago

      Okay I feel like I’m missing a recent news story

        • StametsOP
          link
          57 months ago

          I can’t even come up with some smart ass response to this. I’m just so tired of useless incompetent pieces of shit not only getting these positions but also whining about being shot.

          There should be some double jeopardy at this point or something where if a cop says that you shot at him and had a gun, and they fire back at you, you should be able to obliterate their kneecaps at the very least.

          • @WaffleDong
            link
            77 months ago

            They pointed a gun at a guy that lit himself on fire in protest recently. Was a bullet gonna put the fire out? If all you know is a hammer everything looks like a nail

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        127 months ago

        Cop gets spooked by a falling acorn, the cop and his partner unload their weapons at the handcuffed man in the backseat of the cops car, somehow not wounding him.

  • HEXN3T
    link
    fedilink
    177 months ago

    “Horrible accuracy, but at least they all went inside the tar–oh.”

    • @UnderpantsWeevil
      link
      77 months ago

      This is totally unbelievable, as not a single bullet went through anyone’s dog.

  • @Z4rK
    link
    English
    137 months ago

    Ok I’m dumb, ELI5?

      • @Z4rK
        link
        English
        157 months ago

        Ah yeah that’s nowhere even close to registering where I live, luckily.

        • @troglodytis
          link
          37 months ago

          Luckily the police shoot every color there

    • SpicyAnt
      link
      fedilink
      27 months ago

      You are not alone. I spent two minutes trying to recognize a pattern made by the holes before scrolling down to the comments.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    13
    edit-2
    7 months ago

    This is funny, and police do murder innocent dark skin ethnicities at a much higher rate, but that doesn’t just erase the other 7/10ths 5/10ths of executions which are white people.

    Edit: white to black was a 7:3 ratio but it’s more like 5/10ths when you include other demographics.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        37 months ago

        Yes I agree with you 100%, I’ve never on any occasion argued against any of that.

        Actually, the data has been largely unreliable since at least 2015, as James Comey while he was head of the FBI puts it: “I think it’s embarrassing for those of us in government who care deeply about these issues, especially the use of force by law enforcement, that we can’t have an informed discussion because we don’t have data. People have data about who went to a movie last weekend or how many books were sold or how many cases of the flu walked into an emergency room, and I cannot tell you how many people were shot by police in the United States last month, last year, or anything about the demographics, and that’s a very bad place to be.” All US Federal data on police use of force is self-reported since forever.

        For about 2 decades, largely one of the biggest sources for data was Philip M. Stinson, who tracked nationwide shootings with Google Alerts. There was also another great study on the matter by PNAS called “Risk of being Killed by Police in the United States by Age, Race-ethnicity, and Sex”.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      -6
      edit-2
      7 months ago

      Thats some right wing talking point. It’s valid that we overfocus on the race issue. Though you also have to consider the amount of white people available for exexution vs black people. Unfortunately using bad statistics only gets those race people to focus on race more rather than the OP stats cops have in general. We about to be downvoted into oblivion though. This is Lemmy! You cant say things like that in the echo chamber :,)

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        17
        edit-2
        7 months ago

        Are you saying my talking point is right wing? Because I see it the opposite way. I see that sweeping victims under the rug that right wing people can associate and potentially empathize with makes it a partisan issue when instead we should all be united against police brutality and unjust murders of all our peoples. It could be any of us, at any moment, without any consequence for them.

        Making police out to be an Anti-Black figure is in itself a conservative political philosophy that too many right-wingers would support.

        • @FabledAepitaph
          link
          67 months ago

          That guy just wants to take turns around the little children’s table of murdered-people’s-recognition and say that one ethnicity deserves more sympathy than another. Apparently, he’s saying that one particular group deserves more time with the microphone than another.

          In reality, it’s all of us who are being murdered and race is just a distraction. The race battle is alive and well even among all of us who are on the same side, which is ridiculous.

          That’s them winning, because every ounce of effort we blow arguing who deserves more sympathy today is an ounce of effort not directed toward the police.

          Besides, it’s not even race; its economic class that matters. Who has any numbers documenting rich people who were shot with pencils in their hands because they looked like guns?

          It doesn’t exist.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          17 months ago

          Yes, I would agree. But this is lemmy. And I hope I’m wrong about people’s reaction here. I’m speaking for people who I do not support, and who’s ideas don’t make logical sense to me, so i will shut up now and let those people make their questionable points instead.

      • @UnderpantsWeevil
        link
        37 months ago

        It’s valid that we overfocus on the race issue.

        The eternal struggle in American politics is whether to persecute black people because they are largely poor, or to persecute poor people because so many of them are black.

        Unfortunately using bad statistics only gets those race people to focus on race

        The efforts by both historical and modern American leadership to impose a formal caste system on a melting pot of ethnicity and migrating communities has produced an enormous number of contradictory policies and practices.

        But one upshot is how you can focus in on a particular state or agency or subset of the criminal statistics, and get any kind of trend you want.

        You can then draw all sorts of conclusions - some of them pretty nakedly illogical and incoherent - and then build a media career around using these statistics to prove your fringe view to a gullible audience.

        I might say that the problem isn’t with “bad statistics” nearly so much as pure “bad faith”. Arguing for vicious, sadistic, and largely ineffectual policies by pointing to a singular cohort in a sliver of the overall data set and insisting we need to do full-on Gestapo-esque policing if anyone is to sleep soundly ever again.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    107 months ago

    I thought this kind of humor wasn’t allowed on Lemmy…

    Good to see something offensive for once, I mean it.

    • @qwrty
      link
      English
      1
      edit-2
      7 months ago

      It looks like the target was held up to a plaster wall for clarity.

      Edit: nope I’m stupid, it’s a styrofoam target, so it was probably a target for airsoft

  • @blahsay
    link
    -27 months ago

    😂. I’ve seen the stats and surprisingly there’s no racial bias shown in police shootings. Apparently cops will blow you away regardless of race which is rather sweet

        • @cosmicrookie
          link
          3
          edit-2
          7 months ago

          Well… I’m not gonna lie. I too am lazy and had hopped that you could point me to the controversial data that support your comment.

          I did a quick search though and the only convdincing result that I could find is, that its hard to tell

          https://www.science.org/content/article/study-claims-white-police-no-more-likely-shoot-minorities-draws-fire

          So if don’t mind, can you please oblige me, where did you find the convincing proof that there is no racial bias in police brutality?

          • @blahsay
            link
            17 months ago

            Already updated it with a link. For bonus points I was sceptical of his data and methods but both myself and a professor I know checked and it’s solid work.

            Doesn’t stop people with a race related hate message from trying to discredit it but science don’t care 🤷

          • @blahsay
            link
            -17 months ago

            Neither of those statements indicate a racial disparity in police response by themselves.

            If you don’t understand why…perhaps read the study I posted and see how it’s done.

              • @blahsay
                link
                07 months ago

                Interesting though his main criticism of the paper is a bit ah…subjective (below). Seems more like he’s manipulating data for an outcome tbh.

                I had a look at the author and he seems to have based his career on race relations which makes me worried about his impartiality too.

                ‘The CPE report acknowledges three problems with measuring police force: measuring “excessive” force against all force, measuring differences in police use of force, and measuring force incidents as unchanging rather than constantly changing. Goff said Fryer neither acknowledges these concepts nor deals with them as problems.’