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Thread: Man when i grew up in Mississippi i knew some crooked sheriff's but this dude from

  1. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by QuadrupleOption View Post
    From the article:

    "Most of my life, I didn't have a gun," Green said. "Every Black person should own a gun. Yes, I have an AR-15, and I'm ready to use it. Come to my door, and you'll know I have it."

    I would amend that to every person PERIOD should have a gun.

    I generally don't advocate violence against people, law enforcement especially, but if those dudes in Rankin County are out of control, eventually people will get sick of it and take matters into their own hands.

    Holding law enforcement to a higher standard is imperative to ensure safety for both sides. There are hundreds of thousands of residents and a LOT less deputies. They have to be considerate of their constituents while trying to enforce the law.

    Having said that, it could be a bunch of BS but I can't imagine how you can justify shooting a dude in the face after he's been handcuffed (assuming that is accurate).
    I 100% agree everyone should be armed. You 2nd guess how far you're willing to abuse someone of they can fight back.

    But regarding any sort of armed public rebellion? NOT happening. Why? Because even though "Cops should obey the law" isn't an opinion anyone disagrees with, there's a large amount of R voters who believe any accountability for cops will result in BLM mobs burning their house down and their cown will have San Francisco level petty crime. To some extent I get that reaction from the right, because there are left wingers who speak of all cops as racists, and who unironically say we should defund the police. Do we need more accountability for cops? 100% yes. They -quite literally- get away with murder as their departments "accidentally deleted the body cam footage" or "did an internal investigation and found no wrongdoing". DAs are scared of going after dirty cops because police unions can sink their reelection, and the cops themselves can ruin the DAs conviction record. But we still need cops in civil society

    But, in this current climate, there would be just as many "all cops are heros!" Civilians defending cops as there would be oppressed armed civilians seeking justice on the crooked cops. It's a shame this incredibly easy to agree upon issue (that we need cops, but they also need to follow the law) has been polarized to extremes.

  2. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by the_real_MSU_is_us View Post
    I 100% agree everyone should be armed. You 2nd guess how far you're willing to abuse someone of they can fight back.

    But regarding any sort of armed public rebellion? NOT happening. Why? Because even though "Cops should obey the law" isn't an opinion anyone disagrees with, there's a large amount of R voters who believe any accountability for cops will result in BLM mobs burning their house down and their cown will have San Francisco level petty crime. To some extent I get that reaction from the right, because there are left wingers who speak of all cops as racists, and who unironically say we should defund the police. Do we need more accountability for cops? 100% yes. They -quite literally- get away with murder as their departments "accidentally deleted the body cam footage" or "did an internal investigation and found no wrongdoing". DAs are scared of going after dirty cops because police unions can sink their reelection, and the cops themselves can ruin the DAs conviction record. But we still need cops in civil society

    But, in this current climate, there would be just as many "all cops are heros!" Civilians defending cops as there would be oppressed armed civilians seeking justice on the crooked cops. It's a shame this incredibly easy to agree upon issue (that we need cops, but they also need to follow the law) has been polarized to extremes.
    I think this is a by-product of the war on terror/gulf wars, but LE may have gotten a little too "militarized" over the last 20 years or so. When cops had a .38 caliber 6 shooter, I think they were more apt to use their experience to de-escalate a situation and not rush in like Rambo.

  3. #23
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    The criminals have better ammo than a .38 so LE has no choice.

  4. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pancho View Post
    The criminals have better ammo than a .38 so LE has no choice.
    I saw a video of cops serving a warrant for someone over traffic tickets, not anything violent. Instead of 2 cops knocking on a door, it was 15+ cops in camo, body armor, with ARs, all getting out of 2 APCS to circle the house. They looked like Seals in Iraq except for the "police" on their chests. There was a grandma, mom, and a couple kids inside who had guns pointed at them when they opened the front door.

    Is swat warranted? Sometimes, yeah. Should cops be outgunned? Never. But do they use excessive force just because they have it? Honestly, sometimes yeah. Fact is a lot of cops think of themselves as cool special forces type badasses and they look for opportunities to behave that way when often all they need to do is give the civilian in question an opportunity to work with them.

    My issue isn't that they have "military" equipment, but that they behave like they're "military", and the rest of us are potential insurgents they need to be suspicious of.

  5. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pancho View Post
    The criminals have better ammo than a .38 so LE has no choice.
    Uh, most calibers that are in wide use today were pretty much available 50 years ago. There was a different mindset in policing. I know a retired cop who always says he'd rather work with a lazy partner than an over-eager partner.

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    I will have to agree on your point. I have several friends in this state who are officers and also on swat and although they feel led to do this type work, they do fear for their lives due to the total lack of respect for humanity that most of the drugged up perps display.

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    Nm
    Last edited by Maroonthirteen; 07-23-2023 at 07:36 AM.

  8. #28
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pancho View Post
    The criminals have better ammo than a .38 so LE has no choice.
    This is true. People maybe had bolt action hunting rifles, shotguns or a revolver. We have way more automatic pistols and rifles on the streets than we did back decades ago. Also people are much quicker to use their weapons and blame the police. The odds of police being shot at traffic stops and domestic calls are far far greater today.

    Just walk into any gun store now a days. I go to a popular gun store in Desoto County occasionally. The long guns and carbine (of all calibers)inventory they had in there.... it made me feel like buying a pistol was pointless.
    Last edited by Maroonthirteen; 07-23-2023 at 07:28 AM.

  9. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by Maroonthirteen View Post
    This is true. People maybe had bolt action hunting rifles, shotguns or a revolver. We have way more automatic pistols and rifles on the streets than we did back decades ago. Also people are much quicker to use their weapons and blame the police. The odds of police being shot at traffic stops and domestic calls are far far greater today.

    Just walk into any gun store now a days. I go to a popular gun store in Desoto County occasionally. The long guns and carbine (of aol calibers)inventory they had in there.... it made me feel like buying a pistol was pointless.
    Fun fact: being a police officer is actually the 22nd most dangerous career field after things like being a garbage man, roofer, traffic cop, USP delivery driver, etc. (https://www.ishn.com/articles/112748...-united-states)

    FBI places it as the 18th most dangerous job. (https://usafacts.org/articles/how-ma...-line-of-duty/)

    The number of people shot to death by police has been steadily increasing (https://www.statista.com/statistics/...olice-by-race/) despight the public not getting more violent -based on homicide data at least (https://ucr.fbi.gov/crime-in-the-u.s...ta-table-8.xls).

    Police are more than 20x as likely to shoot someone to death as they are to be killed themselves, and that rate has been climbing for years. About 16% of people shot and killed by police were unarmed (https://www.bmj.com/company/newsroom...-as-in-whites/) which comes to roughly 160 a year.... which is 3x the number of cops killed by gunfire.

    if you have different stats please share. I'm not a liberal and I don't trust a lot of stats I see because our media is awful. However, when it comes to policing I truly can't even find stats that make it seem like cops are actually justified in "fearing for their life", or that they're always exercising enough caution before pulling the trigger. I also see no evidence that things are "getting worse for cops" over a 5, 10, 30+ year timeperiod.

    If a roofer is scared of heights and is violent with others due to the stress of "fearing for his life", we say "sorry, but you should probably get a different job". But cops? Despight their cob being significantly safer than the roofers, we DO allow the cop to be violent as a 1st response due to that fear. And we call then heros for doing it too. I'm saying we need to hold our cops to a higher standard. They get away with behaviors we'd never allow from those working in the ACTUAL dangerous professions. UPS drivers are more likely to die than cops. But if a UPS driver pulled a gun and shot another driver because "I feared they were going to swerve into me" we'd say they should go to prison. When a cop shoots someone unarmed, "he made a motion that seemed like he might be going for a gun" is accepted as valid reason. It's ridiculous

  10. #30
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    I know bad roofers, doctors, teachers and the list goes on and on. I wonder how many of the unarmed folks who were shot by police simply wouldn't comply and kept their hands in their pockets etc? And another thing, out of all these listed professions, law enforcement pays the least so maybe we get what we pay for.

  11. #31
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pancho View Post
    I know bad roofers, doctors, teachers and the list goes on and on. I wonder how many of the unarmed folks who were shot by police simply wouldn't comply and kept their hands in their pockets etc? And another thing, out of all these listed professions, law enforcement pays the least so maybe we get what we pay for.
    Many of the more dangerous professions pay less than being a cop. Roofing, for example, per Google pay 29k-44k, while median police incomes in my state (TN) is 52k. It varies by state but "road construction worker", "delivery truck driver", "garbage man" etc are not exactly blowing cops out of the water on income. BUT, of we can't attract quality cops due to the pay, the solution is to INCREASE THE PAY, not accept awful policing. It's literally the most important public service in our society

    As far as "bad Drs", when a Dr makes a mistake, it's investigated and they could loose their license. Same for lawyers and teachers actually. When a cop makes a mistake, it's the cops themselves who would control the investigation, the police union would fight any discipline (assuming the Chief even wanted to go that route) and the cop can still be employed elsewhere because there's no licensing. He'll, even the people who CUT YOUR HAIR have more schooling and licensing and testing requirements than police do. The fact there are bad employees in every profession is not justification to have zero oversight or accountability or standards for police.

    Moreover, "he kept his hands in his pockets after I said to take them out" is not justification for a execution. Disobeying the order should be an extra charge with an appropriate punishment and a judge/Jury can review the facts of the case (ideally captured by body cam). The cop should ONLY use lethal force when a life is threatened. If they can't handle that, they shouldn't be a cop. Again, statistically they aren't actually under much of a threat.

    Civilians have the right to bear arms. Pockets on clothing is legal. If a cop can't handle the level of hypothetical threat that exists in this world, they shouldn't be a cop.

  12. #32
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    I'd still very strongly suggest to be law abiding as most of us are. Folks say things happen for a reason and most of the time that reason is their own stupidity or simply making a decision to be a law breaker. I respect your opinion but that split second should always go in the officer's favor until proven otherwise. Folks are some mighty strong drugs these days and are capable of almost anything.

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    One would have to take in consideration the sources involved in this article. Most supermarket check out aisle "gossip rags" have higher ratings for accuracy and truth.
    ( I am not defending anybody or repudiating anybody but I have learned to be very cautious of the the sources mentioned or cited )

  14. #34
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pancho View Post
    I'd still very strongly suggest to be law abiding as most of us are. Folks say things happen for a reason and most of the time that reason is their own stupidity or simply making a decision to be a law breaker. I respect your opinion but that split second should always go in the officer's favor until proven otherwise. Folks are some mighty strong drugs these days and are capable of almost anything.
    I agree with almost everything, the question is about that "split second decision". If a cop yells "hands up!" and the person yanks a hand out of a hoodie pocket and the cop thinks there's a gun and shoots, then OK I can understand the cop even if the guy was only holding his phone. BUT, if you yell "hands up!" and the guy just stares at you, there isn't enough credible threat there to shoot. "But what if he had a gun in there, and what if he drew it!, well that applies to every civilian ever- we all could have a gun somewhere hidden and an intent to shoot the cop. If we allow them shooting people because of what that civilian MIGHT do -and not what it reasonably appears they ARE doing- then they can dust anyone ever and still keep their job. Again, why can't UPS drivers or road construction workers just start shooting drivers because they "could swerve into me!"? It's the same logic.

    Like civilians have the right to self defense too. If someone pulls a gun on you, you can shoot them. but you can't shoot people because they had hands in their pockets and you thought they MIGHT want to harm you, you'll go to jail 9/10 times. Why should we expect us civilians to have better trigger discipline than cops? If anything, it's the opposite.

  15. #35
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    From this article...
    Officer deaths increased by 29% in 2021. Felonious killings were the top cause of death for law enforcement officers on duty, reaching a 25-year high in 2021, with 73 deaths. The majority of killings were committed using a firearm, which is consistent for the last 25 years of data.

    https://usafacts.org/articles/how-ma...-line-of-duty/

    It's interesting to learn you are more likely to be killed logging and picking up garbage. However I can't imagine a logger or garbage man gets cussed out and threatened while doing their jobs.

  16. #36
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    That's one of the links I posted, yes. Year to year stats can fluctuate quite a bit, better to use 3-5 year averages to get the real trend, and then look at an even longer graph to see how the situation is today compared to a long time ago.

    I've never denied cops get shot, or that there's NO risk in theor job. I've said they shouldn't get to freak out, panic, and get off because "well my job is dangerous I'm under a lot of stress" when we don't let the people working even more dangerous jobs use that same excuse to defend bad behavior.

    If a civilian has to face a credible threat before we can use our 2nd ammendment rights and defend ourselves, why don't cops? The people who voluntarily took on a job that may have life or death situation, that are trained and probably wearing body armor should be able to evaluate situations at a higher level than run of the mill civilians. But for some reason we flip the standard

    This discussion has devolved into the very narrow window of police use of guns. Overall, that's not our biggest issue with policing. It's the fact they can solicit bribes, sexual favors, use excessive force, etc and the only people who can investigate themselves... are themselves. Power corrupts, and there needs to be a check on police that goes beyond their own department. Even CEOs have to answer to the Board. Evem the President can be impeached and removed from power. Cops need it too

  17. #37
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    Quote Originally Posted by Maroonthirteen View Post
    This is true. People maybe had bolt action hunting rifles, shotguns or a revolver. We have way more automatic pistols and rifles on the streets than we did back decades ago. Also people are much quicker to use their weapons and blame the police. The odds of police being shot at traffic stops and domestic calls are far far greater today.

    Just walk into any gun store now a days. I go to a popular gun store in Desoto County occasionally. The long guns and carbine (of all calibers)inventory they had in there.... it made me feel like buying a pistol was pointless.
    There are very, very, very few automatic weapons of any kind on the street. I'm 60 and semi-autos have been around and popular long before my time. The military sidearm in WW2 was a semi-automatic 1911 chambered in .45 APC, still one of the most powerful handgun rounds to this today. The most common rifle used in the Pacific theater was the M1 carbine with a 30-round mag. It's not the weapons that have changed as much as it is the good guys and bad guys.

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    Quote Originally Posted by shoeless joe View Post
    I live in clay county. Don?t know the sheriff other than seeing him around. Can?t defend or confirm anything in the article. What I will say is The NY Times also wrote an article about a val/sal debacle in West Point a few years ago and it was 100% a racially based and biased hit piece where they made no mention of what actually caused the confusion and instead turned it into a rich white vs poor black issue, which couldn?t have been farther from the truth. So it will take much more than an article from them to make me come to a conclusion about anything.
    I?m from Clay County and can confirm that The NY Times article on the WPHS val/sal contained no facts. They talked to one side and printed everything they said as fact even though everything they said was false. They didn?t want facts. They wanted a story painting Mississippi as racist.

    ESPN did the exact same thing. They came in to do a segment on WPHS football. By the time it was over it was a black vs white story pitting the players at WPHS against the players at Oak Hill Academy. It was a huge injustice to WPHS as it failed to highlight the accomplishments of WPHS while acting like the only difference in the two teams was skin color. There may have been one player at OHA that would have started at WPHS. If you hear the national media is coming in hide your wife and kids.

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    Police pay is definitely a major problem. Same with teachers pay. I definitely think if their pay increased we would get better quality. At the same time, penalties for police doing wrongful things should always be to the max of the law with no exceptions. This would limit corruption in departments and give them a more wealthy life. I’m not saying this will fully resolve the problem, but it will certainly help.

  20. #40
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    Quote Originally Posted by the_real_MSU_is_us View Post
    Fun fact: being a police officer is actually the 22nd most dangerous career field after things like being a garbage man, roofer, traffic cop, USP delivery driver, etc. (https://www.ishn.com/articles/112748...-united-states)

    FBI places it as the 18th most dangerous job. (https://usafacts.org/articles/how-ma...-line-of-duty/)

    The number of people shot to death by police has been steadily increasing (https://www.statista.com/statistics/...olice-by-race/) despight the public not getting more violent -based on homicide data at least (https://ucr.fbi.gov/crime-in-the-u.s...ta-table-8.xls).

    Police are more than 20x as likely to shoot someone to death as they are to be killed themselves, and that rate has been climbing for years. About 16% of people shot and killed by police were unarmed (https://www.bmj.com/company/newsroom...-as-in-whites/) which comes to roughly 160 a year.... which is 3x the number of cops killed by gunfire.

    if you have different stats please share. I'm not a liberal and I don't trust a lot of stats I see because our media is awful. However, when it comes to policing I truly can't even find stats that make it seem like cops are actually justified in "fearing for their life", or that they're always exercising enough caution before pulling the trigger. I also see no evidence that things are "getting worse for cops" over a 5, 10, 30+ year timeperiod.

    If a roofer is scared of heights and is violent with others due to the stress of "fearing for his life", we say "sorry, but you should probably get a different job". But cops? Despight their cob being significantly safer than the roofers, we DO allow the cop to be violent as a 1st response due to that fear. And we call then heros for doing it too. I'm saying we need to hold our cops to a higher standard. They get away with behaviors we'd never allow from those working in the ACTUAL dangerous professions. UPS drivers are more likely to die than cops. But if a UPS driver pulled a gun and shot another driver because "I feared they were going to swerve into me" we'd say they should go to prison. When a cop shoots someone unarmed, "he made a motion that seemed like he might be going for a gun" is accepted as valid reason. It's ridiculous
    Logging, roofing, picking up garbage etc. aren't more dangerous than being a cop. Cops are just better trained at navigating the danger. They treat every single thing they do as a life and death situation, because for all they know, it is. Just because more people get hurt or killed doing something doesn't mean it's more dangerous. Think about all the rigorous training police go through, and then consider the fact that a lot of people in those positions mentioned never get training (or property safety equipment) at all. I can start a roofing company or a garbage pick up service today. I can literally hire 4 derelicts for $15/hr and have them working tomorrow. It's not a 1 to 1 comparison.

    Everything a cop does is dangerous. Most of their time is spent dealing with criminals or unstable people, or simply patrolling high crime areas. Simple traffic stops end lives all the time. They don't know who may be in the vehicle, if they have a warrant, or any other reason they may be scared enough to do something stupid. Then, even if it's a little old lady, there are idiot drivers who can kill or maim them because they are too important to move over a lane or even look up from their phone. Police are trained like the military. They are always looking for who or what can kill them. They survive a lot of situations most of us wouldn't simply because they are trained to. Part of that training is to deal with any perceived threat immediately. Stats about killing "unarmed civilians" are useful to people who want to spin a narrative. Like the Michael Brown story. He was technically unarmed, but he was fighting an officer for his gun and got shot. Police don't go out each morning looking for someone to kill that day. Since I take it you don't have family in the profession, talk to any of them and they'll tell you - they all pray they never have to discharge their weapon. But, their main goal each day is to get home to their family, as it should be. It's a hard way to live. I've never done it, but I have family who has. I will never disparage them, because I haven't experienced what they experience.

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