Could more stringent police procedures lead to incentives to resist arrest?

martybegan

Diamond Member
Apr 5, 2010
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Just a theoretical question here. With spates of new police "reforms" coming out, with police procedures for subduing resisting people more than likely being more tightly defined, does this create an incentive for someone to resist in such a way as to put a police officer into a position where they may accidentally perform an "illegal" maneuver, or be forced into using it to save their own life?
 
Just a theoretical question here. With spates of new police "reforms" coming out, with police procedures for subduing resisting people more than likely being more tightly defined, does this create an incentive for someone to resist in such a way as to put a police officer into a position where they may accidentally perform an "illegal" maneuver, or be forced into using it to save their own life?
WELL MARTY, you already know the answer.

OF COURSE IT DOES. Now, every time a black is confronted for ANYTHING, criminal, deserving, or innocent, they are going to throw up a big shitstorm crying RACIST, PREJUDICE, BRUTALITY, and blacks will be HANDS OFF, topically, socially, politically, legally, cops will be blamed for everything, white privilege for the rest, and the result will be a

MASSIVE UPTICK IN CRIME.

During a pandemic and economic collapse.

Nice.
 

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