... "The media narrative is that police shoot people, mostly minorities, without justification.
The question of who shoots the police is one that the larger society is generally afraid to ask.
... For the defund the police crowd and the progressive minions of distributive and restorative justice,
it would undermine an empowering narrative that has enabled them to shackle the police while letting criminals run free without bail and being rewarded with pleas to lower offenses.
For as long as the police and the “system” can be viewed as victimizing minorities, these minorities can be viewed as victims and not criminals.
The data on who kills police are tracked by the FBI in its Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted program (LEOK).
Year to year aggregations appear difficult to obtain, and the data I found are from 1980 to 2013, as compiled from LEOK by the Washington Post.
During this period, there were 2,269 officers killed in what is described as felonious incidents, which are deaths in the line of duty occurring from criminal acts.
There were 2,896 offenders.
Of the people who killed police,
52% were white and
41% were black.
The Post article concluded from this that whites were more likely to kill police than are blacks.
... Consider that whites were approximately 70% of the population during this period while blacks were approximately 12%.
White people were 18 percentage points less likely to kill a police officer than their distribution in the population
while black people were 29 percentage points more likely to kill a police officer than their distribution in the population.
... black people were almost 2.5 times more likely to kill a police officer than would be expected from their distribution in the population.
Police officers are not ignorant of who kills them.
Police funerals are attended by officers from departments across state lines and police are well acquainted with officers being memorialized.
Moreover, it is not white supremacists calling for killing cops.
“Off the pigs,” goes back to the Black Panther days of the 1960s.
In 2015, protesters in St. Paul, Minnesota were holding a Black Lives Matter banner and chanting, “Pigs in a blanket, fry ‘em like bacon.”
... In the wake of Minneapolis police officer Kim Porter shooting Duante Wright, one protester carried a pig’s head on a spike.
None of his fellow protesters found this obscene.
If that message wasn’t clear, the firebombing of a police union hall in Portland and the rioters in Washington, D.C. chanting “burn the precinct to the ground,” should have clarified it.
... when it comes to the police, the tragic behavior of some police is interpreted as representing all police.
Like lynchings in the Jim Crow South,
if one police officer is at fault, then all are not only equally culpable but also legitimate targets of revenge.
How else does one explain the assassinations of police sitting in patrol cars hundreds of miles from the scene of any protest?
So, if you’re a cop and you encounter a black person, your radar is going to start buzzing in a way that it won’t if you encounter a white person.
According to Office of Juvenile Justice (OJJDP for 2019) statistics for all ages,
blacks are responsible for 37% of all violent crimes,
60% of all murders,
53% of all burglaries, and
42% of all illegal weapons possessions,
even though they are about 12% of the population.
Contrast that with Asians who are six percent of the population and 1.6 percent of the crime rate.
Moreover, Asians have a 5% higher poverty rate than blacks.
Obviously, the causes of criminal behavior are complex ...
But cops on the street are not there to deal with root causes.
Their perceptions of any situation are based on not only on individual experience but the shared experiences of other officers.
Consequently, cops, like the rest of us, make judgments honed from experience and perceptions of how society works.
To expect anything else is to expect police not to be human beings.
Bromides about professionalism and training pale in comparison to gut instincts about survival.
If you stop someone whose demographic characteristics suggest a disproportionate involvement in criminal activities and illegal weapons possession, as well as a likelihood of killing you, your mindset is going to be influenced by that perception.
In a world where we have been made increasingly sensitive to identity and identity issues, how could it be otherwise?
... The conflict between minority communities and the police is untenable and unacceptable.
Police need to be made aware of policing bias, and minority communities need to be made aware that vilifying the police, resisting arrest, and killing officers will enhance the likelihood of tragedies on both sides."
Our nation became a circus with Covid in 2020. The news media became the public relations firm of a government that decides what you don't need to know, and how to slant what you do need to know. Blog motto: "Is that true, or did you read it in the New York Times?" ... “Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly, and applying the wrong remedies.” ... Groucho Marx
Saturday, January 15, 2022
Blacks are 12% of the population, but commit 60% of all murders -- Who kills the police?, by Professor Abraham H. Miller
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