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[return to "George Floyd Protest – police brutality videos on Twitter"]
1. dtagam+4[view] [source] 2020-06-15 00:13:43
>>dtagam+(OP)
I know politics isn't the usual HN topic, but I think this goes beyond politics at this point. Until I saw this list, I had no idea how out of control this situation has gotten here.

I'm saddened for my country and hope that this can be a turning point for all of us.

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2. buffer+f7[view] [source] 2020-06-15 01:42:28
>>dtagam+4
Is it out of control though? The police has 700K members in the US. Millions of daily interactions with people of all kinds. All you could find is 400 cases from ALL the years. And I guess the claim is brutality wasn't justified in every single case. In reality there are not 400 cases on that list, and in many cases the violence was justified.

I'm not saying the police doesn't do wrong, they absolutely do. We have examples of rapes, unjustified murders and beatings, entrapment. They are extremely rare. I think last year the police in the US killed 9 unarmed black men and 21 unarmed white men.

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3. danShu+Uk[view] [source] 2020-06-15 04:50:18
>>buffer+f7
> All you could find is 400 cases from ALL the years.

These aren't from all the years, they're from approximately May 26th of this year. It's 400 cases in the last 3-4 weeks.

That is a startlingly high number, made worse once you actually start digging into the individual incidents, because you realize they're not just isolated. A lot of these videos aren't, "a single police officer does something shifty", they're, "an entire police unit starts firing tear gas at protestors who are kneeling on the ground." And then you start to read the responses from police unions, some of which outright lie about the incidents or contradict the videos. This isn't a problem with individual officers, it's a problem with high-level commanders and police union leaders -- it's a problem that spans entire units.

I personally went through about 200 incidents for a separate project I was working on, some more in-depth than others. I think people are looking at these lists and thinking, "oh sure, but if you zoom in and examine each incident, it gets better." It really doesn't. It didn't take me long to get accustomed to seeing people tear-gassed, those videos don't even make me blink now. But even with that, I was regularly shocked while I was combing through videos with incidents that I wasn't prepared for.

"Tear gas, tear gas, tear gas, holy heck that police officer just body slammed a protestor! Tear gas, tear gas, holy crap they just punched a reporter in the face!"

And again, 4 weeks. Not years. I would challenge anyone who's saying that these are extremely rare or over-dramatized to sit down and devote an evening to just watching the videos in series. It weighs on you. And it quickly becomes obvious that these are not individual rogue officers, these are police units operating in an environment where they know they will not face consequences for hurting protestors.

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4. vegai_+6G[view] [source] 2020-06-15 08:42:30
>>danShu+Uk
>These aren't from all the years, they're from approximately May 26th of this year. It's 400 cases in the last 3-4 weeks.

But... aren't there riots everywhere right now? This isn't exactly a normal situation.

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5. ss3000+zI[view] [source] 2020-06-15 09:10:03
>>vegai_+6G
What does the existence of riots have anything to do with these instances of police brutality on _peaceful_ protestors?
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6. vegai_+VL[view] [source] 2020-06-15 09:48:36
>>ss3000+zI
Everything is connected to everything. If you have riots everywhere then people, including police, are on the edge.

Also, are you suggesting that the riots are peaceful?

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7. UncleM+3m1[view] [source] 2020-06-15 14:41:29
>>vegai_+VL
How come the police get to be on edge but not the people? You’d probably be on edge too after centuries of oppression in every aspect of society.
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