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Expand on that. What is a "military emphasis?" Could there be justifications or explanations for bigger guns or an appropriate time for an armored vehicle? What if "more shooting, less arresting" happens because alternatives to arrest are used for minor offenses, causing there to be more apparent use of force?Bigger guns, armoured vehicles,more shooting less arresting.
More of a military emphasis towards the job rather than a community policing one.
Not sure what you're referring to here?That phrase has bad connotations elsewhere in the world.
Expand on that. What is a "military emphasis?" Could there be justifications or explanations for bigger guns or an appropriate time for an armored vehicle? What if "more shooting, less arresting" happens because alternatives to arrest are used for minor offenses, causing there to be more apparent use of force?
A couple of years back we were in Peru. I would suggest it was virtually impossible to distinguish between police and military looking at their equipment. For us, seeing police jumping out of armored vehicles was something we are not at all used to.
Not sure what you're referring to here?
People have been throwing a word or complaint around a lot lately. "The militarization of the police."
OK... What do you mean? Can you define the word for me? What do you mean by "militarization?"
In a case like that, tactics and weapon use are seldom a primary emphasis of the training when US officers go somewhere. Instead, it's more often things like strategic approaches, policing styles, administrative practices... In short, the things that make US policing "work." Often -- the results are mixed, because a lot of what makes our methods "work" are cultural. You can't take a Bobby off the streets of London, and plop him in a US city, and expect him to be effective without significant changes in how he works, any more than the top cop out of the NYPD -- or my agency, for that matter -- could be dumped in London and succeed. (Assume that basic issues like knowing the streets, the laws, and the community are magically taken care of, in either case.)Just thinking about for example Western police officers as advisers, advising say a South American group of police officers with training and advise on any new weapons that may have been procured.
Amen.
Except MRAPS are NOT "i.e. Bearcats"....
Tanks on American Streets the things worth believing in
But I can see how the uninitiated can think so.
Such as? Yes, there are sufficiently extreme situations that a "militarized" response might be necessary. Granted, we're supposed to use martial law for that here in the US, and aside from the recent riots those extreme situations simply aren't happening.Could there be justifications or explanations for bigger guns or an appropriate time for an armored vehicle?
Again, alternatives like what?What if "more shooting, less arresting" happens because alternatives to arrest are used for minor offenses, causing there to be more apparent use of force?
Yes, SWAT essentially represents what the fear is about. Of course they need to employ such tactics and weapons to a degree because of what they're supposed to be used for. On the other hand, over the last twenty years we've gone from about 3000 SWAT deployments a year to over 80000 across the country, many of them pretty mind-bogglingly unnecessary.Anything SWAT related, and there's your 'militarization' phobia.