I think we do need to credit some people with having a sensible grasp of things though.
I went into London at the weekend. Accidentally found myself on The Mall and the Queens birthday celebrations were on. I must have had 4 interactions with Police. Every single one of them was great. There is zero hierarchy when dealing with our Police on neutral terms. There is an absolute culture of serving the public.
The American model is overwhelmingly 'Protect and Serve'. Officers are entirely different. It's as though they have a constant part of them that's thinking 'Protect'. A pervading sense that danger is afoot. It's very fluffy to say, but you can feel it.
Europeans, and English specifically, will never reconcile the nature of American Police. That attitude of Comply.... COMPLY... It's a real thing. When we see that dynamic on film, routinely, we're not cherry picking. Plenty of us travel there and can instantly draw a line between our own soft experience, dialled up to 10, with a bad decision thrown in, all of a sudden there's a gun out and we're a twitch away from a gunshot.
I don't know what I'm saying, but I'm so glad that we have the standard of policing that we do.
Couldn't agree more, cultures are complete chalk and cheese, fortunately we can look at the UK model and be very proud of it.
However, do you think if everyone in the U.K. could buy a gun with limited hassle we would enjoy the same convivial existence? If guns were so commonplace, that in some places you can conceal carry? If historically guns featured in so many more incidents due to their availability. Fatality rates so much higher. Checks seemingly so slack?
Over here you can have a shotgun, a handgun and a very few other things, you have to go to considerable effort and time to get one, anyone with a conviction equating to over 3 years sentence will never have one, anyone with less than a 3 year sentence won't be allowed one for 8 years from date of conviction, if they are eventually allowed one. Gun incidents are comparatively so rare.
Danger is literally, much more prevalent. Or at least the risk, and that has to form some part of an officers risk assessment. By no means will I defend murder or manslaughter when full facts have proven a limited risk or a poor decision, by the same token I will extend a certain amount of grace to the situations and not leap to conclusions.
Culturally Americans are just so different, to compare their policing to ours is largely useless I think. Fair enough ours could be aspirational but the environment that dictates how you police is totally different.
752 homocides in Chicago in 2016. 2 a day. In Chicago they reduced their stop and searches by 80% due to pressure over unlawful killings and racial profiling etc. I may be wrong but i think the homocide rate doubled in one year.
Damned if you do, damned if you don't.
None of its intended as an excuse but I think at the least until full facts are available it merits tempering the response.