Borrowed Time said:
Which is exactly why I said what I said in my edit, concerning the assumptions. I wanted to know why people feel the way that they do. I can understand where you're coming from as well, seeing from your experiences with the few you've run in with.
The issues with the 12-15 year old kids sounds like a parenting problem, not a police problem. Quite often it's actually better for a child to be incarcerated for their own safety from their parents in that kind of a situation. Although, i don't have all the information so I can only say that with a grain of salt.
The situation with the domestic abuse falls on the victim to actually press charges against the perpetrator. If they refuse to give the individual another chance, and instead press charges against them for assault, then something will be done.
The situation with being harassed for being black I can completely understand being outraged for that. Unfortunately, as was stated before in this post, police are humans. Many humans have bigoted points of view. I'm sure there are plenty of individuals who aren't police who are bigoted in your area. The values of the police tend to follow the demographics of the region. It would be beyond wonderful if this wasn't the case and that they could be 100% ethical 100% of the time, but that's not the case. So yes, I agree that the racist harassment is completely in the wrong.
That does not mean, though, that most police officers join the force to feed a desire for power and control.
I empathise with you about the long hours. I regularly work graveyard shifts of 8-12 hours and am regularly up 24-32 hours myself (such as today). It can be a real pain in the ass.
These kids were not arrested for their own safety. They were whisked off the street, slammed into walls, cars, you name it, and then had to stay in a cell until their parents sobered up and collected them, often refusing to believe that their own child had been doing absolutely nothing wrong.
To be fair, they had a record of delinquency. Underage drinking, possession of marijuana, etc.. But I'm pretty sure breaking a teenager's arm because they were "resisting arrest" (i.e. telling them to fuck off because they weren't doing anything) is a gross abuse of power.
Unless there is a law I have not heard of somewhere that says speaking profanity to a police officer requires them to injure you.
And yeah, I am entirely aware police officers are human. That is why I have said what I did.
I have a low opinion on people in general. For all the pretense to the contrary, we are not much better than any other animal.
But I suppose that will pass with adolescence.
Or, at least, I hope it does.
It'd be great to turn twenty and suddenly not be filled with disgust all the time.
I would address everything else you've said, but I've just skipped over the point of tiredness where you feel positively dandy for no good reason straight into the part where you feel like someone placed several trains in your brain just before they were about to crash.
So, it'd probably all make very little sense.