goalie wrote:jshuberg wrote:Were you equally offended by the lockdown and paramilitary "invasion" of law enforcement, Federal agents, and active duty military in response to the 35W bridge collapse?
Really? That's your analogy? A lot of us from the cities hospitals went to help out on our own time and dime. I didn't see anyone pointing firearms at people. Not one.
I mean, the whole analogy sucks, but jeez, REALLY?!?!?!
You just kinda made my point. It's not that that an "invasion" of law enforcement bothers people, it's when they're hunting a bad guy, and an innocent bystander gets caught up in it, and has the **** scared out of them. New rule: don't interfere with or startle cops while they're hunting a bad guy, there's a strong likelihood they're going to react as if you
could be a bad guy, until it's determined you're not. This might result in having a gun pointed at you, which is never going to be a good thing. Remember what happened to those AP photographers in Iraq that were hiding behind a building, leaned out and pointed a really long telegraphic lens at a helo? They got blown all to hell, because they looked and acted like the bad guys. When there's cops in front of your house looking for a bad guy, stay away from your windows, and don't point anything at them. Behave in a way that differentiates you from the bad guy as much as possible, and let them do their job. The life they save might be yours or a loved ones.
While that picture does invoke an emotional response, without context we can't infer what may have actually happened. It's possible that the cop was startled by the person in the window and reacted just as the picture was snapped. How long did it take the cop top lower his weapon? We don't know, he could have brought his weapon up, saw that it wasn't the person he was looking for, and immediately lowered his weapon. You just simply can't determine if his actions were appropriate to the situation from the photo. Unless he held his weapon on the person for an extended period of time, I'd give him the benefit of the doubt and say that he probably reacted appropriately, and in accordance with his training.
I
do have a problem with a city wide lockdown. Boston should have reacted the way that LA did when that ex-cop went bonkers - increase a law enforcement presence, and advise caution, but allow people to continue with their everyday lives. Once they found the guy, maybe close off a couple blocks surrounding the area, but the whole city was excessive, and I doubt an order for a city wide lockdown would be lawful, or pass constitutional muster. I don't believe that the Governor declared martial law, which is the civilian government surrendering control and power to the military.