Footage of a Toronto police car striking a pedestrian and the officer driving away is raising concern. Jon Woodward explains.Subscribe to CTV News to watch m...
You want us to consider the “human element”? Okay: What about the humans who don’t get the kind of consideration you’re championing from the police, because “the police officer is having a bad day”?
If a citizen would get a ticket, a police officer should get a ticket. What matters is the offense, not who committed it.
This is my argument though. At least here (Denmark) you could be lucky and not get a ticket for this. I’d argue that you’d more likely not get a ticket as long as everything was civilised and both parts talked it out.
I understand that there are differences between cops and definetelly countries too, if it’s true that according to an other comment you’d get **10 years for this!?!? **
Yeah, that all sounds reasonable, but the fact is enforcement should be evenhanded. Everyone thinks the US has a monopoly on bad police, but I’ve seen it in Canada, the UK, and Australia too. From what I’ve read this is a common complaint voiced by citizens of countries across the world. Your example seems benign but it’s the inconsistency of enforcement that leads to situations like we have here, or in Seattle where the SPD officer hit and killed a pedestrian in a crosswalk and got off with no punishment at all.
Your surprise at the potential sentence is warranted, as well. It’s truly mind-boggling here sometimes.
They are professionals who are supposed to be the most skilled drivers, shooters, and conflict resolvers on the beat. Bad policing is bad policing and the people that have been granted the ability to take away our freedoms and liberties at a moments notice need to be held to a higher standard.
You realise that uneven enforcement is worse than overzealous enforcement? It allows bias. Stop apologising for bad police. Nobody is above the law.
Yeah… This is the part about stating this in the wrong community. I’m just adding the “human” element into this.
You want us to consider the “human element”? Okay: What about the humans who don’t get the kind of consideration you’re championing from the police, because “the police officer is having a bad day”?
If a citizen would get a ticket, a police officer should get a ticket. What matters is the offense, not who committed it.
This is my argument though. At least here (Denmark) you could be lucky and not get a ticket for this. I’d argue that you’d more likely not get a ticket as long as everything was civilised and both parts talked it out.
I understand that there are differences between cops and definetelly countries too, if it’s true that according to an other comment you’d get **10 years for this!?!? **
Yeah, that all sounds reasonable, but the fact is enforcement should be evenhanded. Everyone thinks the US has a monopoly on bad police, but I’ve seen it in Canada, the UK, and Australia too. From what I’ve read this is a common complaint voiced by citizens of countries across the world. Your example seems benign but it’s the inconsistency of enforcement that leads to situations like we have here, or in Seattle where the SPD officer hit and killed a pedestrian in a crosswalk and got off with no punishment at all.
Your surprise at the potential sentence is warranted, as well. It’s truly mind-boggling here sometimes.
I don’t even think killing someone would give 10 years here unless it was premeditated.
As long as it’s the same sentence for the same offense, for both police and regular citizenry, I don’t have anything to say about it :P
Look up assault and battery of an officer
They are professionals who are supposed to be the most skilled drivers, shooters, and conflict resolvers on the beat. Bad policing is bad policing and the people that have been granted the ability to take away our freedoms and liberties at a moments notice need to be held to a higher standard.
Humans don’t often lick boots as much.