And that's the problem, Chris. They saw an agitated black young man and INSTANTLY had their guns drawn. Look at the timeframe. 23 SECONDS from pull up to...dead.
Officers need to be trained better.
And we need to ask better questions on 911. Even properly trained, well-intentioned cops can be put in really crappy situations with crappy intel. The black man in the WalMart buying a toy shouldn't necessitate a SWAT rollout when WalMart has enough cameras to make the NSA get happy in the pants. A PHONE CALL to the manager of the WalMart could have answered the question of whether the man in question was dangerous. If any doubt, proceed, but CLEARLY he wasn't. Problem was... NO ONE EVEN THOUGHT TO QUESTION that a black man was an inherent and imminent threat and very dangerous. C'mon....
But...23 seconds. You got two guys there. Do they not teach non-lethal techniques? Are they so weak that two guys can't put one smaller guy in restraints? Were they afraid to fight?
Whatever happened to "Don't taze me, bro?" Should black and brown kids start wearing shirts saying, "PLEASE! Taze me!"
There are some guys who will successfully commit suicide by cop and that's a whole different kind of tragedy for everyone involved. The cop included! There are plenty of conscientious officers who never want to discharge their weapons and work hard in their communities. However, when the road to that end is slicked up with that easy racial prejudice of "draw first" and non-lethal means are considered less and less as well as Police having a precedent for not having a special duty to protect citizens (Warren v. District of Columbia), we have a LOT of police that feel very comfortable just shooting and going home at the end of the day and REFUSE to be put at risk.
There are plenty of ways to be a good cop. Unfortunately, we just aren't seeing that as much as we should in minority/inner city neighborhoods for a variety of reasons. Some nefarious, some not.
I don't care if Michael Brown is the ideal "flash point" for this social change. Just like Rodney King wasn't the ideal person for the last one. As long as we can begin to not only talk about moving things forward but actually doing things to move things forward so that we can in reality just treat every other human being as a human being, then it really doesn't matter who was the catalyst. I'm sorry anyone had to be the catalyst. I'm sorry it took many, many deaths and a particular death to wake even some of the world from it's somnolence.
We're all human beings and deserved to be treated as such. At minimum...