Zeiger
Daily Stormer
October 7, 2016
From now on, you can’t shoot the perp until he hits you a few times with his bat. You know, just to be sure.
After long research, our social scientists have found out the cause of dindu violence: policing of dindu violence.
Thus, the solution is to train police officers to stop treating Black criminals so roughly and use compassion instead.
This is sure to work.
100%
The Chicago Police Department, facing a U.S. Justice Department probe of allegedly widespread civil rights violations, on Friday announced new limits on when officers can use force.
The department has been heavily criticized since the court-ordered release of video showing Officer Jason Van Dyke shooting 17-year-old Laquan McDonald 16 times as the teen armed with a knife appeared to walk away from police. The fatal shooting led to sustained street protests, the firing of police Superintendent Garry McCarthy and the Justice Department probe.
What a tragedy. Just as he was about to get his life back on track, too.
The suggested changes, which were outlined for the Tribune by a source familiar with them, address both specific tactical decisions and broader concepts that reflect the new policing approach that emphasizes officers taking a slower, more cautious approach when possible.
Uh, when an officer’s life is in danger, being “slow and cautious” will only get them killed. This is well known in police training circles. Just look at this video:
A second of hesitation can mean death.
In a statement, police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said the changes place a “heavy emphasis on the sanctity of life.”
Certainly not the sanctity of the cops’ lives, that’s for sure.
The changes basically mean that now criminals can ignore police orders and resist arrest without any real risk. This will surely help bring down Chicago’s crime rates.
It’s high time someone in America considers trying the patented “Duterte” method of fighting crime.
One weird trick to stop crime: kill all the criminals.