- cross-posted to:
- acab@lemmygrad.ml
- cross-posted to:
- acab@lemmygrad.ml
Imagine being woken up at 4am and told to get on the ground while you get arrested, treated like a criminal, threatened, have guns pointed at you and then told … sorry … wrong house … waddaygonnado
This is stuff you would expect in a third world country.
Now look at it another way:
How many police interactions didn’t go this way?
And conversely, how often does a nurse mess up and give someone a medication that could kill them, despite the training?
One thing I’ve learned over the years is that in any field, people are going to mess up, and the distribution is usually pretty standard across all fields.
So then the questions are:
The perception is that the police are lacking in both 1 and 2; I’d be interested to know the reality.
When a nurse messes up … it may hurt a patient and possibly even kill them but it rarely happens
When an accountant messes up … the client ends up losing money, get in trouble with their taxes and in the most extreme rare cases might even lead to the death of someone
When a police officer is mostly only ever trained to deal with any problem with a firearm … when they mess up, they often severely hurt people and when it comes to guns is more likely to kill someone.
A nurses tools are mostly meant to heal people and only in large doses or in very unique doses or situations can it become deadly, in most situations, it takes a bit of effort for a nurse to kill someone
A financial professional would have to go insane and berserk to try to kill you with their bare hands … their ability to kill you is the same as any other random person you would encounter
A police officer has multiple weapons that they legally carry with them that can severely wound or kill someone very easily … namely, they legally carry guns, firearms, blunt weapons, tasers and potent pepper spray … all of which could kill someone if used in the right way … it’s far easy for an officer to kill you than anyone else
Agreed; now go back and read what I wrote instead of what you think I wrote.
Citation needed.
You really think a highly trained and tightly controlled job like air traffic controller screws up at the same rate as the high school kids stacking crackers at the grocery store?
Yes, and no. The difference is that ATC has processes in place to mitigate the mistakes and others to recover from them as quickly as possible. End result is that most people will never notice.
On average, people’s brains don’t fully develop until 25, so teenagers are expected to make more mistakes.
But the distribution of people making mistakes appears to be relatively even, the difference being what the processes in place enable/prevent.
And I’m going to be lazy and not cite anything.
Then I guess there’s no reason for me to believe you aren’t talking out your ass.