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One year after the killing of George Floyd, police reform is still on the minds of many Americans

 

How has the death of George Floyd impacted the state of police reform in the United States. Americans are still wrestling with ways to reform police agencies, one year later. Below you can find three different perspectives on the state of police reform in the United States as we approach the one year anniversary of this tragedy.

A Year After George Floyd: Pressure to Add Police Amid Rising Crime [nytimes.com]

“I don’t care how bad it gets — no one wants more cops,” Ms. Jones, 56, said last week as she met with other activists outside a food hall in South Los Angeles. “We don’t need tougher police, we need more alternatives to help people thrive.”

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Police reform sees momentum ahead of George Floyd anniversary [thehill.com]

Renewed momentum around the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act as the anniversary of George Floyd’s murder on Tuesday approached has led to some optimism from those around the process that a bipartisan bill is within reach, a rare achievement in a divided Washington.

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His Name in Vain: One year later, America is struggling to reform and reimagine the agencies that have been licensed to kill us. [nymag.com]

Most of them don’t die. It’s easy to mistake the worst outcome for the most urgent crisis, but the reality is that the vast majority of people who have violent encounters with the police live to tell about it.

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There are people who sincerely pursue/attain their position of authority to help their fellow human beings; however, I believe that too many law-enforcers — be they private-property security, community police, prison guards or heavily-armed rapid-response police units — have targeted/acquired such authoritative fields of employment for power-trip reasons (albeit perhaps subconsciously).

It's a profession in which they might get to, for example, storm into suspects’ homes, screaming, with fully-automatic machineguns or handguns drawn, at the homes’ occupants (to “face down!”), all of whom, including infants, can be permanently traumatized from the experience. On some occasions, these ‘law-enforcers’ force their way into the wrong home, altogether. That’s potentially when open-fire can and does occur, followed by wrongful deaths to be “impartially” investigated.

Those that do get into such a profession of (potential or actual) physical authority might do some honest soul-searching as to truly why. Meanwhile, some people who may now be in such an armed authority capacity were reared with an irrational distrust or blindly baseless dislike of other racial (etcetera) groups.

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