onoway, on 2013-July-31, 09:04, said:
Sorry Dwar It was Fluffy who was using the "I play a lot of airsoft" reference and I should have checked down further to make sure I had the right author. My apologies.
I was interested to read the comment "bolas are not easy to use." offered presumably as a reason why they (or other such non lethal techniques,I assume) should not be considered. If that's the criteria for what the police do, i.e. something that's easy (which I don't believe btw, at least most of the time) then why not just "shoot them all and let God sort it out?" That would be the easiest, surely, and no risk at all to the police.
According to the story, the police were sent out in response to a call "that a man was suicidal." Nothing at all about a man threatening anyone other than himself, which I think it is fair to assume would have been given higher priority as the reason police were being called if that had been the case.
Your biases are showing!
You 'don't believe' that bolas are hard to use as weapons to control dangerous individuals.
Do you have ANY expertise, or are you simply making assumptions and treating your belief as knowledge?
Can you imagine using a bola in a confined space or to impose control over a mentally ill person? 'Stop or I'll throw my bola!'
The same is true of your notion that tranquilizer guns could be used.
I once cross-examined the widow of a man shot by police. She said that she had expected, when she called the police, that people would show up and inject her husband who would immediately become sedated. This was, it seemed to me, based on what she had seen on television.
It doesn't work that way in real life. In real life no paramedic will attempt to inject anything into a patient unless the patient is already controlled.
And as for the idea of an officer shooting someone with a dart...have you even begun to think about the problems with that? Hint: look to the street outside at any time other than the summer....what are people wearing?
Another hint: dosages? Drug reactions? Number of shots needed to score a hit? Time for the drug to take effect?
I listened recently to a list of 'things we learn from the movies'.
I loved it. For example: every window in Paris has a view of the Eiffel Tower. If you're on foot, and being chased in a town or city, there is always a parade that you can mix into.
The list didn't include: that sedating drugs always knock people out immediately.
The list also didn't include but could readily enough: good guys can shoot any part of the anatomy of a bad guy with any weapon at any range and in any circumstances, while bad guys can never kill the hero.
Try actually setting aside your beliefs and learn something about the topic. It will make your posts more relevant. Gaining knowledge can be uncomfortable because sometimes the facts are contrary to the way we'd like things to be. But it is more intellectually honest to accept facts and change opinion than it is to ignore or refuse to learn facts and cling to opinion. Or as an alternative, stop making posts on topics on which you are ignorant.
Please note that, as always in this thread, I am not defending nor criticizing the conduct of officers in circumstances about which I know almost nothing. Nor am I commenting on the societal differences between Europe, the US, and Canada (which, for the European readers, is NOT the US and is probably somewhere mid-way between the US and Europe in terms of guns and police use of force).
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari