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1:38 AM
Wow...things have gone from bad to worse.
From a comment on that page:
"Imagine how many people have been locked up or killed because our justice system relies so heavily on subjectivity. Instead of spending billions on foreign defense, we should invest in body cameras, and have a national law requiring all law enforcement agents to wear them at all times, with harsh penalties to those who do not or who tamper in any way with the recordings."
 
 
2 hours later…
4:20 AM
I have watched the critical moments of the video several times, in slow motion. I have in this very room tried to defend cops doing really stupid things in the heat of the moment, even killing innocent, unarmed men. But there is no defending this cop, IMO he is guilty of second-degree murder.
There is nothing in this guys manner that should even have caused the cop's hackles to rise.
 
4:38 AM
Quote from the prosecutor in the case, "this is the most asinine act by a police officer I have ever seen"
The prosecutor seems ready to ruin the cop's day.
I hope the cop gets a very long prison sentence.
He may not have had malice aforethought, but he was dead-ass wrong. I think English courts would say that he did not have the mens rea required to be convicted of murder, but he can be found guilty of second-degree murder in Ohio.
I hope he is convicted of murder.
Maybe that's what needs to happen to check this epidemic of white cops killing young black men.
 
4:59 AM
He makes a very good point at 12:00
Also, he points out later that Ohio doesn't differentiate between first and second degree murder. The cop is facing life in prison.
It's going to be interesting to watch this unfold because the prosecutor makes it clear that the university cop should not have been hired as a cop, and the city would not have hired him.
 
5:14 AM
The pictures of the cop make me think of pictures of a certain Alaskan politician. You can kind of tell the guy is an asshole just by looking at his photo.
Former cop, Ray Tensing:
Alaskan Congressman, Don Young:
 
5:46 AM
This guy sums up the whole nastiness quite well:
The last video is cued up to a guy who does YouTube commentary. He's pretty insightful.
"You play stupid games, you win stupid prizes!"
I especially like what he says at ~12:20 - 14:30
and 19:30
 
6:08 AM
Wow, @Jolenealaska, you are on a roll today! (And hello, btw!)
 
Hi @Stephie , that's actually pretty normal for me.
Even if nobody is here, I'll keep a running commentary as I'm reading the news.
<shrug>
it's a hobby
 
From what I saw here, probably yes ^_^
Oh, I mainly came over to see what you guys think about this question: cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/59484/…
I removed all the "what can I do with" recipe requests because instead of simply closing the bit about equivalents might be useful.
I still struggle with the concept of "cups" even after a decade of using US recipes...
 
Personally, I think the question is okay. The gist of it is how many cups of peaches would you get from a certain number of peaches.
I think your edit is good BTW.
I'm going to vote to reopen.
 
Thanks! I sometimes feel sorry for newbies getting their first question closed, especially if they clearly put effort into writing it.
 
Trust me, you're preaching to the choir.
My first weeks here were rough.
 
6:17 AM
^_^
Got to run, inlaws and others will be here today (sigh), children had their birthday this week. Would love to chat again, in twoo weeks or so. (upcomming summer vacation).
 
CYA!
@Gigili, I saw this and thought of something you had asked: scholarlyoa.com/2012/08/04/…
 
6:39 AM
@jolenealaska mornin'
 
Morning hon
I am soon to go to bed actually, but I'm up for a little while.
I'm a little late, the news of the shooting is old, but I'm pretty fascinated by it.
These few seconds sum up the whole shit storm quite nicely:
 
Sheesh
 
I think it's time for a sacrificial lamb. Methinks Ray Tensing is toast.
There is absolutely no way to justify his drawing of his weapon.
The victim was an idiot, but he was in no way threatening.
I have in the past considered fear as a motivator in recent killings of black men by white cops. Fear didn't even come into this. The cop just flat out killed the dude for being an idiot.
And we've got the whole thing on video.
 
 
2 hours later…
8:53 AM
Fun!
They went viral for a reason. Cute blasts from the past.
The sneezing panda was my signature for a while on IMDb.
I didn't know video hits were ever measured in billions.
I know just how David After Dentist feels.
 
 
1 hour later…
10:31 AM
@Cerberus We talked about this not long ago: abcnews.go.com/US/…
 
10:59 AM
@ElendilTheTall How are you liking Windows 10?
 
 
3 hours later…
1:34 PM
@Jolenealaska Horrible.
He should emigrate and be free.
The government shouldn't be involved when two people do something they both want and when there is no actual harm done.
But apparently the judge was against casual sex and found he should ruin a boy's life for that.
@derobert Hmm looks like you have your own Greece...
 
 
8 hours later…
9:12 PM
holy crap:
 
9:59 PM
fuuuu
'heat index' I understand. What I don't understand is what it's relative to
what's the heat index of a hot day in the UK?
 
how hot...how humid?
 
That being part of the problem. Heat - let's say 30C
humidity - don't know. It's rarely reported
I'm exposing the problem that the heat index was designed to solve. Reported information is insufficient to gauge the effect of the weather
ok, so the first graph is well off the scale anyway
 
If it's hot, then news outlets report humidity (in my experience), say over 86F (30C).
yep...off the scale.
you know that's hot!
 
Does anyone live in Bandar Mahshahr?
Yep. Yep they definitely do
 
We have a regular from Iran (I think), but I don't know the city.
 
10:10 PM
I had to google, it might have been the Persian equivalent of 'Death Valley' for all I knew
It's not
 
I have experienced temperatures that high, but in the desert (Phoenix).
 
with presumably low humidity
I mean, it's a desert
 
Yeah...but it had to have been over 50% humidity yesterday.
 
38 at 100% must be by definition lethal
37.something, human core temperature. +-1 degree is medical emergency. And 100% humidity would mean you can't lose anything by sweating
 
10:33 PM
I've subscribed to this guy's videos:
I've watched a few of his videos in the last couple of days.
He handles race issues in the US, and makes a lot of sense.
 
I am definitely listening
His accent is peculiar
And what I mean by that is, is he putting it on? I'm not sure. Is there a point being made somehow that I'm not going to get?
 
I think that accent is "grew up in the hood, received a high-end education"
So I think that accent is really him.
 
10:49 PM
OK, I was with him until the 'let people break the law because they're black' part
 
That's not the point he was trying to make it all, although I agree he probably could have worded it better.
 
yeah, it moved on from that. I get it
 
Do you know about the story from a couple of weeks ago, the black woman who hanged herself in jail?
 
Well, traffic offences are usually not an arrest unless gratuitous, here anyway.
That might be the point
Yeah, I saw that one
 
That's just it, the cop was just going to give her a warning for failure to signal.
 
10:52 PM
The last I saw it seemed incontrovertible that she must have killed herself because nobody else had been there in that time
 
But the woman was so belligerent during the traffic stop that she really forced the cops hand.
Yes.
 
Lots of people seem to not want to accept that
 
When I first saw the footage of the traffic stop, my thought was as the cop called for backup, he ought to have asked specifically for a black, preferably female, cop.
 
That would be shrewd, but probably cause its own problems
 
There ought to be some kind of super-secret cop code for that.
As it turns out, most of the other cops that dealt with the woman were black.
 
10:57 PM
So on the way to work once there was a team of four officers hanging around awkwardly in a sort of tense, poised fashion, around the front of a residential address. At the time I noticed that three of the four were amazonian, blonde women. Only retrospectively did I realise what that probably meant
Almost certainly a domestic violence case
I'd not noticed for that reason, duh
@Jolenealaska It would pose the issue of token [minority] officer routinely being called to vet any actions against someone of [minority]
 
But it wouldn't be token, not in a case like this.
 
I haven't seen the video, was there an insinuation that the officer wasn't behaving in an unbiased way?
 
if there is a real reason to choose a person of a certain race for of particular duty, so be it.
if I was taking down a bunch of KKK, I wouldn't send a black officer.
 
There is a dramatic miscalculation of scale in that comparison
 
@TomW that's why it's got the coverage that it got. No, the cop did nothing wrong, nor did he treat her any differently because of her race.
 
11:02 PM
So where is the justification for requesting certain people as backup?
 
If a black officer called for backup from an area of town known for skinheads, I would make a point to send a white officer. Not because the officer would be any different, but because the person needing to be subdued could be more easily subdued by a white officer.
It doesn't matter why it's easier, just make it easier. It is better if nobody gets hurt.
 
I think I disagree. I think that sets the expectation that there's a justification to fight the police when that doesn't occur
A thousand small steps may be the safest course, but in the wrong direction
 
That would be be the reason for the super secret code. It would be best if the power were used judiciously, so that a pattern is not easily seen.
 
Here is a very tenuous analogy
I used to play rugby when I was a kid. Youth rugby in my part of the world is impoverished and we changed in barns, or in the open, more than a few times. This means that the match officials at those games tended to be volunteers from the home team. This matters not one iota
Match officials are assumed to be beyond reproach, and this idea extends throughout to the international game. Referees in international matches are not allowed to be from countries who are playing, but from other countries whose team would benefit from one of the participants winning or losing is not uncommon
So the presumption of good conduct is built into the system, and demonstrated by putting the people most vulnerable to accusation right where their accusers might want them
So those people are meant to realise they are perched at the top of a stable but very fragile tower
 
I think that ultimately we should be able to have a "presumption of good conduct". We don't. Unfortunately, white cops are scared of young black men (with some reason) and young black men are sick and tired <and angry> of being treated unjustly by white cops (with some reason).
 
11:18 PM
if those people are police officers, then the conclusion is that nobody can stop it from falling, or deny that it has fallen
 
The problem that I see with your analogy is simply that the referees don't carry guns.
Angry (usually, but not always,black) women are a whole different category.
 
Yeah. It doesn't resist particularly intensive criticism
Although I'd see any form of grossly unprofessional and disruptive conduct as similar, the problem being:- the people doing it don't see it as such - neither do their superiors
grossly unprofessional and disruptive being, for example: shooting suspects without good reason
 
That is the one good thing I can see coming out of this particular mess, I'm pretty sure the officer is going down.
The popular opinion is not going to be as divided in this case as it was during, say, the Zimmerman trial.
 
So the first cause is that (some) police officers are racist. That has to stop, and the point I'm making is that the way to get public acceptance is to demonstrate that the incidence of police racism is so rare that to suggest it is ludicrous
 
There is no way that we are going to eliminate even just the most overt police racism in the foreseeable future.
The fact that so many victims of police brutality are doing exactly the right things to perpetuate the stereotypes doesn't help matters.
 
11:37 PM
In the early 2000s I think, the Metropolitan Police was declared 'institutionally racist' by a public inquiry
 
I believe that is true.
 
That phrase was like the wrath of God for them. A lot of senior people lost their jobs
 
I mean that police are in fact institutionally racist.
And not just police.
I think it's better there than here, but the entire justice system is institutionally racist.
(here)
 
There was a definite precedent established by which politicians could enforce cultural change on the police. It made a big difference in a short amount of time. They're definitely nowhere near perfect but they are much better than they were. US police forces across the country should be asking them for help because they made it work
 
Don't even get me started on the death penalty'
What I find pretty crazy is that the US military is really pretty colorblind. So we have two models to follow.
 
11:43 PM
Yeah that one is interesting. Maybe they wouldn't like the answers that came out if the military was asked for help
Advice, I mean
"Don't hire fuckwits" might be the answer
 
Don't hire fuckwits is rule one. And and the corollary to that rule is that if you do hire a fuckwit, and he fucks up, make an example of him and then get rid of him.
 
The word 'officer' is significant. To me, anyway. That to me means a person who is trusted to have responsibility for independent decision-making.
 
Both of my roommates in Korea were dishonorably discharged during my time there.
Yes.
The idiots used a stolen checkbook to buy stuff at the PX.
I know they were dishonorably discharged, I don't know how much time they got in addition.
 
When I graduated university, my friend (who was also graduating)'s brother showed up, he brought two mates. They were all Royal Marine recruits at the time, I think they're allowed to wear dress uniform to public events even before they've passed out. Anyway, some guest had misunderstood and asked them if they were officer cadets, my university has an OUTC. They found this beyond hilarious
Nah, they'd just suited up to show off
But at the time the gulf in mentality between them and officers was...well, to them ludicrous
 
That is something you do see more in the Marines than in other branches!
:)
 
11:55 PM
Royal Marine dress uniform looks similar to USMC, I think. Same guy had his wedding last weekend, same rig. Convention is that other military guests use a different uniform apparently, this is green with white trim, I'm trying to find out which sort this is.
 
Had I not fallen in love with and married Scott, I probably would have stayed in MI for a while. One of the incentives they offered me to reenlist was "Green to Gold". Basically they would pay my rank (E5+) to go to school half-time and finish my degree while working half-time for cool sounding military intelligence units in the area.
I was an E4 (Specialist) but would have been promoted immediately upon reenlistment. Stupid, stupid, stupid!
 
I had a five minute conversation with an Army representative in the first week or so of university, about a bursary. When I told him what I was studying he said emphatically "Signals". That would be MI, I think
Not interested, not at the time anyway. Still not now
 
signals is communication - related but different (at least in the US)
 
as in Royal Signals, the regiment. They do almost all of that
 
11:59 PM
I am now a civilian contractor coincidentally working in the field of military recruitment
 

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