2:06 PM law office | Tumblr | ||||
I love Iris West and I hate that people hate her but it was getting hard for me to defend her when I wasn t even 100% in love with the way she was written. Her character has so much potential when she was writing about the Flash, or digging into her boss s disappearance, or punching villains in the face etc, but every time her story started to get interesting, the writers would make her the star of dumb filler episodes. I hope the writers can do her better now that the Everyone is lying to me story line seems to be over. I understand why she s mad and I agree to a certain point, but you wouldn t date/marry a CIA agent and get angry at them for not telling you all of the government s intel, because they re keeping secrets from you and not being honest. Real families of law enforcement officers understand that/why they can t tell you everything about work. I thought that went without saying. Police shootings of black men over the past year have put a national spotlight on racial disparities in how cops use force and in the criminal justice system but at least one officer is doing his part to get people to stop being racist. Reddit user sf7. who s listed as a verified law enforcement officer on Reddit, asked people to stop calling in suspicious behavior when they see black people doing completely normal things: These types of calls are a genuine problem, especially when the full details aren t relayed to dispatched officers. Last November, a 911 caller reported Tamir Rice when the black 12-year-old boy was throwing snowballs and playing with a toy gun at a Cleveland park behavior the caller apparently found suspicious, although the caller noted that the gun was probably fake. Within two seconds of arriving at the scene and getting out of his squad car, Cleveland police officer Timothy Loehmann shot and killed Rice. Police claim Loehmann wasn t told by the dispatcher that the gun was probably fake. So not only can these phone calls be a waste of time for cops, but they can lead to seriously dangerous confrontations. It s very likely that outright racism isn t behind many of these bad calls. Instead, social psychologists point to what s called implicit bias, which is subconscious bias that can lead people to think, for example, that black people are associated with crime. One useful piece of advice for police trying to control their implicit bias relayed by L. Song Richardson, a social psychologist at University of California, Irvine is to ask, Would I find this behavior suspicious if the person were a young white man instead of a young black man? The very same advice can apply to people calling the cops.
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