And how long does it take to answer a few questions?
2 maybe 3 minutes max?
Moderator: Community Team
aage wrote: Maybe you're right, but since we receive no handlebars from the mod I think we should get some ourselves.
thegreekdog wrote:Are you in favor of racial/gender/ethnicity profiling? If a rash of burglaries occurred in your neighborhood and they were allegedly committed by an old, white, woman, are you in favor of the police stopping old, white, women walking in or near your neighborhood? What if the crime was more serious? What if the crime was less serious?
PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Saying "its a black man" is really no more informative than saying "it was a human being". THAT is the real problem.
No, that is a stupid statement. Of course it is more informative, and realistically so. That information may not be particularly useful in, for instance, a deeply black neighborhood, but in most cases it does add usefulness to the information.
No, it really doesn't, except in VERY limited circumstances... sad you think it does.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:If you add even a few details -- a black man wearing a white cap and black pants, for example, then it becomes more realistic, but then you also can risk making mistakes as noted above.
Of course...this is obvious to anyone. And there will almost always be risk of mistaken identity in such situations, but you can only do the best you can with the information you have available.
You can also recognize how often the "information given" is just wrong. When you add a t-shirt of a specific type or such, that is real information. Just saying "it was a young black guy"
PLAYER57832 wrote:or feeling that anyone who is black should get extra scrutiny because they are more likely to have committed crimes.
Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Saying "its a black man" is really no more informative than saying "it was a human being". THAT is the real problem.
No, that is a stupid statement. Of course it is more informative, and realistically so. That information may not be particularly useful in, for instance, a deeply black neighborhood, but in most cases it does add usefulness to the information.
No, it really doesn't, except in VERY limited circumstances... sad you think it does.
It's sad that I think it doesn't add usefulness to the information that when a black man is almost certainly the perpetrator of a crime (let's say it's a bank robbery and the teller knew with certainty it was a black man), that the police LOOK FOR A BLACK MAN? You think that's just as useful as the police looking FOR A MAN? My God PLAYER...sometimes, you say the stupidest things.
Woodruff wrote:You want to talk about his jacket or his getaway vehicle or whatnot...but THOSE THINGS, while momentarily useful, quickly become non-useful and the perpetrator discards them. And if you think that many criminals don't discard anything that is quickly identifiable, then you're not thinking clearly. They actually plan it out that way.
Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:If you add even a few details -- a black man wearing a white cap and black pants, for example, then it becomes more realistic, but then you also can risk making mistakes as noted above.
Of course...this is obvious to anyone. And there will almost always be risk of mistaken identity in such situations, but you can only do the best you can with the information you have available.
You can also recognize how often the "information given" is just wrong. When you add a t-shirt of a specific type or such, that is real information. Just saying "it was a young black guy"
That may add "real information" if someone is found within the next ten minutes. After that...not really, no.
Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:or feeling that anyone who is black should get extra scrutiny because they are more likely to have committed crimes.
I suggested no such thing - do you even English?
Phatscotty wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Are you in favor of racial/gender/ethnicity profiling? If a rash of burglaries occurred in your neighborhood and they were allegedly committed by an old, white, woman, are you in favor of the police stopping old, white, women walking in or near your neighborhood? What if the crime was more serious? What if the crime was less serious?
What about the police? When a call is made that a person broke into a house and raped a person and was just spotted leaving the house on foot 30 seconds before the 911 call was made, indicating the rapist is still in the neighborhood, is there anyone who seriously thinks the dispatcher should not ask the 911 caller "what race is the rapist, what gender is the rapist, what color are the rapists clothes, what is the height/weight" and the the police responding to the call should not look for someone matching the description received by a witness?
PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Saying "its a black man" is really no more informative than saying "it was a human being". THAT is the real problem.
No, that is a stupid statement. Of course it is more informative, and realistically so. That information may not be particularly useful in, for instance, a deeply black neighborhood, but in most cases it does add usefulness to the information.
No, it really doesn't, except in VERY limited circumstances... sad you think it does.
It's sad that I think it doesn't add usefulness to the information that when a black man is almost certainly the perpetrator of a crime (let's say it's a bank robbery and the teller knew with certainty it was a black man), that the police LOOK FOR A BLACK MAN? You think that's just as useful as the police looking FOR A MAN? My God PLAYER...sometimes, you say the stupidest things.
Except, now you are stretching things considerably.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Saying "keep a watch out for a black man" is OK, just like saying "keep a watch out for a white blonde-haired man". But, the thing is if I said "a blonde man robbed the bank", it would not lead to police stopping and questioning or searching every blond-haired man they see. Somehow, many people think that IS OK if the man being targeted is a black man.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:You want to talk about his jacket or his getaway vehicle or whatnot...but THOSE THINGS, while momentarily useful, quickly become non-useful and the perpetrator discards them. And if you think that many criminals don't discard anything that is quickly identifiable, then you're not thinking clearly. They actually plan it out that way.
Yeah, like wigs, etc. The point is not that police shouldn't keep track of race, the point is that if the only identifier of a person is gender and race, its not much better than just saying "its a human".
PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:or feeling that anyone who is black should get extra scrutiny because they are more likely to have committed crimes.
I suggested no such thing - do you even English?
It IS what a lot of people think and it was the subject of the thread.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users