Asher Kelman
OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
Doug,
How mind-boggling a question of racial profiling might be and police over-reactions, I am not at all flummoxed or discouraged. We will simply break down the complexity to bite sized morsels that folks with a stake in this matter can come to civil terms with. We are not moving mountains, just learning to tunnel through them or bipassing them so they cannot so readily impact the fabric of our lives. Blacks shouldn't fear their kids driving through a mostly white township and the families of policemen should not have to fear that some crazed activist might execute the man or woman they love and depend on.
I am very optimistic that we are on the cusp of change!
Here in California, we have a commission starting, as of last week, to begin to establish the tools in order to evaluate "racial
profiling". Representatives from community advocate groups scholarly experts, police, serifs and government agencies are being given a frame of reference for what the legislator needs as data. They committees will hammer out how "what" data is collected and based on what standards - racial make up of community v prosecutions v convictions. Lots of matters to discuss, but we in California and other states like N Carolina, (already with much more progress), will help create an eventual national consensos for all the imponderables that union lawyers might want to object to.
We will have progress. We have no other choice going forward.
Asher
How mind-boggling a question of racial profiling might be and police over-reactions, I am not at all flummoxed or discouraged. We will simply break down the complexity to bite sized morsels that folks with a stake in this matter can come to civil terms with. We are not moving mountains, just learning to tunnel through them or bipassing them so they cannot so readily impact the fabric of our lives. Blacks shouldn't fear their kids driving through a mostly white township and the families of policemen should not have to fear that some crazed activist might execute the man or woman they love and depend on.
I am very optimistic that we are on the cusp of change!
Here in California, we have a commission starting, as of last week, to begin to establish the tools in order to evaluate "racial
profiling". Representatives from community advocate groups scholarly experts, police, serifs and government agencies are being given a frame of reference for what the legislator needs as data. They committees will hammer out how "what" data is collected and based on what standards - racial make up of community v prosecutions v convictions. Lots of matters to discuss, but we in California and other states like N Carolina, (already with much more progress), will help create an eventual national consensos for all the imponderables that union lawyers might want to object to.
We will have progress. We have no other choice going forward.
Asher