People like to side with one side or the other.. "oh it's the police that are too aggressive" "oh if they werent criminals this wouldnt happen"
Truth is, yes police forces are over-equipped and ill-trained in alot of regions in the USA, this will offend some people, but it is the inconvenient truth. The tools at their disposal are unfortunately left largely at their discretion upon when to use them. Given the thin blue line brotherhood mentality, when one does wrong it is highly unusual for them to be outed for what they've done. Instead for the good of the department it is more common for them to find no wrongdoing and to just relocate the officer to a different division. Some agencies are good about ensuring the ethics of their officers and being on the straight and level, but there are a great number who will do everything in their power to avoid scandals too. You can't use one side to offset the other, in the end it depends on the departments.
The truth is escalation is used for having all the militarized weapons on the law enforcement's side, but at the same time the fact that the police have higher power weapons is why criminals strive so hard for them as well. The North Hollywood shootout type of incidents are EXTREMELY rare, and that is the main justification for weapons like the AR-15 being available for law enforcement. Anyone who's ever dealt with a rifle like that understands that it must be deployed with great care in an urban/populated environment, it really isnt ideal for an urban area because of penetration issues. Yet in some places it is commonplace in patrol vehicles, not just swat. imo that is an overreach that will not have a positive ending.
The police here especially as of late I've noticed are far more high-tension than a few years ago, as to why that is who's to say? Police MUST be held accountable for their actions just the same as criminal suspects, but realize there are incidents where someone is being "non-compliant" that when a recording surfaces clearly shows they were in fact doing nothing wrong to end up in the position to where a cop should be assaulting them. If I were placed in a position that a police officer were grabbing at me attempting to assault me, police or no, I would respond, and I would respond extremely violently. Human nature dictates one will defend themselves when attacked, just because you have a badge won't remove those basic animal instincts from the person(s) you're engaging. People will fight to the death with 4-5 guys assaulting them, and just because you're a cop doesnt give you any more right to attack someone than anyone else, as of late it seems that point has been lost. There was a time when police attempted to detain a suspect, their goal was to get them in cuffs, time and again i've seen overreaches where they've used force excessively b/c they are angry over the incident, it's a human reaction, but one you should be accountable for. People are just fed up with the appearance of corruption and overreach by gov in general, not just police.
In america more than other nations, race is still a very hot-button issue, it is used by many to promote their causes, and for profit. Sadly, in america it is still a very commonplace justification for why an incident happened... In most cases wrongfully so. If roles are reversed, generally (again going to offend some, but it's my opinion) a minority-on-white incident does not receive the same treatment as a white-on-minority... The media is the primary cause of race-baiting unfortunately, thus propagating the issue and keeping it alive and well. Most nations around the world are much more mature in resolving the racial tensions that they have from previous eras, in america people like to hold onto them for justification as to why they should be given more, instead of striving for equality.
In closing, I am sure I will upset some people with my statements, but they are my opinions alone and anyone is welcome to comment here as well, as long as it is kept civil we at EMP won't be pursuing differences of opinions, just as long as they are done in a civil, mature matter.