People usually think about something when people hear the word "police." We believe that police in this world is to maintain, defend, defend, serve, prevent, and prevent crime in peace. We have seen that everything that shows the police is good people participating in good news, real shows, and speech at school. Since sophisticated technology and the Internet came in our era, we saw many police officers show their real colors to the world. Now we have different ideas from time to time and have a second thought about them.
Which police do you play? Of course, a bad species, a murder police, will escape it? No her article said so. Just hit the police. Which police officer? Any policeman, according to her friend's example, I think that playing a white police officer is particularly satisfying. I put him on the street with a white butt. "" Is this reasonable? It makes sense to fight to protect those who endanger their lives and ourselves from criminals (of course , Are they likely to endanger their lives and become victims of crime Can police reduce the conflicting interaction between the police and the black community? (This is a rhetorical question is.)
Because there is no police officer with an ethical institution, all police officers are terrible. They may be good parents, good friends, or even good saxophonists - but they are not good policemen. If there is no agent, moral responsibility is denied, so that no one is responsible for the execution of worship of Daniel Shafer. Philando Castille, who was fired in front of his partner and her children, extinguished the life of a 12 - year - old black child Tamir Rice when playing in the park.
There are many great policemen, but there are too many bad people in history. These bad things have led to crime against colored people who have been systematically deprived of equal rights for centuries for centuries. So the influence on police recognition is rooted. (This topic is not part of this article, but I'll explain it in a bit more detail later.) However, recently I saw a wonderful Netflix fiction series "7 seconds". It highlights some of my points. "Seven seconds" tells us that a 15-year-old African-American boy died in Jersey City, and made a serious pain with the cover of the police. Leading actress: Claire Hope Ashtiei, Regina King, Bo Nap. (I strongly recommend this program)