The videos Arctish linked to do not.
Black lives matter more than google
I already showed you that it didn't go down the way you think.
No, you showed a THEORY by someone who wasn't actually there about how the case went down. That theory is inconsistent with the video and the witness accounts of what happened.
Black lives matter more than your apologetic theories.
Severe damaging of pride is the fullest extent of the threat to the officers in the cases above; this type of injury is not generally fatal to police officers. Even Jeremy McDole wasn't actually threatening the officers, he was primarily trying to kill HIMSELF.
Black lives matter more than a police officer's pride.
Black lives matter more than your preference for violent solutions to nonviolent problems.
Except that's not the way the world works.
And we have people like you to thank for that.
Black lives STILL matter more than your preference for violent solutions to nonviolent problems.
Whether a situation turns violent or not almost always depends on the actions of the suspect.
In all the cases above, the violence was initiated by police officers and the "suspect" (which is not even the right word for the victims in many of those cases) was either fully cooperative or was not actually given the opportunity to BECOME violent before he was assaulted. Christopher Roupe's case is pretty explicit: he was shot while holding a Wii remote in the doorway of his own home two to three seconds after opening it. The most confrontational thing he could have done was launched a blue turtle shell at the officer's car.
Black lives matter more than your victim blaming pathology
1) There's no question Castille was not motionless.
He was sitting in a stationary car obeying an officer's order to show him his license; the officer mistook his movement for a hostile action and immediately shot him. Basically the same thing that happened to Levar Jones, except the cop who shot jones forgot to turn off his camera for that stop and wound up going to jail for lying about the shooting.
2) Sitting motionless and refusing to accept your ticket gets you a trip to jail.
Sitting motionless and smoking a cigarette does not.
Black lives matter more than cops wanting to punish smokers.
Except that's not how it went down...
... because the officer chose to escalate the situation and turn what should have been a traffic stop into a potentially violent confrontation. And again, he was eventually fired for that case.
Black lives matter more than cops losing their jobs
And you have some magic spectacles to give the cops that let them tell which is which?
Deescalation techniques avoid problems and give you room to react when problems occur. They should therefore be the DEFAULT action, and abandoned only when the subject being encountered repeatedly choses dangerous escalation.
Black lives matter more than your lack of civic values
Black lives matter more than protecting systematic imperfection.
If you try to keep them out when they have a warrant you're going to jail.
Indeed. And you don't have to AGREE to go to jail or consent to anything at all. The law cannot compel you to submit, it can only apply consequences for failing to obey it. If the law requires you to allow access to your home under such and such a circumstance, you violate the law by refusing. But a police officer cannot, on his OWN authority, order you to give him access to your home; he can only do THAT if he is empowered to do so by the law, and his proof of that empowerment is called a "warrant."
So it is the law, and NOT the police, who have authority to supersede your rights.
Black lives matte more than your worship of authority figures
You have already shown you don't know what went down in those cases.
Black lives matter more than your mindless obfuscation of the facts that everyone else in this thread can plainly see
Contrast this with our run-in with the authorities in Hungary. It wasn't a big deal, we could easily show that it was a mistake on the part of their official and lacking the ability to read Hungarian we had no hope of catching it. (Admittedly this took a while due to the conversation being in German, being spoken pretty badly on both sides.) After that came the hard part--they wanted us to fill out a form about what happened. In Hungarian. Oops--this was a police matter, nobody was willing to translate. (Never mind that their name wouldn't even appear on it.) Finally a businessman from Vienna overheard the situation and offered his help as he knew we weren't going to get anywhere with the locals. That's a police state.

So one police officer in a foreign country was being a dick to you and you call that a "police state"
Here are some examples of what a Police State looks like.
Bloody Sunday
[YOUTUBE]https://youtu.be/tVymzWrBTww[/YOUTUBE]
The Children's March in Birmingham
[YOUTUBE]https://youtu.be/joc3CRL6x4E[/YOUTUBE]
The 1968 Democratic Convention
[YOUTUBE]https://youtu.be/EYp1JgwotXU[/YOUTUBE]
No video currently exists of the Oak Park/Austin riots the day after Martin Luther King was shot, mainly because the only reporters filming that day were arrested and their cameras confiscated. Groups of high school students marched down Madison Street through the mostly black neighborhood of Austin; they were met the corner of Austin and Madison by a Cadre of about 130 police officers who promised to arrest ANYONE who crossed the street with "conspiracy to sedition." The march called their bluff, and the police charged the crowds with clubs; 3 kids died, 15 were hospitalized. The resulting riots lasted for 3 days.
It was only ten years later when Jon Burge and his gang of browncoats started kidnapping and torturing people to force confessions out of them. Burge swore that all of the people he tortured were "bd guys", just like you do, and that anything he might have done to them was justified.
And you think you have seen a "police state" because a Hungarian cop was rude to you one time?
Black lives matter more than your white privilege.
Arms up usually means surrender.
... unless it's a
nigger dindu, right?
I don't worship them. I just don't demonize them like you do.
I do not and have never demonized police officers. I am harsh and unforgiving of officers who abuse their authority, of officers who hide behind the threat of force to cover their own insecurities, of police departments and police commanders who protect bad cops from prosecution, and of supposedly "good" cops who make excuses for abusers.
There are police departments in this country -- and even in my own area -- that I have ENORMOUS respect for, given the steps they've taken to promote trust and cooperation with their community members. I've dealt with those departments many, MANY times, and they have always been courteous and respectful to me. Twelve years ago, I saw a man going through the worst day of his life and I watched a police officer calmly talk to him and convince him that the actions he was taking were only going to make things worse and he should calm down and see how things looked in the morning. That officer saved that man's life. Three years later, in another part of town, I saw a police officer draw his service weapon and shoot a kid for flipping him the finger. The officer claimed the kid had pulled a knife on him and threatened to kill him; I reported the officer, but since I didn't have camera footage the department ignored me, and that officer later called my phone and told me that if he ever saw me on his beat again there would "might be another unsolved shooting in the ghetto."
These are the two extremes that set the parameters of this debate, while most police conduct falls somewhere in the middle. These are both things that happen in this country, in every city,
every day. We have a choice of which one of these things we want more of and which one of these things we want less. Police officers prefer that their authority remain unchallenged, that their dominance at the top of the fucked up social food chain that is the ghetto remain absolute.
But black lives matter more than a police officer's preference.
Since most suspects are not violently subdued in the first place...
... then deescalation is always an option. You have no reason to argue against it anymore; you've just confessed that it actually works MOST of the time anyway, and by extension you've confessed that the majority of the people the police interact with are not violent criminals or even prone to violence.
So promoting deescalation tactics doesn't actually cost the cops anything except, occasionally, their pride.
The cops aren't above the law.
Then they should be prosecuted when they shoot unarmed people in public, just like anyone else.