There are a bevy of "issues" in regards to the subject of this thread, well beyond the ones listed here. Are they the only ones you are interested in discussing? I am interested in additional issues, and interested in persuading you to be interested in them as well. Pivoting to something else isn't "spin" (which claims one thing is really a different thing), it's just the natural progression of discourse. If I'm unintentionally getting ahead of ourselves, I can back up. In this case, I'll start with these per your request.
merits of including medical/psychiatric first responders
Initially I addressed this here:
Like I said your (transcribed) solution (that someone else came up with and trademarked) is great
But to further expound, I think that if money were no issue and we could pair first response teams with someone psychiatric/medically trained (like a counselor and a dedicated EMT) then George Floyd's death probably wouldn't have happened. It could potentially solve a lot of the problems that the George Floyd Protesters are identifying. Training existing officers to be partial counslers/EMTs wouldn't go amiss either.
nature of violence requiring police/community response
I'm not sure exactly how you mean this, so you will have to elaborate. If I were taking a stab, I'd guess it was partially in reference to this:
A good example of the first is failing to acknowledge that the article you posted to support your assertion that violent crime is up, stated exactly the opposite, with murder the exception.
Which contrary to this, I did acknowledge here:
The drop in robberies and burglaries is attributed to people being in their houses most of the time and not walking down proverbial dark alleys (cutting off the supply of available places to burgle, and people to rob).
and (speculatively) attributes the murder spike to greater poverty, mental illness exacerbated by being forced to shelter in place, tensions with police, and youth violence brought on by closing schools prematurely and taking most structural public institutions away from them, leaving them vulnerable to getting drawn into gang culture.
These are all things police have to bear the brunt of in response. "Tensions with police" is just that- a two way hostile 'air' that provides the emotional fuel for outbursts in either direction, which creates a net positive of violence. How do we eliminate that tension? How do we ensure that unarmed first response units are kept as safe as they are expected to keep suspects?
I mean it seems pretty obvious to me that locking people inside their homes, preventing many of them from working, and cutting many of them off from social support groups is going to have a mental health toll that is bound to push people over an edge they were already standing on anyhow. I don't think I need to dig up sources on this one, though I'm sure I could. How this can translate into anger and violent crime should also be self evident. However, the data is a lagging indicator, and most of this mess is currently in the "being sorted out" phase, so we are pioneers of speculation for the moment.
Does this sufficiently address the aspects of this situation that you want to address? Might I raise one of my own? Incidentally, it's the same point that I began this entire discussion on:
I don't see where else they can get the money to make it work.
to which you responded:
I didn't specify a way to implement this. If I were to do so, it would involve substitution, not augmentation.
In other words, defund the police- substitute that funding with medics/counselors. To which I responded:
Skyrocketing violet crime says plenty about what happens when you take money away from police departments- enough I wager to probably take it off the table as a long term source of funding for better first response units. My question is where the money is going to come from. Like I said your solution is great if the logistics can be worked out, but if they can't it's useless.
I can back up the assertion that a greater police presence drives down violent crime per data acquired via the old terror alert system- which discovered that during high alert moments, when officers were dispatched across cities, violent crime dropped off significantly. Your response:
Is violent crime skyrocketing? If it is, that suggests that current funding allocation is not appropriate to the need.
Seems to indicate, per the data that I just mentioned, that the need is currently a greater police presence in these areas of spiking violent crime. I thought this to be common sense, but maybe I was wrong. Do you have some other data on how to curb murder rates in american cities that I'm unaware?
4 Theories About Why Homicides Are Spiking in U.S. Cities | Cities | US News
Theory No. 1: Changes in police activity
The increase in violent crime could be linked to how the pandemic has impacted policing, Rosenfeld says. He notes that some of the main functions that police officers perform when out on patrol include monitoring buildings, checking vehicles and conducting interviews with people on the street or with business owners.
"Those activities are sharply curtailed when officers are wearing masks, stay in their vehicles and try to maintain social distance," Rosenfeld says. "And those are the kinds of so-called proactive activities that research has shown can reduce crime."
Reestablishing trust with Police could also help:
Theory No. 2: Communities are pulling back from the police
It's also possible that the spike in violent crime could be attributed to communities, especially disadvantaged communities of color, pulling themselves back from the police "due to breached trust and lost confidence," he says. Rosenfeld notes the similarities he's seen in his analysis between the recent spike in homicides and the increase found in 2015 and 2016 in the aftermath of protests associated with police brutality in places such as Ferguson, Missouri, and Baltimore.
"When people are alienated from the police – in my business, we call this when the police are experiencing diminished legitimacy," he says, "then people are less willing to call the police when they know of a crime, less willing to cooperate with the police or when they're asked to cooperate in an investigation, and more likely, then, to take matters into their own hands when disputes arise."
Which brings me back to the money, and our core argument of augmentation vs substitution.
Why would you want to substitute police officers, rather than augment them, when the data indicates that the opposite is called for?
How does one reconcile the demands of the protesters to substitute the police, as a means to boost police trust and bring down crime, with evidence and current reality on the ground, that the opposite of that is also what helps to bring down crime?
On this point-
my point- you've offered nothing except Coriolitudes.