Z Buck McFate
Pepperidge Farm remembers.
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Expounding on the "big ships are sinking the smaller ships and getting the smaller ships to blame it on someone else" tangent:


Paywall. Also - WaPo Opinions. But most people will never read beyond the headline either.
Member of conservative group ran over by leftist following vigil
Looks like a concussion and a brain bleed, which is no joke. I wonder why nobody considers this news.
Because you're posting a link to an extreme far-right shit site whose factual reporting rating is "mixed," at best, because of failing fact-checks. Do you think you can just post shit websites and expect people to take it seriously? Forget it. And the site that first website references, is also is an extreme far-right shit site whose factual rating is even worse than the first one - their factual rating is "low." That means it's not remotely unusual for propaganda and fake news to be posted.
Police shoot 13-year-old boy with autism
saw story on news last night locally here but this breaks my heart and reminds me why I wouldn't call anyone to handle one of my little siblings meltdowns... Brayden gets very violent and he has absolutely no sense of authority or anything really with his autism.
Bray is 15, my little sister who is also autistic is 13. breaks my heart... We need something better, if nothing else, for them.
I remember back when I worked for HUD taking care of government housing, I was on call one night and had to go and help with a police standoff. You'd think ISIS was holed up in an apartment there- they had the swat truck out, maps of the area drawn on the side of it in white board marker, an entire circus of various law enforcements. For what? The NICEST gen-x era hippie guy- the type of rotund bearded guy to collect books and ornamental sword figurines- who happened to be schizophrenic- was off his meds and having a freak out episode in the hallway. When a cop showed up he got spooked and ran inside his apartment. The cop wanted to talk to him instead. That's it. Ended many hours later with him getting thrown down a flight of stairs and arrested for assaulting an officer after being tricked into opening his door.
Same story again and again- someone calls the cops to help someone, cops show up and fuck them over instead. Because fucking someone over is all cops know. In a domestic dispute they show up to fuck over whoever seems like the lesser victim by arresting them. But when they show up to deal with someone who is victimizing themselves with mental illness, that's the only person available to them to fuck over, so that's how it usually plays out.
Plus law enforcement is kind of a mental illness all it's own. They have a lot in common with the autistic- too much really- so much that almost inheritly clash. Cops have their humanity deliberately deprogrammed for the sake of objectivity- since we don't want the spectre of "good ol boy" cops playing favorites with their buddies.
So how do we balance the necessary aspects of objectivity with the necessary aspects of human connection? It's not so easily solved.
I really like the idea of adding mental health professionals to first responder teams, as discussed earlier. We closed asylums and started putting people with mental illnesses alone with their meds in state housing, but we never added the proverbial asylum warden with a sedative syringe to the first responder list in these "new asylum" housing projects. Instead we just send cops with tasers. I feel like obvious issues with mental health and the system could get wide bipartisan support if anyone was interested in bipartisanship anymore.ugh that story just breaks my heart. That kind of stuff is just gut wrenching... It sadly is not an easy fix and I wish I had answers...
You didn't seem so keen on it when I made the suggestion earlier in the thread. Glad you came round. Oh, and about substituing vs. adding money: more money would be great, but even without, we can probably spend what we have to better effect. Say police go on 100 calls during a week, and 15 of them would better be handled by mental health professionals. If we pay MH people to go on those calls instead of cops, we get a better result for the same/similar money, unless you think MH counselors are much more expensive than cops. The problems cops sometimes cause in these situations are a needless drain on community resources, so it may also be a case of penny wise and pound foolish.I really like the idea of adding mental health professionals to first responder teams, as discussed earlier. We closed asylums and started putting people with mental illnesses alone with their meds in state housing, but we never added the proverbial asylum warden with a sedative syringe to the first responder list in these "new asylum" housing projects. Instead we just send cops with tasers. I feel like obvious issues with mental health and the system could get wide bipartisan support if anyone was interested in bipartisanship anymore.
Come around? My position is the same, and I still find your suggestion regarding it a poor one. Augmentation over substitution. Good cop bad cop. One counselor one cop, with checks and balances on each, as a team. It would cost more money, but unlike most of the ridiculous pork that the left wants to throw money at, this is a situation I wouldn't mind contributing some tax dollars to- and I'm sure many other people on the right would agree. Initially I thought it would be too expensive, but I'm confident we can find enough less necessary spending elsewhere to slash.You didn't seem so keen on it when I made the suggestion earlier in the thread. Glad you came round. Oh, and about substituing vs. adding money: more money would be great, but even without, we can probably spend what we have to better effect. Say police go on 100 calls during a week, and 15 of them would better be handled by mental health professionals. If we pay MH people to go on those calls instead of cops, we get a better result for the same/similar money, unless you think MH counselors are much more expensive than cops. The problems cops sometimes cause in these situations are a needless drain on community resources, so it may also be a case of penny wise and pound foolish.
[MENTION=20035]anticlimatic[/MENTION]
You constantly change all of your positions to whatever pushes peoples buttons and then you accuse them of not being polite. You do it constantly. It's your main point of consistency is your inconsistency.
DHS Homeland Threat Assessment draft report: Homeland Threats 8 19 2020 Draft
Mentioned among primary anticipated threats to our country in 2021: white supremacist terrorist cells. (And foreign sabotage to our democracy, primarily Russian, but that's a different thread).
Absolutely no mention of Antifa.
I see you missed the highlighted. I bet most folks would support additional spending to augment police with mental health professionals, as long as it is available. No need to let the perfect be the enemy of the good here, though. As I explained, we can substitute mental health responders when that is appropriate, reducing the workoad on cops. Often cops work with partners, so a team of one cop and one MH responder would go instead of 2 cops. The incident just related involved an entire SWAT team if I read correctly, a much larger expense, wasted on the wrong sort of incident. If that is how police departments customarily respond to incidents, it's no wonder funding is short.Come around? My position is the same, and I still find your suggestion regarding it a poor one. Augmentation over substitution. Good cop bad cop. One counselor one cop, with checks and balances on each, as a team. It would cost more money, but unlike most of the ridiculous pork that the left wants to throw money at, this is a situation I wouldn't mind contributing some tax dollars to- and I'm sure many other people on the right would agree. Initially I thought it would be too expensive, but I'm confident we can find enough less necessary spending elsewhere to slash.You didn't seem so keen on it when I made the suggestion earlier in the thread. Glad you came round. Oh, and about substituing vs. adding money: more money would be great, but even without, we can probably spend what we have to better effect. Say police go on 100 calls during a week, and 15 of them would better be handled by mental health professionals. If we pay MH people to go on those calls instead of cops, we get a better result for the same/similar money, unless you think MH counselors are much more expensive than cops. The problems cops sometimes cause in these situations are a needless drain on community resources, so it may also be a case of penny wise and pound foolish.
Just like we don't want to send a cop to a mostly harmless mentally ill person's house to beat him up, we don't want to send a compassionate social worker to a violet psychopath's house. More often than not, on a first-response what-am-I-getting-into basis, you need all the tools in your toolbox on arrival.
Comments about the way someone is addressing the topic are fair game, especially if it speaks to the effect of someone's manner or methods on the overall discussion. If that tangent persists for more than a couple posts, it should be split off.Disagree. Stay on topic.
I see you missed the highlighted. I bet most folks would support additional spending to augment police with mental health professionals, as long as it is available. No need to let the perfect be the enemy of the good here, though. As I explained, we can substitute mental health responders when that is appropriate, reducing the workoad on cops. Often cops work with partners, so a team of one cop and one MH responder would go instead of 2 cops. The incident just related involved an entire SWAT team if I read correctly, a much larger expense, wasted on the wrong sort of incident. If that is how police departments customarily respond to incidents, it's no wonder funding is short.
Comments about the way someone is addressing the topic are fair game, especially if it speaks to the effect of someone's manner or methods on the overall discussion. If that tangent persists for more than a couple posts, it should be split off.