I'll go against my usual political grain here and say that I think Reardon made the right choice. Imagine that's your daughter who is pushed against a car and has an assailant coming at her with a knife. If you cry genuine tears over what happened, I'm okay with that, but I don't want to see politicians crying crocodile tears over a girl who wyas, let's be honest here, engaged in extreme and life-threatening violence. This incident looks in no way to be equivalent to George Floyd or Daunte Wright or others who died wrongly.
Crocodile tears for child who is dead?
It’s not the equivalence it’s the ubiquity.
Our communities are over policed and under protected.
This was an instance of the proverbial split second decision so I can see giving Reardon the benefit of the doubt pending investigation.
It's a dangerous and irresponsible game to immediately start playing politics with a dead kid who made a clearly bad choice. Worse is to begin elevating the discussion beyond where it should be at this juncture.
But that is also the case for the shooting in Ohio. That dude is likely alive, if he cooperates with the arrest and lets a lawyer get him out of jail.
Many of the country's communities
are under-protected, but that is at least partly because those same communities often will not cooperate with the police in helping to protect the people from others within their community.
Camden, NJ reorganized its police force completely, and crime dropped significantly. But the community has many members who are upset with the amount of electronic surveillance there is, now.
I find that a bit ironic given that the cameras on cellphones are creating accountability for the police.
I find it would well serve
all communities, if it is legal to do so, to require the police and firefighters to live within that community. That's a really hard thing to require, but if you live in a place you should want to protect it. If you are someone's neighbor, they are less likely to see you as an outsider. And that would create circumstances where an officer isn't pulling up to a house not knowing anything about who lives there.