TBF if I was a cop, just been assaulted, then had a taser fired at him, I would shoot him as well, no matter what the colour
Exactly the reason why you and others like you shouldn’t be on the force. Too many just like that, therefore the problems we have. Simples really.
But what are you giving back. You still have the land, while the few Native Americans not systematically killed have very little.
Yes social justice for all, not just blacks , there is another massive social injustice I know of as well, but I don't suppose you will want to go there either, it's one where lots of foreign colonialists went to a country, stole the country, and now kill the Natives for throwing stones,maybe another day ay.
Chase Legleitner was 19 when he robbed three men in a 2008 drug deal. Lamar Lloyd was 21 when he stuck up a Pizza Hut and gas station the following year. Both men pleaded no contest to two counts of armed robbery. They went before the same judge, in the same courthouse. Each had a single misdemeanor on his record. They tallied the exact same points on the scoresheets used to determine criminal punishments in Florida. But their sentences could not have been more different. Legleitner spent less than two years in county jail. He is now free to golf and fish on the weekends. Lloyd got 26 years in prison. He will be 47 upon his release in 2034. That disparity is not unusual in the courtroom of Judge Sherwood “Chip” Bauer Jr. Since taking the bench a decade ago, Bauer has been tougher on those with a darker complexion, often sentencing blacks to two or three times longer than white defendants who committed the same crimes. Or in the case of Lloyd and Legleitner, 13 times longer.” There are factors that come into play that explain some nuances between the cases. But less than 2 years versus 26 years? WOW!!!
Officer Rolfe seems like a stand up guy: https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.th...ce-officer-cover-up-accusations-garrett-rolfe
Shocker! Lovely chap! “Rolfe was the subject of four citizen’s complaints during his six years on the force, none of which were sustained by police. The department disciplined him for three other incidents, including once for “use of force” involving a firearm, a year after the Harris shooting. In a letter to (Judge) Downs sent from an Atlanta jail, Harris (Suspect) said the public would not be safe as long as Rolfe and the other officers who shot him continued to patrol the city.”