The shooting of someone who turned and pointed a gun at police is wrong... because the Constitution and Bill of Rights???
The Constitution and Bill of Rights are the foundation of our country and justice system. It's purpose is to protect our liberties and rights. This means that our rights should not be cavalierly dismissed.
I place an extreme importance and value on the lives of citizens. Any free society should. This means that in order to take the life of a citizen you need extraordinary circumstances. Imo, this incident "barely" qualifies and it qualifies more so by technicality than by actual danger.
"...do not think the officer should have shot him...technically his life was in danger..."
Should the officer have given him a flower or paid off his student loans?
With his life in danger, a gun being pointed at him, what should he have done?
You keep saying "who turned and pointed a gun at police" with the inference that the police were in real danger. On a scale of 1 to 10, 1 being no danger at all and 10 being holding a bucket of nitro-glycerin while listening to loud rap music, the cops were at a 2, maybe a 3 at best.
Look, given this situation, even if the suspect actually "Tried" to shoot the police odds are good he would not have hit them. The suspect was fleeing, trying to get away, so the police were not in overt imminent threat type danger. Sure, the situation is tense, and there is definitely potential for things to go wrong, but this was not a "him or me I need to draw down" gunfight at the OK Corral no matter how bad you are trying to paint it that way.
As a nation, we've come to accept a certain amount of group-think in regards to police shootings. If police are in "any" sort of danger whatsoever then we've bought into the notion that it is okay for them to kill citizens.
Yes, their jobs are dangerous, but that should not be a license to kill.
Unfortunate that a life has ended, yes. But it's ridiculous that an ethnic community would be upset about how this played out.
It isn't ridiculous.
I can link you to dozens of whites with guns threatening officers and yet said white person doesn't get shot and killed.
So there is this perception backed by hard mathematical data that says if you are black or brown and get into a conflict with police, your odds of being killed are way higher than if you would be white in that exact same situation.
Similarly, the community places a lot of value on the lives of the citizenry and feels that killing citizens for breaking the law is extreme and should require more burden than what is currently acceptable.
Breaking the law in this country just shouldn't be a death sentence, the police should make every effort to protect and serve and that includes the criminals as well.
He had an open bottle of gin, his BAC was two times the legal limit, was firing in the air and at the ground, took off running and pointed a gun at the police.
Are we going to go back in time and use information we couldn't have possibly known at the moment of the incident.
I saw the video once, when police arrived they have no idea what his Blood Alcohol level is. They have no idea whether he has a permit for that gun or not. What we do know is that he is a citizen of the United States and is presumed innocent until proven guilty. Obviously, the guy is an idiot and ran and made the situation worse...
Look, I really don't think you get my point. Your point is simple. He broke the law, he ran from cops, he endangered their lives, he was shot, case close.
My point is that breaking the law shouldn't be a death sentence, the cops were in danger, yes, but they weren't in "Shoot out at the OK Corral" level of danger. It was enough danger to reach the "threshold" to use lethal force but IMO just barely. The suspect did NOT shoot at the cops. Pointing a gun while running is not shooting. Similarly pointing a gun while running and turning backwards is not as dangerous as you try to make it sound. But it is dangerous "enough" that the officers lives were at risk thus I do reluctantly stand by their decision to use lethal force.
The entirety of your post is riddled with contradictions and omissions.
Seriously, you really can't believe all these things you are saying?
It seems that way to you because you are trying to make a complex subject simple.
I'm trying to balance the very complex socio-political ramifications of Enforcing the Law in a free society in which owning guns is 100% legal and the citizenry is "supposed" to have Rights. Similarly, said Citizenry is "supposed" to be considered innocent until proven guilty... But at the same time the police officers do have a right to protect their own lives. However, they also have a Constitutional duty to uphold the Constitution and protect the lives of the citizenry.
So it may appear that I'm waffling back and forth... but I'm not. I just realize all the parameters and I refuse to make this a simple "he broke the law so he gets what he gets" type of argument. Life is more complex than that...
or it least it should be.