sleeper;1746094 wrote:I would bet the vast majority of these cases are not people defying cops orders based on their constitutional rights but because they are ignorant trash.
No argument here, but laws regarding personal safety and personal protection are typically only necessary during exceptional circumstances, and not normative ones.
sleeper;1746094 wrote:The reason cops need full authority is because they do not have perfect information and need to feel safe in order to do their job correctly.
I certainly don't think so. They have the right to give orders based on perceived threats as it is, but one doesn't need complete and unbridled authority in the moment in order to feel safe, or even BE safe.
sleeper;1746094 wrote:Don't believe me? Look at the cop who got pistol whipped because he was afraid to enact full control over the situation and be blasted on social media for it.
He was afraid to appropriately control the situation. An officer has the ability to give orders for the purpose of safety, and this guy didn't do it.
I understand his fear. There have been far too many incidents where police have been vilified in recent months. Now, maybe those police deserved it. Maybe they didn't. But whether or not they did, it's easy to see how this man would be conflicted.
However, you still have to make a quick value judgment ANY time you would use force, and frankly, an officer SHOULD have to evaluate the consequences of his actions like anyone else does.
sleeper;1746094 wrote:The reality is this; if a cop is infringing your rights, you deal with it after the fact and you go hard and heavy.
At that point, what you're saying is that those things aren't really "rights." You get compensated for them, but you have no "right" to refuse to have them infringed. Hence, they're no longer rights at all. Just some unfortunate lottery.
sleeper;1746094 wrote:During the actual stop, you follow lawful orders and "resist" only if it reaches the point of absolute insanity.
As Glory pointed out, there is a distinction to be made between resistance and failure to comply. Resistance, as you say, should indeed only come about in the rarest of circumstances. However, failure to comply if the request or command violates my rights shouldn't come with the threat of violence. Ever.