Pipeline 1010
Golden Member
Leaving no room for error would make sure we didn't have cops or employees in general anywhere.
This is textbook straw-man logical falacy. Nobody here said that the cops should have no room for error. To argue that this is people's problem with what happened is dishonest. Do you understand how to differentiate between small errors that don't really hurt anybody and colossal fuck-ups that directly cause death? Does there truly lie nothing inbetween?
People screw up on their jobs - this includes cops - and like most businesses and places of employment - people get a couple times of screwing up - now if this cop regularly screws up - sure - he should be fired... but for a one time screw up (if it were) on an exemplary record - that likely didn't result in his death (see my previous comments on this) - I don't see why he should be fired.
This depends on how BADLY you screw up. If I write a bad line of software that causes an error message to pop up on our web page on certain infrequent cases, I can see being given a chance to fix it and not getting fired. If I sexually harass a coworker, or if I crash our entire site for a week, I can rightfully expect to pack my gear and GTFO. Doesn't killing someone to death with a well-known banned technique seem like the extreme end of a monumental screw up? How many times does your department allow you to choke hold somebody to death before they fire you?