2. Swanson, C. S., Territo, L., & Taylor, R. W. (2012). Police administration, structures, processes, and behavior. (8th ed.). Upper Saddle River,NJ: Prentice Hall.…
Racism cuts across a myriad of social aspects as Carlton Reeves puts it, "hate comes in all shapes, sizes, and colors and from this case, we know it comes from different sexes and ages” (Reeves, 2015). During his arguments, Reeves adds details that allow the audience to feel emotional. For instance, he places a small detail about how Anderson was killed 4 days before his birthday, which makes the reader feel sensitive about the incident. Funny enough, the brutality of Anderson was conducted by the people who we expect should fight it in the society. All the three are full-blown youths and of the new generation. Deryl Paul is 22, John Rice is 21, and Wade Butler is 23. After strangling him to death, they also ran a truck over him and walked away chanting slogans of white power. Reeves finishes by giving his verdict. A verdict that is neither based on racism nor personal ego, a verdict that guarantees justice to the oppressor and the oppressed in equal magnitudes. Above all, a verdict that goes beyond the rule of law to express its emotional appeal with the three murderers by wishing them that they find peace. Above all, the sensitivity of the critical humanity issue it touches on and the prerequisite conditions leading to the unfolding of events. All these evoke emotions of sympathy towards the slain men and the black fraternity as well. Reeves’s emotional speech goes further to wish Anderson's mother well. The three murderers he wishes that they will soon find justice. This choice of words appeals to the reader’s…
La Haine (Hate) with its black & white, rough camera work; conveys a very serious theme. The film's opening consists of a montage of news footage depicting severe rioting, sets a very confrontational tone between the system and those who defy it. La Haine tells of just a story. After a teen is brutally beaten by the police, a suburb of Paris finds its self littered with over-turned cars blood, and broken glass of smashed windows and Molotov Cocktails. Three teens (Vinz, Hubert, and Saïd), who knew the boy that was beaten (now in the hospital) find themselves seeking revenge, leave their projects behind and travel to the capital. Vinz, seeks pure revenge in simply killing a police officer in retaliation. Hubert on the other hand believes that murdering a cop in return will do little to help their situation as it will most likely either intensify the rioting and and tension between the police and the residents of the projects or will just land themselves in prison. Saïd however finds himself struggling with the extremely complicated ethical dilemma at hand and has much less of a defined position. Saïd, contemplating both vinz's and…
The more we are exposed to violence the less we take it seriously because of what is seen in movies, read in books, and accessed on social media. According to Barbara Osborn “TV and film criminals are 100% bad and they have no families…they deserve no sympathy and they get what they deserve”. So it says that as the story unfolds, outbreaks of violence against people and property make sure that viewers stay in their seats which means they take this as entertainment and not as a serious view. The movie producers want you to stay there and watch the violence instead of you resolving a problem with it if you do have to deal with the situation. It also indicated that no one mourns their death which means they want you to not start cry about it when it’s happening to you. It says “their lives are unimportant” so if someone that you care about dies it’s not important. They shouldn’t say someone dying is unimportant because people matter.…
Martin Luther King, Jr. once said “Violence is immoral because it thrives on hatred rather than love. It destroys community and makes brotherhood impossible. It leaves society in monologue rather than dialogue. Violence ends by defeating itself.” Twenty-five years after Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his Nobel Lecture, Brent Staples wrote “A Brother’s Murder” describing the circumstances of growing up in a heavily poor, heavily black neighborhood (Staples 505). The acts of violence in the small neighborhood in Chester, Pennsylvania are not related to the acts of racism around “their hood.” The narrator describes how one could get stuck in the rubble of the violent drama, like his brother Blake, and how one can avoid it completely, like the narrator did. Staples elaborates on the conditions in which these young males were being killed, their race and gender, and he explains how he avoids it entirely. THESIS??…
In The American Scholar: Survival Skills at a School in L.A., kids are exposed to violence, and death. These kids are becoming numb to such acts of violence and know no different. When most people think of Los Angeles, they think of Hollywood, the glitz and glamour of celebrities, not the violence that surrounds the area and threatens the kids and young adults, creating an upsetting situation because kids experience death as a part of their lives. Los Angeles appears as make-believe land to many people, where all act as positive and happy all the time; however that is not the case. Furthermore death creates numb kids and has the potential to make them violent criminals as well. Anne Beatty’s effective ethos brings attention to the violence…
“La Haine”, a 93 minute film regarding about three adolescents(Vincent Cassel, Hubert Kounde, and Said Taghmaoui) who struggle to cope in a poverty-stricken environment in which hatred and violence are part of everyday life. Even the title “La Haine” which is a French word, translated to 'The Hatred' suggests what the film is about. Based on a true event, “La Haine” is inspired by a real event where a young man was murdered while being questioned at a Parisian Police station. In exploring racism in the Paris suburbs, this film has a direct contrast with more typical French films, such as Amelie(2001) which presents a far more romantic and idyllic vision of French life. The beginning of La 'Haine' shows the beating of a Parisian in comparison to the beginning of Malcolm X which in the beginning, shows the beating of Rodney King and these two have a direct comparison as they both represent inequality as those people being beaten up had done no crime or malignant deed to deserve the beatings. “La Haine” has such a huge impact as the film remakes how the riots in the outskirts of Paris were created and how the three adolescents from different ethnic backgrounds, where Vinz is Jewish, Said is Arab and Hubert is African, cope with ongoing riots. The director(Mathieu Kassovitz) inspiration was the riots of LA and the riots in Paris and how the riots had similar effects.…
With some believing it is the courts job, and some people believing it is the job of the police. This paper will examine in detail whom the primary…
The public’s confidence in the police is a very important aspect of society and the law. Police personnel need the citizen’s confidence so they can perform their duties effectively. If the public is seeing…
The reckless violence and the strong hate shows us how twisted our modern society is and how a normal family in a suburban town can be torn apart so easy just by hate.…
When police officers first came into being, it was their responsibility to provide protection to all of the community and property that existed within their jurisdiction. However, in today’s society, public and private police are seen working hand-in-hand on a regular basis at both public and private functions (Nova).…
Police officers are around to keep us safe and are viewed as individuals who not only follow the law but ensure that others do the same. Though this is the usual case, not always do our police officers practice these ideas. Problems amongst the police force have been around since prohibition and are only increasing in our dangerous and corrupted society. Corruption, on-the-job dangers, and the use of deadly force are all issues facing the police departments today.…
The police personnel carrying out the arrest and handling the interrogation of the arrestee should bear accurate, visible and clear identification and name tags with their designations. The particulars of all such police personnel who handle interrogation of the arrestee must be recorded in a register…
* The police: the body which seeks to enforce the law and protect the public…