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Culture War Roundup for the week of November 13, 2023

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hypocrisy with regards to crime.

Hypocrisy in using deadly force for a pure property crime?

The government ought not be able to do things any other citizen can do. If it's good to shoot people breaking into cars, anyone should be empowered to do it, and we should reward them when they do that. If it's bad then no one should be able to do it (from the President to the lowest peon).

This is absurd. Should any citizen take upon himself to become their own policemen and start 'arresting' under threat of force everyone they suspect of committing a crime?

Yes chad.jpg.

In my ideal world victims would apply enough force to end crimes as they occur.

In my ideal world victims would apply enough force to end crimes as they occur.

Not what I said. The state/police doesn't just attempt to stop crimes in progress, they arrest suspects after the fact, obviously, mostly when no agent of the state was present at the time of the crime. Should private citizens go round trying to do that as well?

Yes.

No and neither should police, so the point still stands

I just had a horrible “everyone loses” vision of the future where everyone is permitted to conceal carry and kill criminals but they’re required to wear body cameras while in public.

but they’re required to wear body cameras while in public.

Not only is everyone already wearing a body camera in public, but one of the reasons they upgrade to new models is for the better and better cameras installed thereon.

The government is already known to seize any footage taken with such a camera without a warrant, too.

There is a big difference between a smart phone (video on <1% of the time and at your complete discretion) and a legally mandated, always-on body cam.

eh, police bodycameras aren't always on.

I don't know about you, but if any of my footage is ever seized, they'll mostly get a great view of the inside of my pocket, or rarely my feet and the ground immediately in front of me. Maybe my face with the ceiling in the background. That is assuming secret 24/7 camera feed.

"No, yer Honor, I wasn't trying to cause trouble. I just really thought it was important for my doctor to have 24/7 live-feed to the inside of my colon. Honest."

Dashcams have been normalized—why not bodycams? As long as the government can't seize the footage without a warrant, I see no downside.

Remember Glassholes? People have an expectation of "privacy in public" in the way that normal humans aren't perfect memorization machines who could produce exact images of your face complete with biometric identification on command. So when you're recording random dudes it's always very SUS. If we had body cam always with you but only ON when shit goes down, then maybe people would be ok with that.

But this body cam would need a bright hardware led that can't be disabled while the cam is actively recording.

I…don’t remember glassholes, and my experience with Internet shock videos makes me reluctant to search for it.

What was it?

A pejorative term for Google Glass users, particularly those who wore them to public and shared private spaces.

Ha. I remember seeing this comic at the time, but forgot the name.

My first thought was a device like a PiHole, but for ruining video instead of preempting advertising.

I can see many benefits to willingly wearing body cams. Much less confusion around facts of any legal cases, no more false accusations of any kind, and protection against lies from police or witnesses. There are plenty of studies that support the idea that people behave better when they know they are being watched.

But a society where everything you do or say is recorded isn't one I'd like to live in. In the US, there are many state that require two party consent for something to be recorded, I'm sure one could find plenty of strong arguments for why that is the case.

You could argue we already reached this point, certainly nearly anything you do online is recorded, and in public there is no shortage of cameras and recording devices, but I think even just having it be something we can pretend to ignore allows a level of social ease. Once we reach the point of consciously wearing body cams, the cats out of the bag. Now everything you say and do is recorded. Maybe you personally wouldn't be impacted, but I think we're trading off security in exchange for social cohesion. Do you feel more safe in an area that has a million cameras and security forces, or in an suburban town/city that has no cameras because they don't need it. I think there's a reason why there are gated communities, where once you get past the gate you don't see any signs of security, because people don't want to feel like they live in an area they are constantly supervised.

Let's not forget, governments can change, just because the government now might be benevolent and not forcefully seize footages without warrants doesn't that they won't change the process for getting a warrant, or even ignore protocols all together.

Then there's the matter of security on these devices, cameras get hacked all the time and there are people that willingly look for people in embarrassing or sexual situations to share to the greater world.

A dashcam is mostly restricted to the realm of driving and I can accept that. A bodycam is on you always.

I actually agree. It's illegitimate for a group to do something that is not legitimate for an individual but as AshLael notes, that's a rare take.

Wild take. So a random dude should be able to declare war? Imprison con artists? Print money?

Yep, a nation of true sovereigns.

That sounds like an oxymoron.

This is kind of how policing was meant to be historically in the UK as I understand it. Police were meant to be just citizens that were being paid to do a job but having no special powers. Even now I think citizens can bring private criminal prosecutions to court. The Peelian principles (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peelian_principles) article on Wikipedia has some of the background on this. Also, due to historical fears UK police are generally unarmed except for special units. However, I guess as time has gone on the UK has drifted from policing from consent to a more policing by the state model.

In doing so while the general state of DC law is much less permissive. A private citizen is definitely not allowed to do this.

I don’t think it’s actually a gotcha, since there is always a gulf between private and state violence. But I suspect it’s got the right optics, the right “gosh look how bad things have gotten,” to make the rounds.

I'd... not want to place bets on the state of the law, here. @Gdanning is probably more familiar with the matter than I am, but at least in gunnie circles the reference for law enforcement is Tennessee v Garner, and while it's a muddled mess of Totality of The Circumstances, the federal DoJ rules are not very permissive.

Even Tennessee v Garner merely establishes the boundaries for a Fourth Amendment violation; the limits for criminal liability, or for ordinary civil liability for assault/battery or wrongful death, can be very different. As of course can department regs, as you mention.

Oh. I’m not batting terribly well today, am I?

Knowing nothing else about this particular incident, my first thought was car bombs. I’d expect defense of (unoccupied) property to be important for security.

The DHS guidelines look very similar to those. Though the USSS is apparently unique in being authorized to disable vehicles! Not that it matters here.

But yes, given that provision against shooting fleeting suspects…well, this could be messy.

Nobody got shot, and no one's going to come forward with a civil lawsuit so they can get slapped with a bunch of criminal charges, so I don't think it's going to go anywhere far enough to be messy. It's just really embarrassing.