And yes, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, black offenders committed 52 per cent of homicides recorded in the data between 1980 and 2008.
You think the two are related?
Interesting read here: http://www.newsweek.com/racial-makeup-police-departments-331130
What I find interesting is the media considers this the hot topic and it isn't even close to what will really kill you, no matter what your race, sex, or age is. I know many don't consider Abortion a death, so you can skip the top one if you feel that way.
Shouldn't we be seeing front page news on medical errors(my sister died because of this) or Tobacco, or Drunk driving, Poisoning, or any number of ways people die that easily outnumber the 986 people that police shot in 986(https://www.washingtonpost.com/nati...c7a404-b3c5-11e5-a76a-0b5145e8679a_story.html).
Think a nurse is ever charged with first degree manslaughter for her mistake? 130 times as likely to happen as a police shooting. Any charges for corporate america regarding cigarettes? 180 times as likely to happen. Think about that. Also remember you are almost as likely to be killed by your spouse as you are to be shot by a cop. See what happens when soccer rules your life.
Death through June 2016
Abortion: 571596
Heart Disease: 321571
Cancer: 309716
Tobacco: 183202
Obesity: 160695
Medical Errors: 131620
Stroke: 69671
Lower Respiratory Disease: 74821
Accident (unintentional): 71215
Hospital Associated Infection: 51820
Alcohol: 52344
Diabetes: 40037
Alzheimer's Disease: 48963
Influenza/Pneumonia: 28908
Kidney Failure: 22383
Blood Infection: 17516
Suicide: 22389
Drunk Driving: 17696
Unintentional Poisoning: 16623
All Drug Abuse: 13089
Homicide: 8793
Prescription Drug Overdose: 7852
Murder by gun: 6016
Texting while Driving: 3135
Pedestrian: 2617
Drowning: 2049
Fire Related: 1832
Malnutrition: 1451
Domestic Violence: 764
Smoking in Bed: 408
Falling out of Bed: 313
Killed by Falling Tree: 78
Struck by Lightning: 43
Mass Shooting * Domestic:15
Radical Islamic Terrorism: 49
I get where you are coming from, but these are government actors. At the very least, our government shouldn't be killing people. We control government's behavior. We try sometimes, but we don't always control private behavior (nor should we always control private behavior).
You are also limiting the issue to deaths. This goes broadly to how police (our government) are treating people and covering up abuse. It's police unions, kind of like teacher's unions, defending the worst of the worst under some bogus slippery slope argument. Take the guy shot in NC. He was supposedly stopped because he was carrying a gun. But it's legal in NC to openly carry a gun, and it's illegal to stop and frisk a person on that basis (Charlotte police lost that court battle a couple of years ago). So why were Charlotte police stopping him in the first place? This stuff goes on all the time - and it's not limited just to African Americans.
BTW - I don't think this was an accident.
In fact, it's hardly ever an accident when someone points a gun and shoots someone dead. If these are "accidents," maybe Kapernick and others are correct in calling for more extensive training of police officers.