SFPD Puts Rape Victims' DNA Into Database Used To Find Criminals, DA Alleges (arstechnica.com) 132
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The San Francisco Police Department's crime lab has been checking DNA collected from sexual assault victims to determine whether any of the victims committed a crime, according to District Attorney Chesa Boudin, who called for an immediate end to the alleged practice. "The crime lab attempts to identify crime suspects by searching a database of DNA evidence that contains DNA collected from rape and sexual assault victims," Boudin's office said in a press release yesterday. Boudin's release denounced the alleged "practice of using rape and sexual assault victims' DNA to attempt to subsequently incriminate them."
"Boudin said his office was made aware of the purported practice last week, after a woman's DNA collected years ago as part of a rape exam was used to link her to a recent property crime," the San Francisco Chronicle reported yesterday. The woman "was recently arrested on suspicion of a felony property crime, with police identifying her based on the rape-kit evidence she gave as a victim, Boudin said." That was the only example provided, and Boudin gave few details about the case to protect the woman's privacy. But the database may include "thousands of victims' DNA profiles, with entries over 'many, many years,' Boudin said," according to the Chronicle. "We should encourage survivors to come forward -- not collect evidence to use against them in the future. This practice treats victims like evidence, not human beings. This is legally and ethically wrong," Boudin said.
San Francisco Police Chief Bill Scott said the department will investigate and that he is "committed to ending the practice" if Boudin's allegation is accurate. But Scott also said the suspect cited by Boudin may have been identified from a different DNA database. "We will immediately begin reviewing our DNA collection practices and policies... Although I am informed of the possibility that the suspect in this case may have been identified through a DNA hit in a non-victim DNA database, I think the questions raised by our district attorney today are sufficiently concerning that I have asked my assistant chief for operations to work with our Investigations Bureau to thoroughly review the matter and report back to me and to our DA's office partners," Scott said in a statement published by KRON 4. Scott also said, "I am informed that our existing DNA collection policies have been legally vetted and conform with state and national forensic standards," but he noted that "there are many important principles for which the San Francisco Police Department stands that go beyond state and national standards." "We must never create disincentives for crime victims to cooperate with police, and if it's true that DNA collected from a rape or sexual assault victim has been used by SFPD to identify and apprehend that person as a suspect in another crime, I'm committed to ending the practice," Scott said. Even though the alleged practice may already be illegal under California's Victims' Bill of Rights, State Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) and District 9 Supervisor Hillary Ronen are planning legislation to stop the alleged misuse of DNA.
Wiener said that "if survivors believe their DNA may end up being used against them in the future, they'll have one more reason not to participate in the rape kit process. That's why I'm working with the DA's office to address this problem through state legislation, if needed."
"Boudin said his office was made aware of the purported practice last week, after a woman's DNA collected years ago as part of a rape exam was used to link her to a recent property crime," the San Francisco Chronicle reported yesterday. The woman "was recently arrested on suspicion of a felony property crime, with police identifying her based on the rape-kit evidence she gave as a victim, Boudin said." That was the only example provided, and Boudin gave few details about the case to protect the woman's privacy. But the database may include "thousands of victims' DNA profiles, with entries over 'many, many years,' Boudin said," according to the Chronicle. "We should encourage survivors to come forward -- not collect evidence to use against them in the future. This practice treats victims like evidence, not human beings. This is legally and ethically wrong," Boudin said.
San Francisco Police Chief Bill Scott said the department will investigate and that he is "committed to ending the practice" if Boudin's allegation is accurate. But Scott also said the suspect cited by Boudin may have been identified from a different DNA database. "We will immediately begin reviewing our DNA collection practices and policies... Although I am informed of the possibility that the suspect in this case may have been identified through a DNA hit in a non-victim DNA database, I think the questions raised by our district attorney today are sufficiently concerning that I have asked my assistant chief for operations to work with our Investigations Bureau to thoroughly review the matter and report back to me and to our DA's office partners," Scott said in a statement published by KRON 4. Scott also said, "I am informed that our existing DNA collection policies have been legally vetted and conform with state and national forensic standards," but he noted that "there are many important principles for which the San Francisco Police Department stands that go beyond state and national standards." "We must never create disincentives for crime victims to cooperate with police, and if it's true that DNA collected from a rape or sexual assault victim has been used by SFPD to identify and apprehend that person as a suspect in another crime, I'm committed to ending the practice," Scott said. Even though the alleged practice may already be illegal under California's Victims' Bill of Rights, State Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) and District 9 Supervisor Hillary Ronen are planning legislation to stop the alleged misuse of DNA.
Wiener said that "if survivors believe their DNA may end up being used against them in the future, they'll have one more reason not to participate in the rape kit process. That's why I'm working with the DA's office to address this problem through state legislation, if needed."
Cops have stats (Score:5, Insightful)
When folks talk about defund the police this is why. Now mind you that's slogan is quite possibly the worst it could be. Outside of a few anarchists nobody wants to completely do away with public safety. And also mind you there's a reason why the media ran with the people pushing that slogan instead of the more sensible ones.
But maybe now would be a good time to consider if giving nearly unlimited power along with military grade weapons to people meant to serve and protect is really all that good and idea.
This surprises me (Score:2)
What surprises me is not that the cops did everything they could to close their case, it's that they got caught doing something that was obviously going to blow back in their faces. I would have expected something more like "parallel construction" . IE, they hide the rape kit dna search, figure out who they're interested in, and then use above-board techniques (like grabbing a starbucks cup out of a trash can) to get the dna in order to match it officially.
I guess SFPD don't watch police procedural shows on
It's always a bad thing to be grading performance (Score:4, Insightful)
Every job I've seen that grades people is a seriously shit work environment.
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I'm wondering what kind of job does NOT grade the employee in some sort of way. Salaries job I imagine always has an "annual review" of some sort. Hourly jobs I imagine would normally be graded on more immediate/quantifiable productivity of some sort. Except it's reasonable for some sort of highly skilled & highly compensated positions to not bother, but that hardly constitutes the norm. Even excluding attendance or some other sort of fired-for-cause reason, are you talking about some sort of union posi
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How can you possibly claim it's a bad thing?
Easy and depends on the stat and how seriously they are taken. If you incentivize a police officer by counting the cases closed, they will eventually play the system by either taking easier cases or trying to close cases by finding someone and ignore the fact that they maybe innocent. Sure some or maybe even most officers may not do that but the ones that do will be more likely to be promoted.
So yes stats can be bad in fact very bad, the one I hate the most is GDP, we now have a society optimized to improv
Search Warrant (Score:2)
IANAL, but it seems that search warrants are required to collect DNA from an individual. At least that's what all of the best 'Cops' shows seem to indicate. There are exceptions to this, such as someone discarding a drinking cup. Or leaving their DNA inside a rape victim.
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It is necessary to separate attacker and victim DNA in a rape-kit. Of course using the victim DNA for anything beyond that is an act that only complete and utter immoral scum will do.
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IANAL, but it seems that search warrants are required to collect DNA from an individual. At least that's what all of the best 'Cops' shows seem to indicate. There are exceptions to this, such as someone discarding a drinking cup. Or leaving their DNA inside a rape victim.
Or placing the suspect into a cleaned interrogation room with the heat turned up.
Re: Search Warrant (Score:1)
Re:Search Warrant (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem is that using this DNA database in ways it was not intended will discourage some rape and assault victims from stepping forward and claiming that a crime was commited. It's the same thing with arresting and deporting residents who step forward as witnesses to crimes, they are discouraged from talking to the police and instead keep their mouths shut.
With an attitude that any DNA sample can be used at any time for the purposes of catching criminals leads down a not very slippery slope to just colleting DNA everywhere (such as hospitals); with the attitude that only criminals could possibly object.
Is it better to let a few criminals go free than to have an police state where individuals rights can be suspended at will as long as criminals are caught? I think yes. The traditional rule in this country is to get a warrant.
Like that police officer who was convicted of rape (Score:2)
Unplanned consequences (Score:2)
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This case was not about finding our the truth in a rape. The rape case was many years ago. The new case was about finding a suspect by searching existing DNA databases one of which was a database containing DNA from rape victims (yes the victims because you need it to separate the victim from the perpetrator). Such a database should not have been able to have been searched. The 4th amendment makes it clear that warrants should be required and that fishing expeditions by law enforcement aren't allowed ev
Re:Search Warrant (Score:5, Insightful)
Legal and moral are not the same thing. There are things that are moral that are also illegal , and there are things that are legal that are highly immoral.
Doing this destroys the trust between rape victims and the police, that going to the police seeking help will not be weaponized against them.
Its the same reason why we generally dont let cops hang about in emergency wards to arrest everybody who turns up with a heroin overdose, all that achieves is to stop people going for help when they overdose.
If people believe they face getting arrested if they seek help for being a victim of crime, they wont seek help. And that leaves a lot of far more serious criminals (rapists) free to roam.
Plus, privacy is important. Obviously.
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And that nicely sums it up.
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Oh, and consider this - what happens to the total number of ODs when you remove the legal consequences? What happens to the total number of deaths? What if that's a case of naïve compassion causing more suffering?
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Re: Search Warrant (Score:2)
They don't need a warrant. The DNA was given willingly when the rape kit was taken.
It was not given willingly as a gift to do with it whatever the police wants, it was given for a specific purpose.
If I willingly give you $5 to get me a latte it doesn't mean that you can put the change into your park meter - or mine, for that matter, unless you ask first and I agree.
Main problem is no punishment (Score:4, Insightful)
We pass laws for crime and put punishments in. We don't simply say "No stealing" Instead we say 4-8 years in prison if you steal.
We need to do the same laws against government actions.
It should not be "No discriminating". Instead it should be "If you discriminate, your actions will be reversed AND you are required to spend 1000 hours picking up trash in the worst neighborhood."
Instead of "No tresspassing without a warrant" it should be "If you tresspass without a warrant, all evidence is disallowed AND you have to personally act as their chauffeur for 12 trips of their choice within 3 months."
Re:Main problem is no punishment (Score:5, Funny)
We don't simply say "No stealing" Instead we say 4-8 years in prison if you steal.
Nah, in California we just say, "Don't steal too much."
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your definition of discriminate might well be "don't give the qualified guy of ethnicity x the job, let's give it to the unqualified y of made up gender z because equal opportunity"
No thanks. 'Discriminate' has one definition of carefully picking the best choice.
Re:Main problem is no punishment (Score:4, Insightful)
Naw. That's just a bunch of whiny underqualified members of the majority class bitching that some qualified minority got the job. Equal opportunity doesn't mean quotas, it means please consider people other than the majority as long as they're qualified. But people are already bitching loudly about affirmative action because Biden is going to nominate amazingly qualified black women. A lot of dog whistles are already out there implying that the nominee won't be qualified.
If in the past when you had two qualified candidates and the tie was always broken in favor of the while male, and that wasn't "discrimination", then why when today there are two qualified candidates and the black female is chosen is it suddenly "discrimination"? The only difference is that the bias has changed. Unfortunately we have no way to be color bind without an anonymized application and decision process (no name, no picture, no address, no school affiliation, etc).
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But I'm not talking white male vs. everyone else. I'm talking qualified women of a couple races also getting snubbed, for quotas sake. And the lazy and unqualified getting the job, then milking things.
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What are the examples of this? With evidence that the person was less qualified and those giving the job knew it, and it wasn't based on friend-of-a-friend got the jobs or things like that. I've seen no cause celebre here, but there are certainly a lot of "I heard from someone I know that..." stories.
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If in the past when you had two qualified candidates and the tie was always broken in favor of the while male, and that wasn't "discrimination"
Any evidence that that tie was ALWAYS broken like that, or even what percentage was broken like that? And if the tie was broken like that is was discrimination, just like picking a black female now is discrimination. To me favoring someone based on their membership of a particular group is the very definition of discrimination. If you have that unusual case of exactly as well qualified people have a policy of tossing a coin then.
Having quotas is exactly that. It means you have to have a certain amount of pe
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Any evidence that that tie was ALWAYS broken like that, or even what percentage was broken like that?
You make a sort of a point there, but the reason the point is sort of valid actually illustrates the problem. Until 1937, there could not have been a tie between a qualified black candidate for the Supreme court and an equally qualified white candidate because there had never been a black federal judge before then. Ditto for a female one vs. a male until 1949. Of course, some of those early black and female judges were actually pretty extraordinary since they pretty much had to be to break through the compl
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Not qualified or less qualified? The former is harder to prove and probably more rare. The latter is an easy example case: the most recent Supreme Court selection process. They've literally eliminated 97% of
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Are you sure it's only 3%? Also, no one ever hires for the most qualified candidate. The most qualified probably doesn't want the job in the first place, and once you've got a high enough tier of candidate deciding between them as to who is best is highly subjective. I've been in hiring committees for administrators in college and there's a lot of arguing about that, and in the end there are a lot of "extras" being considered that aren't really necessary for the job.
Ie, for Trump appointees, it was clea
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It might be 5%? I did some googling on how many black female judges currently exist and then numbers floated between 3 and 5%.
Re:Main problem is no punishment (Score:5, Interesting)
Equal opportunity doesn't mean quotas, it means please consider people other than the majority as long as they're qualified.
Equal opportunity means everyone is evaluated for the job based on their qualifications. Biden is refusing to evaluate men and women who are not black for the position. Biden is explicitly discriminating on the basis of appearance thereby explicitly rejecting equal opportunity.
But people are already bitching loudly about affirmative action because Biden is going to nominate amazingly qualified black women.
No of course not. It's not the outcome that matters it's the process.
A lot of dog whistles are already out there implying that the nominee won't be qualified.
If your process is discriminatory and therefore lacks legitimacy naturally you should expect the resulting lack of legitimacy to follow your choice.
For example if the president were to only consider family members for the job and they all happened to be amazingly qualified everyone would still break out their dog whistles and play the nepotism tune even after an amazingly qualified candidate was selected.
Process matters not only in selecting the best person for the job but in conveying confidence and legitimacy to the selection. Without integrity in the process there can be no confidence in the outcome.
If in the past when you had two qualified candidates and the tie was always broken in favor of the while male, and that wasn't "discrimination", then why when today there are two qualified candidates and the black female is chosen is it suddenly "discrimination"?
Outcomes don't matter only process.
The only difference is that the bias has changed. Unfortunately we have no way to be color bind without an anonymized application and decision process (no name, no picture, no address, no school affiliation, etc).
You seem to be arguing that it is impossible to consider people by their work history and qualifications. Therefore the only course of action is to explicitly consider people for a job based on their appearance.
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And yet every president in most of my lifetime has already created a pre-selected list of court nominees that fit certain qualities before assuming office. Including Reagan, both Bushes, and Trump. Nothing new here with Biden.
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And yet every president in most of my lifetime has already created a pre-selected list of court nominees that fit certain qualities before assuming office. Including Reagan, both Bushes, and Trump. Nothing new here with Biden.
The more jurists are selected for their ideology, age and appearance the less legitimacy society has in the courts and government. It doesn't matter who does it or what their political affiliation happens to be.
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Equal opportunity means everyone is evaluated for the job based on their qualifications.
Yet all three of Trump's Supreme Court appointees was Catholic. Actually, 7 out of 9 of the Supreme Court justices is Catholic. A bit odd considering that Catholics are only a quarter of the US population.
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Yet all three of Trump's Supreme Court appointees was Catholic. Actually, 7 out of 9 of the Supreme Court justices is Catholic. A bit odd considering that Catholics are only a quarter of the US population.
What matters is process not outcomes.
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What matters is process not outcomes.
You can be pretty sure, in the US, that a fairly large part of that process involved those doing the appointing specifically looking for Judges those doing the appointing consider to be part of a group that opposes abortion.
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Just before I retired, with roughly 70% of the directors, managers and mid managers female... I was formally taught that the most diverse candidate would break ties at my fortune 100 company. So if the candidates were equally qualified, we would hire minority males over females over males and minority females over white females. Even tho the policy was *well* past the point of equality and you had such obvious problems as minority female director hiring another female of the same minority as manager who
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How to convince your friends you are smart while making your opponents laugh at your arguments.
1) Find someone whose view you disagree with, but did not actually say anything that you can prove wrong.
2) Tell everybody what else THEY think. Make it really stupid and inane.
3) Attack your OWN made up viewpoint.
4) Sit around congratulating yourself on defeating the straw man you created.
ethics (Score:3)
I believe the correct moral calculus here is 1) the government should have no more power to confiscate the DNA of a rape victim than of any other citizen and 2) The government should have no power to confiscate the DNA of a citizen not suspected of a crime, because that is an unwarranted invasion of privacy.
So ya, conclusion is, they should not be doing that.
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Confiscate? "You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means."
confiscate, v.- take (a possession, especially land) as a penalty and give it to the public treasury.
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No, the DNA was submitted willingly. Maybe the DNA sequence was re-used with authority, but neither DNA nor the sequence is the person's property. It was also not "taken" in the sense that is always used for "confiscate".
No wonder you posted as an AC: At some level you recognized you are the one being stupid.
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So to do a rape kit, they swab the victim in order to find traces of the rapist’s DNA. They don’t always find that, but they always find the victim’s DNA in abundance. As a practical matter, they have to sequence the victims DNA in order to compare it to their sample, to filter their DNA signature and see if they’ve collected any DNA from the assailant. They have to keep all that evidence, so that in the future, if the assailant is identified, they can use the evidence against them i
Victims victimize (Score:2)
If you are the victim of something, and when society offers you no empathy and nothing to deal with that, that evil can fester and make you a victimizer yourself. That anger and fear can drive you to axe your own sense of empathy for others you can't relate to, the oppressed become oppressors.
Chesa Boudin (Score:5, Insightful)
This is the same person refusing to prosecute crimes like theft and burglaries leading to soaring crime. His release of career criminals has already gotten multiple people killed. As a result he now faces a recall election he will most likely lose.
I would not take anything Boudin has to say at face value. If you are concerned about this issue wait for objective findings rather than relying on unsupported musings of a politician before making a conclusion.
So victims get a free pass? (Score:4, Insightful)
What about *their* victims?
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Depends on the level of crime, we have to outweigh public good and resources versus prosecuting every law violation. If we make it so that people who committed minor crimes are afraid to report rapes, it means society loses out on catching a rapist -- many of whom offend repeatedly, not to mention the victim suffers disproportionately because of justice denied. If we are going to use these methods to catch people, it ought to only be used for very serious crimes.
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Yes that is exactly the type of calculus we need. I mean, if you want to be some kind of robot and blindly stick to faux-idealist orthodoxy versus stop rapists then you're also doing a type of calculus and differential equations to enable degradation of society. We should have a justice system that optimizes for prevention of extreme suffering. We should offer immunity for low level crimes for victims of rape if they are discovered as a consequence of reporting a rape, just like how prosecution strikes deal
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Exactly. I'm not unsympathetic to victims but why should they get a free pass to commit crimes?
Sure, and what about the people who don't wear a tracking collar all the time? Why should they get a free pass to commit crimes? So, obviously everyone should be forced to wear a tracking collar. Also, it would be convenient for the police if everyone were shackled all the time too. Much harder to commit crimes that way. For that matter, if everyone were just kept locked in a cell except when they go to work, where they can be chained to their workstation, think how much crime could be eliminated.
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They shouldn't be building a DNA database at all. They are not sufficiently reputable to be trusted with it.
Simply being in the database will lead to false accusations, because there will be cases in which the best match in the database is used to target people for investigation, even if they aren't actually a good match.
Re:So victims get a free pass? (Score:5, Insightful)
If someone commits a petty theft crime, it would mean they would fear reporting rape for fear of being caught for that. That means society loses out on catching a rapist, not to mention the victim suffers disproportionately because of justice denied. If we are going to use these methods to catch people, it ought to only be used for very serious crimes.
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Do they really collect DNA evidence for petty theft crimes? TFA mentions a felony, so I suppose there is a certain threshold.
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How many injustices are you willing to allow in order to prevent maybe one?
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You're right, what about *their* victims. We should DNA test everyone. You get up first. You have nothing to hide so nothing to worry about citizen right?
Or are you just hoping you don't get raped and therefore don't get your DNA hoovered up too?
Recognize when the cat is out of the bag (Score:3)
There is a security vs privacy tradeoff, and a trust of government question. I believe that trying to solve this sort of problem piecemeal is inefficient, as technology moves faster than the laws can change. We need to regulate the outcomes, not the methods.
When methods are allowed, they need to be public and studied through real peer review. As an example there is an often cited number that DNA false matches are only a one in a trillion. In the first place that is absurd - no laboratory work can be carried out with that low an error rate. Also its not good enough for broad sweeps - if you check a million samples of DNA a year in the country, you will get hundreds of false matches.
Wow (Score:1)
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How many robberies should a rape victim be allowed to commit?
0, But they should Not be putting victim's profiles in the database, because this would give victims a reason to not report crime b/c the victim can fear the investigation will be used to put them in prison.
Realistically? (Score:3)
Hell, it sounds like they didn't even bother to verify which database the match came from before running to the media. How about finding out if a practice exists before committing to end it?
DNA database has many uses I thought (Score:2)
I was under the impression that DNA could be used to identify close relatives of that DNA involved in a crime. What about the cases where we absolutely want to check relatives of these victims against DNA evidence? It could even HELP in those victim's cases.
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Re: good (Score:5, Interesting)
And then victims don't trust the cops so you end up with assaulters doing multiple crimes. And you end up with a few victims who also did crimes get away. Win win for the criminals.
Your plan shouldn't be catch a few today so many go free tomorrow. By your logic, we should do all the regular people first before we start doing victims. That messes up the DNA database resulting in more false positives but we don't care.
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Good was my first thought. The Bill of Rights, however, takes the attitude of letting criminals go free. Better that 10 guilty men go free than one innocent man be imprisoned.
Yet we riot in the streets when someone is acquitted and do nothing for the imprisoned innocents.
Seems fair, ask the police to enforce the law and you open yourself up for investigation. But that's not the American way.
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Boudin is looking for two things: First, more excuses to let criminals off the hook. Second, a distraction from the recall petition against him. This provides both.
Re:Wow (Score:4, Informative)
It is the allegedly soft-on-crime liberal DA who called for it to stop.
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Is the SFPD really liberal?
They are not. No police force in history has ever been "liberal". The profession attracts authoritarians and these are all right-wing conservatives, with basically no exceptions. All that shouting of "Liberal!" is just extremist right-wingers trying desperately to deflect attention from their sins.
Re: Wow (Score:2)
The culture of every police department is controlled by elected officials.
The interesting thing is the conformity of those police departments to a spectrum of behaviors, regardless of the elected officials that control them.
It is sufficient to make one curious, if one has not been cured of that vice by lobotomy or worse, joining a political party.
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You think the SFPD is "liberals"? The mind boggles...
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Scratch the makeup off a liberal and you shall find a fascist.
many people make that mistake its a easy one to make but you will find that authoritarians come in both liberal and conservative flavors we just fear and hate the one on the other-side of the left-right spectrum more than our own.
Re: Wow (Score:2)
Re: Wow (Score:4, Insightful)
Right wing in America isn't libertarian. Whereas modern American conservatives do want to restrict certain rights: who you sleep with or marry, getting an abortion, smoking weed or other drugs, etc, all things that the classic libertarian does not want to restrict. American conservatives when in office do very little to shrink government, they just keep big government in place where it helps them and reduce it where it helps the other side. The modern American conservative is a mix of "social conservatism" and "economic liberalism".
Consider the south American right wing dictators (Samoza, Pinochet, Peron, etc). Very much centralized government with strong authoritarians, staunchly opposed to anything even remotely leftist, or even centrist in some cases. Which is why the US supported them because cold war politics favored the right wing authoritarian allies. An authoritarian centralized goverment does NOT imply left or right wing politics.
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American conservatives have *repeatedly* overridden local control when they were in power. They make lip service about local control but in reality the states override cities and counties all the time-- and usually with unfunded mandates too.
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I note that PJ O'Rourke died this week. He was a conservative humorist but able to poke fun at both sides. His one quip was that Republicans claim that government is broken and when they get elected they prove it. Republicans do seem to do a better job at criticizing government when they're not in power but flail a lot when they are in power. Ie, McConnell seemed a bit like a deer in the headlights when he was no longer an obstructionist but now had to actually lead.
"States rights" as a rallying cry has
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No schools are teaching kids to be racist. The whole "critical race theory" is a bugaboo that's misinterpreted and redefined. Critical race theory is only something discussed at very high level post graduate levels. It is not being taught in kindergarten for crying out loud. And yet it's a rallying cry to get worried parents to vote for them.
Teaching that the civil war was about slavery, that there were severe compromises in the constitution to allow slavery, and that segregationist policies after the w
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No, there have been laws and not moral guidance on some things, with a backlash when such laws are repealed. Ie, a ban against birth control used to be a law. Sure that's old, but laws against abortion is pretty much the number one focus for social conservatives. Also laws proposed to dictate where transgenders can use restrooms, or banning teaching of any birth control in public schools except for abstinence. Or anger when new laws are proposed or enacted to expand legal rights, such as gay marriage, mari
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Right-wing Authoritarianism is a European political ideal, because in America, right-wing is more libertarian than conservative.
Except for drugs, prostitution, assisted euthanasia, pornography, books with uncomfortable topics, and anything else they can find bible passages to override that whole libertarian thing. No government control of people's lives there. Totally live and let live LOL.
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Re: Wow (Score:5, Insightful)
What Republicans are authoritarian? Only Democrats are authoritarian.
Both parties are full of people who desperately want the "freedom" to impose their ideology on others.
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What Republicans are authoritarian? Only Democrats are authoritarian.
Both parties are full of people who desperately want the "freedom" to impose their ideology on others.
Pretty much why by European standards, the Democrats are strongly right-wing conservatives and the Republicans are extremist right-wing conservatives. That also nicely explains why you find right-wing authoritarians in both parties. Sure, in theory, left-wing authoritarians exist, but they are are indeed because the idea does not really work.
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What Republicans are authoritarian? Only Democrats are authoritarian.
Both parties are full of people who desperately want the "freedom" to impose their ideology on others.
Pretty much why by European standards, the Democrats are strongly right-wing conservatives and the Republicans are extremist right-wing conservatives. That also nicely explains why you find right-wing authoritarians in both parties. Sure, in theory, left-wing authoritarians exist, but they are are indeed because the idea does not really work.
LOL. That maybe was true 20 years ago, but today US left is off the hook bonkers. When was the last time you heard leftists in Europe calling mathematics racist, or wanting to defund police?
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LOL. That maybe was true 20 years ago, but today US left is off the hook bonkers. When was the last time you heard leftists in Europe calling mathematics racist, or wanting to defund police?
There are basically no "leftists", not even in the US. That is a broken idea used to prevent discussion of some questions. Basically, the extremist right is fantasizing that there is an extreme left to balance them out and that they are the good ones because they try to keep things in the middle. That is not even remotely true.
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In theory? What about Stalin, Hitler, Mao, Pol Pot, the DPRK's Kim family, Chavez, Castro, Xi, Ho...?
Somebody calling themselves "socialist" does not make them "left". These are basically all right-wing authoritarians as can be seen by their actual actions. As they are also totalitarian and/or fascists, things get a bit harder to see as there is no opposition. But do you really want to claim that a fascist is "left" in the political spectrum and show utter and completely cluelessness?
I don't know a lot of Democrats (Score:2)
I don't think I'm going to accept people who want things like Medicare for all or infrastructure spending because that's not so much an ideology as its policy based on what they think will have the mos
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My ideology is rooted in the idea that you get the best outcomes when people are free to create their own. This also happens to be the ideal upon which free societies must be based. What do you lose if I "impose" that on you?
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Two words. Vaccine Mandates.
Before he was elected, Biden said that vaccine mandates were unconstitutional. After he was elected, he began looking for ways around the constitution to mandate vaccination, which was a breach of his oath of office.
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I swear, some Lefty somewhere found a copy of the history of the rise to power of the National Socialist German Workers' Party in the 20s, and thought it was a "how to." (I mean, really, it's even got "Socialist" in its name, so it must be for them, right?)
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Classifying those is more complicated than "right wing left wing" despite what you learned in school. Virtually all Nationalists are on the right edge of any political spectrum you could make up, but they aren't necessarily Conservative. The NSDAP's Common interest before self-interest, for instance, is opposed to modern Conservatism. If you look at the 25 Point Program of the NSDAP you'll see plenty of hallmark of Liberalism:
- Profit sharing across industries
- Strong ce
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My favorite part though is how Europe is slightly further to the left because of its long history of feudal authoritarianism. Social Democrats are just recapitulating Noblesse Oblige despite their pretense of holding commoners to be the eq
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they already did it once during the King god Bush II era, its just easier to hide in plain sight in this case.
You mean the economic collapse that happened while Obama was Pres? The one that was caused by deregulation under Clinton?