California Introduced a Bill That Would Require Cops to Have a 4-Year Degree

Unless you’ve been living under a rock lately, you know there is a swirling conversation in this country around policing and police reform.

Violence has been wrought, people have died, and there have been calls for defunding the police to more sensitivity and de-escalation training, to those who believe things are fine the way that they are.

Now, a California assemblyman has proposed an interesting solution to the excessive uses of force by law enforcement – he wants to require all incoming officers to have either a bachelor’s degree or be more than 25-years-old.

Image Credit: Pexels

Reggie Jones-Sawyer introduced Bill-89, citing a 2007 study that found that the more educated officers were, the less likely they were to use force. They also rack up fewer complaints from the community and their fellow officers.

Jones-Sawyer made the following statement:

“This data-driven bill relies on years of study and new understandings of brain development to ensure that only those officers capable of high-level decision-making and judgment in tense situations are entrusted with working in our communities and correctional facilities.”

The requirement to be at least 25 is due to research that shows that, in the areas of impulse control, planning, and working memory, the human brain is not fully developed until after that age.

Image Credit: PexelsThe state already accepts that as true, since they extended youth offender parole to 25.

“These jobs are complex, they’re difficult, and we should not just hand them over to people who haven’t fully developed themselves.

This could be the beginning of changing the entire way that policing is done on the front end.

Then we can let the bad cops retire on the back end.”

California would be the first state to require a 4-year degree, though Illinois, New Jersey, and North Dakota all require at least two years of college.

Image Credit: Pexels

They would join plenty of countries around the world, though – England, Wales, Denmark, Norway, Finland, and Sweden all require college education before becoming a police officer.

Esteban Nunez, director of the Anti-Recidivism Coalition, verifies,

“The evidence is clear – the prefrontal cortex of the brain is not fully developed until age 25.

It is with similar logic that youth must be treated as youth by our criminal justice system.”

Science is on their side, but only time will tell whether other lawmakers will agree –  and whether science and research will translate to lives saved on the streets.

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White Woman Shares All the Times She Encountered Police and Was Let Off the Hook

It’s not a secret that black Americans live in a vastly different world than white ones.

Case in point: Black men and women live in fear that they’ll be pulled over or approached by police, worried that they may suffer violence or, worse, may end up dead after the interaction.

One white woman highlighted this huge disparity with an impactful Twitter thread describing her many interactions with police over her lifetime.

It starts when she was just 15 years old and caught shoplifting:

And continues to another incident when she was 18:

The thread continues:

Nothing happened then, either:

She pointed out that she doesn’t have a criminal record:

Moral of the story? White people almost always survive their encounters with the police. The same is not true for black Americans.

A black woman responded with her own thread that’s similar to Vernoff’s, except her experience was the opposite:

No matter how you feel about politics, I think we can all agree that Vernoff, a showrunner for “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Station 19,” has certainly given everyone lots of food for thought, right?

Did you ever make mistakes in your youth that involved the police? How do you feel the police handled you or your friends?

The post White Woman Shares All the Times She Encountered Police and Was Let Off the Hook appeared first on UberFacts.

White Woman Shares All the Times She Encountered Police and Was Let Off the Hook

It’s not a secret that black Americans live in a vastly different world than white ones.

Case in point: Black men and women live in fear that they’ll be pulled over or approached by police, worried that they may suffer violence or, worse, may end up dead after the interaction.

One white woman highlighted this huge disparity with an impactful Twitter thread describing her many interactions with police over her lifetime.

It starts when she was just 15 years old and caught shoplifting:

And continues to another incident when she was 18:

The thread continues:

Nothing happened then, either:

She pointed out that she doesn’t have a criminal record:

Moral of the story? White people almost always survive their encounters with the police. The same is not true for black Americans.

A black woman responded with her own thread that’s similar to Vernoff’s, except her experience was the opposite:

No matter how you feel about politics, I think we can all agree that Vernoff, a showrunner for “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Station 19,” has certainly given everyone lots of food for thought, right?

Did you ever make mistakes in your youth that involved the police? How do you feel the police handled you or your friends?

The post White Woman Shares All the Times She Encountered Police and Was Let Off the Hook appeared first on UberFacts.

People Share What Happened When They Reported Crimes to the Police

There’s a lot of talk out there about the role the police play in society, whether or not it should change, if some more training could do the trick, and everything in between.

Part of the conversation is whether or not the police are really willing or able to do anything for the average citizen who finds themselves the victim of a crime, and Twitter user @IllyBocean kept the conversation going on Twitter, asking what people’s personal experiences were.

He points out that, if the response of the police to middle class white people was lacking, things could be, you know, significantly worse in poor communities of color.

These 11 people’s replies honestly only served to bolster the argument against keeping the policing status quo, but you read them and you decide!

11. I suppose you have to cover all of your bases.

This still sucks, though.

10. That sounds…objectively terrible.

And no, they weren’t dealing drugs.

9. It’s almost like they think it’s not worth their time.

$800 would be worth my time, though.

8. I mean you can’t expect them to science, too.

But honestly, did you check the backseat of his car?

7. Not sure I would have even bothered calling the second time.

Maybe you just hope you get someone who’s interested?

6. What a horrifying thing to tell anyone, nevermind a child.

I honestly wish I could believe this wasn’t true.

5. That doesn’t sound like the whole story.

I bet she never got her phone back, either.

4. I mean obviously you need proof.

But maybe at least try to find some?

3. Regular people out there just doing their part.

It’s not so hard, is it?

2. Sorry I’m not really here to discuss beverages.

Maybe pick some up in your spare time you have not interviewing my neighbor.

1. At least Lowe’s was on their game.

But obviously they don’t have to follow the law and stuff.

I don’t know what the answer is, guys, but I hope some people who are smarter and more aware than I am come up with a good one!

Have you ever had to call the police for help? What happened? Let us know in the comments!

The post People Share What Happened When They Reported Crimes to the Police appeared first on UberFacts.