Indeed what happened today was tragic and I share everyone’s sympathy for the victims, their families and friends. However, I find this post quite extraordinary and really very worrying on a number of levels. You’re clearly writing this from your own middle class white male perspective. I’m a middle class white female and I would have to agree that whenever I’ve had the need to call on the police (for example when I was mugged for my phone near Honor Oak station and when my son was indecently exposed at in the changing rooms at The Glassmill), I’ve found them to be highly professional, helpful and committed and I couldn’t fault them. However, my husband is a kind, decent, law-abiding black man who served over 25 years dedicated to helping others in the fire service - and his experience of the police is very different. He’s never, ever broken the law yet the number of times he has been stopped and searched for no justifiable reason whatsoever is incredible. His similarly kind, law-abiding black male friends in caring professions have also been subject to similar experiences. So it’s very wrong of you to denigrate the BLM movement in the way you have, without a full appreciation of the black male experience. If there are any black men in this forum then I suggest you engage with them.
It’s also very wrong of you to make a sweeping statement that British police are outstanding - as in any organisation, there are “wrong uns” and the police force is no exception, in fact by its very nature it will attract those prone to corruption. I’m not saying all police are that way inclined - and as I said my own personal experience of them has been exemplary - but I’m sure the families of Stephen Lawrence, Jean Charles de Menezes and Daniel Morgan, amongst many others would have a lot to say in response to your sweeping statement.
I also think it’s very wrong to make judgments in this particular case without knowing the full facts. We don’t know why this guy was being pursued - there was talk that he’d abducted a child in initial reports, but that’s all gone very quiet - we just don’t know the facts. But in any event it’s a big jump from being a “joyrider” (which we don’t know he was) to call him “homicidal” - do you have any evidence to say that he intended to kill and injure those poor people? What if the guy had mental health issues and/or was scared - does that make him a bad person worthy of our contempt, or does it make him a troubled person who was scared and didn’t know what to donwhen pursued and needs support (and hasn’t had that support in the face of austerity)? Maybe he was a “druggie” - again, if so, does that make him a bad person or someone who’s had a troubled life through no fault of his own and who society is failing? My point is, we don’t know the facts - and it’s very dangerous to make these judgments about people based on incomplete facts. Even if the police did nothing wrong, then to judge this man in the way you have without knowing the circumstances is very disturbing, very symptomatic of current society and just not at all helpful and will solve none of the problems. Yes, it’s right at this time to extend our sympathies to the victims, but it’s very wrong and damaging to post stuff like this.