Whites are more confident than ever that their local police treat blacks fairly

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Whites are more confident than ever that their local police treat blacks fairly

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The image of America’s police departments has been tarnished in recent months, with shootings and chokings of unarmed black men sparking nationwide protests charging racial bias.

But a new poll includes a surprising finding: The episodes might have actually increased white Americans' belief that their local cops treat blacks fairly.

An NBC News/Marist College poll released Sunday found 52 percent of whites saying they have a “great deal” of confidence that police officers in their community treat blacks and whites equally. That is 11 points higher than in a September NBC/Wall Street Journal poll asking the same question (albeit using a different polling firm). It also clearly exceeds levels of trust seen in a series of Pew Research Center and USA Today/Gallup surveys dating to 2007, as well as another NBC/WSJ poll conducted after the O.J. Simpson verdict in 1995.

There’s been no such boon in confidence among African Americans, though. Just 12 percent express a great deal of confidence in local police’s equal treatment of blacks and whites -- a number that is squarely within the 10-to-17-point range in previous surveys. Only one-third have at least a “fair amount” of confidence in their neighborhood police, compared with 78 percent of whites.

(See full data breakdowns and poll details in the Google doc below.)

Why are high-profile black deaths at police hands coinciding with an increase in whites’ confidence in local police?

One possibility is that whites broadly believe white police officers had good intentions in recent deadly altercations and sympathize with them following protests and accusations of racism. National polls are consistent with this view, especially before the acquittal in Eric Garner’s death after an officer put him in a chokehold.

But another possibility is that whites do see major problems in recent police shootings in Ferguson, Cleveland and Staten Island, but don’t see them reflecting negatively about their own neighborhood’s police. It’s easy to see how a “this doesn’t happen in my town” logic could bolster whites’ faith in their own police force, who might seem much more competent in comparison to departments embroiled in accusations of racism. (It's kind of the same way with your local congressman. While Congress as a whole is generally held in very poor repute, people are much more forgiving of their own member -- and almost always reelect him or her.)

An August Pew Research Center poll found just this sort of bifurcation when asking separate questions about police locally and nationwide. Fewer than four in 10 whites said police across the country do an “excellent” or “good” job treating racial and ethnic groups equally (38 percent). When asked about police in their own neighborhood, though, 71 percent expressed a great deal or fair amount of confidence that blacks and whites are treated equally. African Americans also expressed higher support for local police than cops across the country on racial equality, though most still rated both negatively.

In addition, while whites largely agreed with the grand jury decision not to charge Darren Wilson for shooting Brown in Ferguson, over half disagreed with the lack of indictment of officer Daniel Pantaleo in Garner’s death, according to a Bloomberg News poll released this weekend.

Whites’ persistent belief that their local police treat African Americans fairly might affect how the policy debate plays out going forward. Congress does not appear motivated to enact major reforms for police forces, leaving state and local governments and their police forces as the primary hubs for policy changes. And in their own neighborhoods, whites don’t appear to feel the same urgency for reform.

Indeed, at this point, it seems whites see racial bias in police treatment as something that happens far away from home.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2014/12/09/whites-are-more-confident-than-ever-that-their-police-treat-blacks-fairly/?

Race Shapes Americans’ Attitudes about Decisions In Ferguson and Staten Island

This NBC News/Marist Poll Reports:

The grand jury decisions not to indict police officers who killed unarmed men in Ferguson, Missouri and Staten Island, New York have revealed a huge racial divide in how Americans perceive law enforcement in the US. While more than one in five white residents, 21%, reports increased confidence in the legal system following these decisions, seven in ten African Americans, 70%, have decreased confidence in the judicial system.

Additionally, whites are more than four times as likely as African Americans to have a great deal of confidence in police officers to treat blacks and whites equally, and whites are nearly four times more likely than African Americans to have a lot of trust in their local police officers to refrain from using excessive force when taking a suspect into custody. White residents are also more than three times as likely as African Americans to believe local police do a good job enforcing the law. By more than two-to-one, African Americans are more likely than whites to say law enforcement applies different standards to whites and blacks.

Age also impacts perceptions of law enforcement in the United States. Americans under age 30 have a more negative view of police officials than older Americans. However, when it comes to the grand jury decisions in Ferguson and Staten Island, younger Americans are more likely to say they have not heard anything about these decisions.

There is consensus in one area. Regardless of race and age, Americans support requiring police officers to wear video recorders to monitor their policing procedures. “These national poll results decidedly point to white and African Americans seeing similar events through a very different lens,” says Dr. Lee M. Miringoff, Director of The Marist College Institute for Public Opinion.

More here in the pdf
 
That's because we don't have an effective PR campaign when it comes to racial injustices. Preach to the choir. Preach to the choir. Rinse. Repeat. The cases we champion must be very carefully chosen in order to get progressive white support to get laws changed.
 
Comedy bits from 35 and 40 years ago that still ring loud and true today in 2014 after 2 high profile grand jury cases involving the deaths of unarmed civillians at the hands of LE officers that were only 9 days apart.



 
FUCK ALL THE WHITE PEOPLE THAT PRACTICE AND/OR SUPPORT RACISM/WHITE SUPREMACY!

:angry::angry::angry::angry:

:smh::smh:

:hmm:
 
That's because we don't have an effective PR campaign when it comes to racial injustices. Preach to the choir. Preach to the choir. Rinse. Repeat. The cases we champion must be very carefully chosen in order to get progressive white support to get laws changed.
That's one reason I was never comfortable with Ferguson as a national debate. Rosa Parks was the person on that bus for a reason.
 
I have said many times and will say it again. White racism needs to be treated as a mental disease and classified in a DSM manual.
 
White people know police are on their side against blacks. They serve as the buffer between their good white christian values and the law-less underbelly of the seedy black underclass.

They will even bare some injustice from police against their own at the cost of keeping blacks in their place. They really believe it's the cops keeping them from harms way. They've bought into the fear of black man because they know the injustices that our being committed against black people.



What video is this from?
 
That's one reason I was never comfortable with Ferguson as a national debate. Rosa Parks was the person on that bus for a reason.

I don't think we have the leadership in place to properly handle the situation. And the people definitely don't understand that just because something is WRONG doesn't mean it's what we want to represent the cause.

Strategies that were successful in the past are being completely ignored in the present. :smh:
 
Listening to whites talk about race issues is pointless and the last thing a black person should be doing.
 
That's because we don't have an effective PR campaign when it comes to racial injustices. Preach to the choir. Preach to the choir. Rinse. Repeat. The cases we champion must be very carefully chosen in order to get progressive white support to get laws changed.
That's one reason I was never comfortable with Ferguson as a national debate. Rosa Parks was the person on that bus for a reason.

A lesson that still needs to be learned...
 
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