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That the police should carry weapons while on regular duty

(PRO)
0 points
(CON)
WINNER!
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TophatdocTophatdoc (PRO)
For this debate, my opponent and I agreed that weapons should be associated with firearms. My role from my perspective is to defend the status quo which is for police being able to continue to carry firearms while on the patrol or on the beat. Unless my opponent lives in Japan or a few other countries where police usually don't carry weapons he is against the status quo in this case.

I will offer five reasons why police should carry firearms wherever they go.
#1 Laws are fictitious.(Character of Criminals)
Laws only exist to people who obey, or respect, or fear the law. and to people(criminals) who are caught breaking the law. There is and will always be people who break the law. The people who don't follow the law should be considered courageous and strong. These creatures should be respected as foes since they are willing to do what many others are not willing to do. Therefore, police must be willing and capable of dealing with them accordingly. This means police must be willing to confront people who are this brave and bold with firearms if necessary. To rid police of firearms is to handicap the police while emboldening criminals. Some elements of society may feel more inclined to commit a crime simply knowing that the police don't have any firearms.

#2 Pacifism Works!(Capacity of the Police)
Pacifism will work to get us all killed. There will be those who claim I am inciting an appeal to emotion by saying this. Not true, remember Jesus of Nazerth, Mahatma Gandhi, and Martin Luther King jr were all killed yet claiming something along the lines "eye an eye for makes the world go blind" or "do to others as you would have them do to you." We can pick up a book and figure out the leading advocates of this great idealistic philosophy have been rewarded with graves for their peaceful efforts. To disarm the police in the United States where there are 88 firearms per person is dangerous[1] to put it not nicely, and idealistically insane to put it practically. If firearms are that common, almost anyone can get one whether it be legally or illegally through purchases in black market or through stealing someone's firearms.

[1] http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/health/2013/09/19/u-s-has-more-guns-and-gun-deaths-than-any-other-country-study-finds/

What will the police use to defend themselves and diffuse situations in a country where firearms are prevalent?  If a person is cornered or trapped in a situation with subhuman organics with firearms where there is no escape such as we saw in Columbine. The only choice is to block bullets is with their bodies. In essence, the only option is to die. A world where the innocent and the police will rendered  incapable of defending themselves from people with firearms should be considered undesirable.


#3 The Unseen, Unheard, and the ILL-Prepared(Limited Amount of Information)
When a police officer arrives upon a situation where there may be an argument, confrontation, or altercation he has a limited amount of information on what is taking place. Why? The police is informed by a phone operator.  The phone operator knows very little based off of what the emergency caller stated. Someone may have a firearm, a knife, or tire iron. The police might not be informed of this and be harmed by coming into a conflict they know very little about.

This is why all thoughtful criminals know that the least information or distorted information about them allows for a better chance they have with getting away with a crime. There is a mess of questions left behind in this abyss of knowing nothing: "why did this happen," "who did it," or "will this happen again?" To best be prepared is to be equipped for the most difficult of situations. This means police should be required to carry firearms in order to be prepared for the worse.

#4 Equality Comes Through the Barrel of a Gun(Unskilled Weapons Called Firearms)
A firearm is an unskilled weapon this is why it is easy for the mentally weak and the physically weak to utilize. This is why females who may be 5'6" be on the same level of power as a 6'6" man with the mere existence of a firearm. I sincerely ask, "would women be allowed on the police force if firearms didn't exist?" I would state emphatically most likely not because women are usually smaller than men[2}. Nevertheless the different fitness requirements that are lowered to allow women join the police force[3]. A firearm allows for women to continue to be on the police force if they are not going to be on the phones. If there were not any firearms, the women would not be walking the beat or go on patrols.

[2]http://www.statcrunch.com/5.0/viewreport.php?reportid=28652&groupid=964
[3]http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-181623/Police-fitness-tests-downgraded-women.html

#5 Who has the Power to Stop the Bad Guys?(A World Without Power)
If power continues to be diluted, who will have the power to stop the contemptible and malevolent subhuman organics amongst us? To take firearms from the police, allows for the morally bankrupt to use weapons and possibly firearms on innocents, undesirables, and possibly the police. The United Nations has suggested multiple times with authority that they don't want the average citizen to defend themselves[4]. To rid the police of firearms leaves the public defenseless against those who prey upon others with firearms.  No one will have the power to stop those seek to break the law using firearms. So who will stop the dastards and barbarians amongst us if not the police? Will it be the military? Absolutely not.

[4]http://www.un.org/disarmament/ATT/

Return To Top | Posted:
2014-07-15 03:24:44
| Speak Round
nzlockienzlockie (CON)
Hi everybody and welcome to what should be an enjoyable and interesting discussion on Gun usage within the police force. 
I'd like to open by addressing the "status quo" statement my opponent opened with. As it happens, I DO live in one of the countries that maintains an unarmed Police Force - New Zealand. Other countries in this list include the UK (pop 68 million) and Japan. (pop 128 million people)
I make this point to illustrate that in this debate, BOTH of us will be arguing to maintain the status quo. In my opinion, the status quo should have very little to do with the outcome of this debate thanks to a single word in the resolution - "SHOULD". 
I'd like to quickly address some of my opponents points and then come back to this. 

Points #1 and #5:
My opponent both opens and closes with a familiar refrain for the anti-gun control brigade, "the criminals have guns so we should have them too!" Another common variation on this theme is that the Police should have more/bigger guns than the criminals. This is a major point so I'd like to deal with it clearly here. 
Judges will quickly see that this is a self-defeating argument. Criminals operate outside of the law meaning that they will ALWAYS have the upper hand when it comes to weapons. They are the outnumbered and often physically outmatched as well, they need a weapon to seize the advantage. Operating outside of the law as they do, this is never a problem. Especially not in countries like the USA where gun control is lax, ineffective or non-existent.
Understand this loud and clear - Law will NEVER have a weapon advantage over Lawless 100% of the time. Here's how it looks...

Policemen are the biggest guys in the tribe. 
Criminals carry a club.
Policemen arm themselves with a club. 
Criminals now carry knives to again give themselves the advantage.
Policemen arm themselves with knives.
Criminals now carry swords to regain the advantage.
Policemen arm themselves with swords.
Criminals now carry pistols to regain the advantage.
Policemen arm themselves with pistols...

Now, the above scenario is conservative. Police are merely reacting and are each time only matching. Realistically other scenarios are possible as well, but in each of them the ease of which serious harm can be dealt escalates. In EVERY case innocent citizens are caught up in the cross fire and fallout as well. In the early instances they are merely beat up and stabbed. In the later stages they are being shot and killed instead. 
It's important to note that the criminals only need to have an advantage over the law-abiding. It's equally important to note the WE THE LAW-ABIDING dictate what that advantage will be. The only reason that advantage has escalated to a potentially fatal gun is because the law-abiding also carry guns. If the arming of a society is held back, then the criminal's military advantage is less likely to be life threatening.

Point #2:
My opponent brings up an excellent source in his second point and then misquotes it. I'll clear up what was certainly just an accidental 100x exaggeration and then look a little closer at his source material.
He's used this source to claim that there are 88 firearms PER PERSON in the US. In actual fact the figures show 88 firearms per 100 people. This figure places the USA on top of yet another bad list. Along with having more mass shootings between 1966 and 2012 than any other country, (USA - 16 vs Next highest - 2), the USA holds more firearms per capita than any other country. It will not surprise you to learn that this table also lists the USA as having more firearm-related deaths as well, the only country in double digits. 
Japan, the country my opponent mentions does not arm its police force, also has the lowest rate of firearms per capita and the lowest rate of deaths as well. 
It's clear that arming the population in the USA has not helped reduce gun related deaths. If this resolution was related to the USA then I think I would probably find myself on the opposite side of this debate. HOWEVER - the resolution is NOT country-specific. I see no evidence in this table or anywhere else that arming police is something NZ, UK or Japan should adopt. 

Point #3:
It's true that the Police often arrive at a job without knowing what the potential dangers are. It's also true that this MAY result in death or injury for the first responders. But let's remove the emotion from this and look at the facts.
MOST jobs can be quickly assessed once on site. Back up can be called, including armed police. Personal body armour can be worn further reducing the risk. 
Guns can even be safely locked in vehicles without violating the resolution we're debating, and can therefore be accessed IF needed.
Being a policeman is a hazardous job. As explained above, arming police also means arming criminals. Arming criminals directly results in MORE hazards for Police, not less.

Point #4:
My opponent seriously makes the point here that women need a gun to become a police officer. Seriously. There are so many holes in this that I'm going to let him pick which one he'd like to rebut and we can come back to this line if he chooses to pursue it in the second round.
- Police can not be effective if they are weaker physically than someone else. 
- Why not just arm the Policewomen the men who fail the fitness requirements?
- What specific benefit does having women officers bring? How does arming them enhance this benefit?

---
I began this debate with a reference to the word "SHOULD" in our resolution. If we were designing a society what SHOULD its police force look like?

"When Robert Peel started the 'New Police' in 1829, the idea faced profound  and widespread hostility. Peel and his colleagues realised that the police could  not defeat the mass of the population by force. Policing by consent was the only  option, even if that consent was grudgingly offered by the lower social classes.  That was why he consciously decided that the 'bobbies', unlike the Bow Street  Runners and other ad hoc groups of constables, should be unarmed. Even the  truncheon was to be hidden away, lest it should appear offensive.

 The doctrine of 'minimum force' came to mean that there was a ceiling on the  weapons to which the police had access - and a low ceiling at that. When a  serious threat presented itself, the military was called in. " Peter Waddington - Guns won't protect the Police 

It's my contention that Policing by Consent SHOULD be the idea we strive for. It ensures that the criminals are clearly identified and vilified. It lessens the temptation for Police to become bullies or to be perceived as such. It forces them to use intelligence, logic, reason and courtesy when dealing with the public - the vast majority of which are NOT criminals. It presents a positive role model for children who learn that even adults don't need to rely on violence and intimidation to stand up to bullies.

Unfortunately in many countries, the problem has already escalated to the point where it IS fair and reasonable for the police force to be armed during routine walkabout. If this debate centred on one of those countries, I'd support the resolution. However this resolution is not specific in that regard.
Speaking as a citizen who lives in a country with an unarmed police force despite having one of the higher degrees of gun ownership, I am grateful for the fact that the criminals around me don't see the need to arm themselves with guns. It means that I read about a cop who gets beat up or even stabbed, rather than reading about one who got killed.

I've shown how arming the Police increases the degree to which the criminals arm themselves. I've shown, using HIS source, that more guns in a society equals more gun-related deaths. My opponent is against gun-related deaths so he must explain why increasing the number of guns in a society is a good idea. 

THIS resolution is negated. 


Return To Top | Posted:
2014-07-17 10:16:21
| Speak Round
Cross-Examination
nzlockie: Thanks for your opening round. Are you arguing that the harms that may occur due to police carrying guns 100% of the time are justifiable or that they don't exist at all?
Tophatdoc: Could you please rephrase the question? I don't understand.
nzlockie: sure, Ill break it down. Do you concede that there are harms which exist directly as a result of cops carrying guns on their routine beat? (for example, innocent parties, including the chips themselves, being shot)
nzlockie: If so, is it your stance that those harms are justifiable as "acceptable losses"?
nzlockie: *cops. although I guess chips could also be accurate! haha
Tophatdoc: I would concede that harms will exist as a result of cops carrying guns
Tophatdoc: How do police deal with criminals who are armed with firearms if they are not allowed to carrying firearms themselves?
nzlockie: Obviously the way the police respond to a scenario is going to depend on the scenario. Police in cars may carry a firearm in a locked container within the vehicle. Police can also back away if they feel it's unsafe and radio for an armed response.
nzlockie: I'm not advocating that police have no ACCESS to firearms - only that they not carry them on their person during their routine beat.
nzlockie: Since you didn't answer it, I'll assume that it's your position that these harms are justifiable as "acceptable losses". Exactly where is the line? How many innocent lives are worth the aprehension of a criminal?
nzlockie: Is it a sliding scale? Is it worth a higher risk to take down a killer as opposed to a speeder?

Return To Top | Speak Round
TophatdocTophatdoc (PRO)
"It is clear now my opponent is not arguing against firearms being carried by police but that they should not be allowed to be carried on their person.

My Opponent's Opening Claim:
My opponent points out Japan, United Kingdom, and New Zealand as countries as unarmed police forces. That is an interesting point and it should be perceived as a misleading point as well. It should remind us of how many people in the world point to Bastoy as a model prison[1]. Yet people fail to realize Norway has never had any significant crime rate because Norwegians are passive[2]. This is very misleading.  The United Kingdom and New Zealand have never had a significant crime rate worth noting. I will explain Japan later. In 2013, New Zealand had only fourteen murders[3]. My opponent's home country in his lifetime will never see as many murders I see in a year within my home city alone, nevertheless the entirety of the United States. There are dozens of countries that are far more dangerous than the United States with far less of a population[4]. Let us keep in mind, my opponent is defending the status quo of a country where police barely need to police. I will state with authority if he and I were to switch places, he would change his mind. I on the other hand would not change my mind because as I said police should be equipped to deal with criminals appropriately. I am concerned with practicality, my opponent is concerned with ideals.

[1]http://www.theguardian.com/society/2013/feb/25/norwegian-prison-inmates-treated-like-people
[2]http://www.nationmaster.com/country-info/profiles/Norway/Crime
[3]http://www.police.govt.nz/sites/default/files/publications/crime-stats-national-20131231.pdf
[4]http://www.businessinsider.com/1homicidal-countries-2011-11?op=1

RE: RE: Points #1 and #5
"My opponent both opens and closes with a familiar refrain for the
anti-gun control brigade, "the criminals have guns so we should have
them too!" Another common variation on this theme is that the Police
should have more/bigger guns than the criminals."

This certainly was not what I was saying. I explained within Point #1, police must be equipped with firearms to properly deal with the world today.  This means police need to carry to firearms in order to stop violent criminals.

"Judges will quickly see that this is a self-defeating argument. Criminals operate outside of the law meaning that they will ALWAYS have the upper hand when it comes to weapons.....Law will NEVER have a weapon advantage over Lawless 100% of the time."

How is this true, that criminals will ALWAYS have the upper hand? On what evidence is this based to make this statement? Police are given as much authority and discretion as the public wishes to allow. This is the reason why Japan has a low crime rate is because the police are allowed to operate ruthlessly and efficiently to stop criminals[5]. It should also be noted the Japanese have dramatically decreased crime since the 1960s where gang violence was at a peak[6]. In Japan the conviction rate is higher than 99%. It is not uncommon in Japan for innocent people to be sent to confess crimes they didn't do.
[5]http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-20810572
[6]http://britsoccrim.org/volume6/008.pdf

"Operating outside of the law as they do, this is never a problem.
Especially not in countries like the USA where gun control is lax,
ineffective or non-existent."

Correlation is not causation. I can point to several countries that have very strict gun control laws and have extremely high homicide rates related to firearms like we see in Russia or Mexico.  Within the United States, the cities with the highest homicide rates are in states with the strictest gun control laws[7]. Then also as I said earlier in this debate, gun control only applies to those who follow the laws. This is why you can look at countries with gun control that have higher homicide rates related to firearms than in the United States[8].  Let us not forget many countries with the highest homicide rates related to firearms such as Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador all have restrictive gun laws . Guatemala has restrictive gun control laws and has a high homicide rate[9]. The idea that gun control laws has to do with anything is misleading because the correlation is not consistent in restrictive gun control countries.
[7]http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/30/us/strict-chicago-gun-laws-cant-stem-fatal-shots.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
[8]http://www.gunfacts.info/gun-control-myths/guns-in-other-countries/
[9]http://www.gunpolicy.org/firearms/region/guatemala

"In EVERY case innocent citizens are caught up in the cross fire and fallout as well."
There is no evidence in existence to support this claim.

"Along with having more mass shootings
between 1966 and 2012 than any other country, (USA - 16 vs Next highest
- 2), the USA holds more firearms per capita than any other country. It
will not surprise you to learn that this table also lists the USA as
having more firearm-related deaths as well, the only country in double
digits."
My opponent is right, the United States is the top country in firearms related deaths according to these statistics. This why I chose those statistics because they are intentionally being misleading, I knew my opponent would use them, and now it is time to debunk them. I challenge anyone to look at those statistics again and they will notice not a single one of the world's most populous countries nor the largest countries in the world are mentioned aside from the United States. There is no Indonesia, no India, no Mexico, no Nigeria, no Pakistan, no Brazil, and worse of all there is no Russia. They even omitted countries from an entire continent, South America.  Why, were these countries ignored because it does not match their agenda.  It should be very well noted that Brazil and Russia have restrictive gun laws and have far more homicides than the United States[10][11].  What is even more astonishing is that Brazil and Russia are nowhere near the leaders in restrictive gun laws and having extremely high homicide rates[12].

[10]http://www.gunpolicy.org/firearms/region/brazil
[11]http://www.gunpolicy.org/firearms/region/russia
[12]http://www.businessinsider.com/1homicidal-countries-2011-11?op=1

"Japan, the country my opponent mentions does not arm its police force,
also has the lowest rate of firearms per capita and the lowest rate of
deaths as well."
I don't think my opponent wants to defend the gross conviction rate in Japan that has existed for a long time that has resulted in many innocents locked up. I also don't think he wants to defend the illiberal tactics allowed to be utilized by the Japanese police[13]. Criminals have little to no rights in Japan.  Japanese police are known to be aggressive, that is why it is "guilty until proven innocent" in Japan. In Japan, police need not carry firearms because they stop crimes before they happen.The Japanese want a safe society and give the police the authority to make it safe. The police need not carry firearms when they have been given the authority to be aggressive, right or wrong.

[13]http://britsoccrim.org/volume6/008.pdf

"I see no evidence in this table or anywhere else that arming police is something NZ, UK or Japan should adopt."
The fact of the matter is a police officer from New Zealand or United Kingdom or Japan would have a mental breakdown in the United States, Russia, Brazil, or any Central American country. In reverse, a police officer from the United States, Russia, Brazil, or a Central American country would feel like they are on vacation in New Zealand, United Kingdom, or Japan. The United Kingdom, New Zealand, and Japan are not models for police across the globe to follow. There has been no crime rate of significance in New Zealand or the United Kingdom, they lack the experience of danger that exists in many of the world's countries.

Return To Top | Posted:
2014-07-23 03:00:24
| Speak Round
nzlockienzlockie (CON)
What a thrill it is to continue this stimulating debate! I thank my opponent for his 2nd round comments. 
I'd like to note that he has indicated that he will address my rebuttals to his #3 and #4 points in the next round. Until he does so, those rebuttals stand unopposed.

Practicalities vs Ideals
This is going to be a critical point when it comes to judging this debate so I'd like to address it before we go any further. In his last round my opponent has stated that, "I am concerned with practicality, my opponent is concerned with ideals."  - PRO (Round 2) He's also indicated that I might be a little naive as to the proliferation of violent crime in the USA and that if I lived there I would likely be on his side. I agree. In fact, in my first round, I said, "If this resolution was related to the USA then I think I would probably find myself on the opposite side of this debate." - CON (Round 1) I travel all over the world for work and the USA remains the ONLY country I travel to where I take out travel insurance. I can assure everybody that I am well aware of the state of that particular country and I am not arguing that their Police should stop carrying guns. 
The FACT is that today's resolution is not region specific. Given that there is NO global status quo, how else can this resolution be taken except as a theoretical one for a theoretical ideal society?
PRO has already suggested that NZ has little need for policing at all, so he certainly has no problem with us maintaining OUR status quo. 

It is entirely appropriate to treat this debate as contrasting views on how a Police should present itself in a new ideal society. To that end, I again draw your attention to Sir Robert Peel, the founder of the modern Police Force.

"When Robert Peel started the 'New Police' in 1829, the idea faced profound and widespread hostility. Peel and his colleagues realised that the police could not defeat the mass of the population by force. Policing by consent was the only option, even if that consent was grudgingly offered by the lower social classes. That was why he consciously decided that the 'bobbies', unlike the Bow Street Runners and other ad hoc groups of constables, should be unarmed. Even the truncheon was to be hidden away, lest it should appear offensive.

The doctrine of 'minimum force' came to mean that there was a ceiling on the weapons to which the police had access - and a low ceiling at that. When a serious threat presented itself, the military was called in." - Peter Waddington (Source in Round 1)

As a quick aside as well - I'd like to point out that the society into which Peel placed his Police Force was hardly peaceful. In fact for my opponent to suggest that the UK has no crime rate worth noting suggests that he's not overly familiar with an international news channel - or maybe he forgot the massive nation-wide rioting they had there recently?
 
Gun control in Brazil
My opponent has brought up several countries where strict gun control laws do not work. I could address these. I could point out where Brazil, Mexico, Honduras and El Slavador sit on the governmental corruption index. But I don't have to because this is not related to our debate which is focused on the Police force. The Police carry guns in ALL of the countries he's mentioned. The fact that gun related crime is rampant there supports my point more than it does his. 
The criminals are forced to carry guns there thanks to the afore mentioned...

... Law of Escalation
Ok - this is not really a "law". I made that up just now. But it could be because we literally see it in almost every facet of society. My dad is bigger than yours. My car is flasher than yours. Yo' Mama so fat...
My opponent asked what evidence my comment that the Lawless will ALWAYS have the advantage over the Lawful? I again direct him to his own comments. He and I both agree that criminals operate outside of the law. Police operate within the law. This means that Police will ALWAYS be restricted in terms of the weapons they can carry and use while criminals will not be. This fact is undisputed by either of us. Or at least it was in Round 1.
Criminals NEED a force advantage, since they are usually at a numbers disadvantage. Exactly what level that force advantage is can largely be determined by society. The Bulls don't play Jordan if they are playing some second rate college team. 

Misleading Stats?
PRO reveals that not only did he misquote his source material, but he also deliberately used a misleading document. It turns out that there are a lot of other countries WHERE POLICE CARRY GUNS that ALSO have a high incidence of gun-related death. Nice. Probably not the knock out punch for his side that he seems to think it is. Adding more countries to the top of that list doesn't help him. Maybe if this were a debate about Gun control for the masses rather than just for the Police force?

The mental ability of the NZ and UK police force to deal with Gun toting crims
Obviously I'd like to address my opponents unsubstantiated assertion that the Police men and women from NZ and the UK don't have what it takes to handle policing in the USA. Clearly it takes far more courage to enforce the law with a gun on your hip than it does to do so without. This is a five round debate though, and my opponent is digging himself a nice little hole here, so I'm going to let it go on for a bit. 

NEW POINT: Police carrying guns forces criminals to carry guns.
Yes you caught me, this is not a new point. I'm restating it this way to make it clearer. 
Criminals and cops are against each other. If cops carry guns, then criminals need to carry guns. It doesn't work the other way because pre-selection ensures that cops are always prime specimens in the peak of fitness. They also have a numbers advantage, information advantage, usually an experience advantage not to mention they have society and the law on their side as well. 
To win this debate, PRO wants to convince us that the Good guys have the disadvantage. We LIKE the good guys. Of course we want them to have the advantage in EVERY area - but, as has already been established, there is NO WAY to prevent the crims from accessing whatever level of weaponry they need. Police can never have a weapon advantage 100% of the time. 

Harms that result from Police mistakes
What happens when a cop gets it wrong? PRO mentions the innocents in Japan that get locked away. What about the innocents that get shot and killed by a nervous or mistaken cop? 
Many countries place heavy restrictions on Police when it comes to car chases. These governments have recognised that the act of chasing the criminal poses a high risk to innocents that may be caught in the figurative cross fire. With this debate, the innocents may be caught in the literal cross fire.
Like this guy from Canada who was just walking to work when he was shot and killed as cops tried to subdue a homeless guy with a knife.
Googling, "innocent bystander caught in police shoot out" is quite depressing. Many of these people had their lives actually ended for absolutely no reason. In most of the results, the criminal the police were killing didn't even have a gun! 
In the USA and Mexico we might not have a choice. The situation there is too far gone. To disarm the police may be to place them at too much of a disadvantage. But this debate is not country specific. 

 
  



Return To Top | Posted:
2014-07-23 12:27:12
| Speak Round
Cross-Examination
nzlockie: Would you mind addressing the final question from the last CX? How many innocent lives are worth the apprehension of a sriminal?
nzlockie: *sirimabiminal
Tophatdoc: I don't know the answer to that because I don't set values on life itself. Values are relative to the beholder. Some will say that a homeless man and child prodigy are of equal value. There will be many who say otherwise.
Tophatdoc: You stated "We LIKE the good guys. Of course we want them to have the advantage in EVERY area"
Tophatdoc: What evidence do you have that "we like the good guys?"
nzlockie: Empirical evidence. The "Good guys" are OUR team. Experience and observation shows me that people favour their own team. It also teaches me that society favours the lawful over the lawless hence the cops are OUR team.
nzlockie: Are you indicating by that question that in the USA today the majority of society is against the Police?
nzlockie: Would even a significant minority, 30% or so, indicate that they were not in favour of the Police? That the Police were not on their team? Maybe THEY are the good guys and both the Police AND the criminals are the bad guys?
nzlockie: (2 days
nzlockie: later) if my opponent IS suggesting that then I'd point out that that fact supports Robert Peel's assertion that policing by consent is preferable.
Tophatdoc: I am not stating that the majority are against the police. I however will state there is a significant element in American society that doesn't like the police at all.
Tophatdoc: There are numerous examples of this in American society, especially in areas ridden with crime. By all means, not all of these citizens who dislike the police are "good guys."
Tophatdoc: "Society favours the lawful over the lawless hence the cops are OUR team." Where did you find the evidence to make this claim?
nzlockie: like I said, empirical evidence. Police are more commonly held up as the heroes of a saga rather than the villains.
nzlockie: also noted that in the USA where police carry guns overtly at all times, a significant minority have a low opinion of them. Supports Peels contention that society will struggle to support a police force that appears to intimidate in this manner.

Return To Top | Speak Round
TophatdocTophatdoc (PRO)
"Before I respond to my opponent's points. I first want to respond to his last claim during cross-examination. He said about the police:  "like I said, empirical evidence. Police are more commonly held up as the heroes of a saga rather than the villains." My opponent did not provide any empirical evidence to back this claim. It is just his opinion, nothing is wrong with his opinion but it is not evidence.

RE: Point #3:
My opponent claimed that I was invoking emotion by stating the first responders were equipped and prepared for what the phone operator has told them. This is not emotion but a fact.  Situations can not be quickly assessed in a violent or potentially violent situation, especially in if there is a shootout or a brawl taking place when police officers respond on the scene. Police officers know little about the situation and often times may aggravate the situation to makes things far worse. This is a weakness whether firearms are involved are not. I would rather have a police officer carry a firearm on his person as a precautionary measure for the worse case scenario.

RE: Point #4:
"Police can not be effective if they are weaker physically than someone else."

It is not a matter of actual physicality and strength for me. The general sentiment is that gender, height, and weight play significant role in whether someone is going to try to escape or fight a police officer. It is the mere appearance alone of an imposing figure or a weak figure that plays a role in whether violence may ensue between a suspect and a police officer.

"Why not just arm the Policewomen the men who fail the fitness requirements?"
I will give a perfect example from personal experience of why the fitness requirements are important. I remember one day last years when I was getting off of a public bus that a police officer was talking to a guy while another officer was standing near the two. During the middle of their calm talk, the guy bolts down the street with the two officers right behind him and the guy jumps three or four fences while running into different yards. When he jumped the fences the police were too out of shape to keep up with him.  The guy clearly got away with relative ease. It would of been malicious for the police officer to whip out a pistol and blow the suspect away to his death. The guy was unarmed. Just arming women would not change what happened here.

The police officers are already forced to carry so much equipment along with a bullet proof vest to impede speed. But also the police officers are merely doing their job. The suspect in many situations there are escalated perceive they are fighting for their lives.  Their central nervous system is far more alarmed than the police officers because it is "personal" for them and have gone into "fight or flight mode."  They may be capable of superhuman feats when in such a frenzy depending on the person. Police officers need to be physically fit to be at least somewhat prepared for these situations where a suspect may perceive themselves as cornered and may use any means to escape.  A firearm itself would be of no use in situations where the police officers life or anyone else's life is not in danger. A mere scuffle or chase would not ordinarily require firearms. However, these situations may end with a suspect brandishing a switchblade,  a hatchet, or a firearm where the police officers life is in danger. Physical fitness requirements are necessary to be prepared for the various predicaments one may find one's self in.

"What specific benefit does having women officers bring? How does arming them enhance this benefit?"
i don't think female police officers bring any benefits. They are just one part of the force.  Yet there are many people who want female police officers on patrols and beats, therefore they need to carry a firearm as well which may also act as deterrent to protect themselves from the worse.

Return To Top | Posted:
2014-07-29 02:37:03
| Speak Round
nzlockienzlockie (CON)
Thanks Doc for that round. First up, Doc has asked for evidence that public perception sees the Police as the "Good Guys", aka "Our Team".
No problem:
1.  Reader's Digest's Most Trusted Professions 2014 places Police at #10, three places above the people we let look after our kids.  This survey was from NZ. Interestingly, the identical survey conducted by Reader's Digest Australia had their Police, (who DO carry guns) ranked three places below ours at #13. 
2.  A random sampling of this list of past and present Police TV Dramas showed that in 98% of them, the Police played the hero role. In the few where the Criminal was the hero, the majority of the Police characters were shown to be criminal AGAINST the status quo, ie they were "dirty" cops. 
3.  This completely exhaustive report finds that "Police in America enjoy relatively high levels of satisfaction, support, confidence, and esteem from the public..." - The Public Image of the Police, IACP Report. This report also emphasizes the importance of the Public perceiving the Police as being on their side. This echoes Robert Peel's initial vision of the modern Police Force. 

I trust this evidence is enough as I'm not really sure why he wants it and I have other things to deal with.

PRO has finally gotten around to addressing my rebuttals to some of his first round points. I'm going to quickly deal with his explanations and then get on with expanding my case.

Re: Point #3 - Arriving at a job with a limited amount of information. 
In this point, PRO stated that because officers may often find themselves arriving at a job with little or no information, they need to be prepared for the worst. "Prepared for the worst" means they need a gun strapped to their waist. In rebuttal I pointed out, quite correctly, that the vast MAJORITY of police work is actually quite mundane and weapons are not required, let alone guns. Despite what TV tells us, this is true.
I also pointed out that my side of the house DOES NOT PREVENT COPS FROM ACCESSING FIREARMS. Police in squad cars may have a firearm locked up in a safe within the car. If the situation looks dire, they can quickly and easily access it. 
Finally I pointed out that there are a myriad of alternate options, both offensive and defensive, which cops can employ to reduce the risk to themselves. These include but are not limited to: Body Armour, Tasers, Pepper Sprays, Batons, Karate, Negotiations, Radioing for backup, the Buddy system, Running away... the list goes on.
YOU might not like these tactics but these tactics have been proven again and again to save lives. 
There are two quick points I'm going to make about this particular issue:
1. A Gun is not "preparing for the worst". If PRO wants to stake that claim, he needs to explain why they don't carry gas masks. Why they don't wear full riot gear. Why they don't have a hanky. A gun is preparation for SOMETHING, but it's not the worst. Let's keep it real here.

2. Police engender MORE support when the criminals look like the bullies. I call this the Underdog Effect and I'll be devoting my 4th round argument to this. 
 
Re: Point #4 - Women Police Officers.
There was a lighthearted moment in the first round when PRO suggested that women would not be on the Police Force were it not for the fact that the fitness requirements were lowered and Police can carry guns.
When questioned, he stated that he doesn't think women bring any special benefit to the job, except that some people wanted them there. 

He does bring up a valid point which is that a gun DOES bring a measure of lethality to a person who might otherwise be weak. This is a great argument for gun control, but that might be a debate for another time.

Unlike my opponent, I happen to believe that women bring a lot to the table as far as policing is concerned. And the DC Police appear to agree with me. In this study, they found that:
  • "Women patrol officers tended to be more effective than their male counterparts in avoiding violence and defusing potentially violent situations.
  • Women were less likely than men to engage in serious unbecoming conduct." - Women in Law Enforcement
  
As you can see, this model mirrors that of Robert Peel. Policing by Consent rather than Policing by Force. This will all be dealt with in my 4th Round argument.

I'd also like to draw Judges attention to the fact that in the first round, PRO used this Point #4: Equality comes through the barrel of a gun to say that specifically Women police officers should be armed because they are weaker. When I asked why he wanted to stop at just women, why not include the less fit men as well, he replied with a story he claimed showed that physical fitness was important, (crucial even!) arming the police would not have helped apprehend the suspect, and that extra equipment weight can slow officers down. Let's just point out that for this point to support his argument AT ALL, he needs to accept that arming the police places a lower priority on physical fitness, will add two or three pounds minimum of weight to the officer and in cases like the one he cites, they will STILL find themselves unable to stop crime. 
To say this point is rebutted is an understatement.

Halftime Evaluation:
At this point, I'd like the judges to stop and take stock. In this debate, CON has already shown significant harms caused by Police having a firearm strapped to their waist during routine patrols. PRO has yet to bring an unrebutted argument to the table, while our side still has several points out there which have not been addressed as well as several unanswered questions:
  • After he submitted data that shows that more guns in a society equals more gun related deaths, PRO still hasn't explained why this is a good thing.
  • PRO has not contested my assertion that Arming the Police forces Criminals to be armed as well. 
  • PRO has not contested my assertion that the Lawless will always be capable of carrying more and bigger weapons than the Law abiding. 
  • Although he has conceded it, he still hasn't justified the loss of innocent life during the apprehension of criminals. 
  • He has yet to say how many innocent lives are worth the apprehension of a criminal. 
  
I'd like to remind everyone that this side of the house is NOT arguing that the police forces who are already armed should be disarmed. If you are reading this debate in America, it will seem laughable to you that I'm suggesting your police don't need to be armed in this way. Rather, as established in the early rounds of this debate, we are arguing based on the idea that the clock has been turned back. 
In a society where criminals are bound to exist - how do we as a society want to handle them? With a hammer or with a sword? 
The hammer is a blunt instrument. It has one function. To smash. Ultimately the largest hammer wins. This is Policing by Force. 
The sword requires skill and finesse. It can parry, stab and slice. It looks weaker than the hammer, but in reality is a more efficient and more effective weapon. This is Policing by Consent. 
 
I look forward to the next round!

 



Return To Top | Posted:
2014-07-30 10:07:49
| Speak Round
Cross-Examination
nzlockie: NZ's national Rugby team, the All Blacks, are playing the US team in Chicago later this year. They have a 75% win rate against international sides spanning over 100 years of competition making them the most successful national team across any code.
nzlockie: The US Eagles have an international rugby record that actually stretches slightly further. In that time they have amassed a winning percentage of 33%. This includes only 2 wins against a top tier nation. And that nation was France, who have also lost to C
nzlockie: Canada, Romania and the tiny kingdom of Tonga. Twice.
nzlockie: Question - if you have to support one team, which one do you support and why?
nzlockie: (And by "you" I mean YOU, tophatdoc. Serious question.)
Tophatdoc: Canada, the Great White North
Tophatdoc: How am I qualified to give an assesment of this?
nzlockie: Sorry, I meant, out of NZ and the USA. The question is a direct comparison to the topic we're debating and speaks to the way society chooses sides.
nzlockie: (I only chose Rugby because I was watching a game. The question actually works better if you don't know the game.)
nzlockie: it looks like I'm not going to get an answer though. my point was that people love two things. they love an underdog, and they love the team they have the most in common with.
nzlockie: as a generally law abiding public, we have most in common with those that uphold the law. not carrying guns, even when we think that the criminals are, makes us think the police are brave. it also make us think of them as the underdogs, which we like.
nzlockie: the criminals come off looking like the bullies and we all like someone who stands up to a bully.
nzlockie: Here's an important point: The more HEROIC the police look, the more they will serve as the role models for the new generation.

Return To Top | Speak Round


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nzlockienzlockie
Thanks!
Posted 2014-09-13 07:49:42
BlackflagBlackflag
I honestly enjoyed reading this debate.
NZlockie certainly changed my views on arming police, although patrolling many parts of the country should not be considered "regular duty"
Posted 2014-09-13 07:27:23
TophatdocTophatdoc
I will respond to POINTS #3 & #4 next round.
Posted 2014-07-23 03:01:30
nzlockienzlockie
I think we have an understanding.
Posted 2014-07-11 10:00:41
adminadmin
"all guns are not firearms" - surely you meant to say "not all guns are firearms", no?
Posted 2014-07-11 03:56:10
TophatdocTophatdoc
How about we associate "weapons" with "firearms" to be very clear because all guns are not firearms.
Posted 2014-07-11 02:07:38
nzlockienzlockie
This scope is a little broad... Would you agree to define "weapons" as exclusively, "guns"? That'd turn this into a good old fashioned gun debate which we all love!
Posted 2014-07-10 08:20:42
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