Dominater wrote:AshyLarrysDiaper wrote:bullsnewdynasty wrote:
So your problem should be with politicians, not cops. Cops don't create the law. Unions are always going to defend their own. Why is there a problem with police having unions compared to other jobs? If you want to start a discussion about unions, let's have it.
I'm not a lawyer so I won't pretend to understand the complexity around it. If you pointed to specific incidents where the immunity law protected cops, it might be more effective than just throwing the word out there.
But based on my reading of it, nothing protects you if you violate federal law or constitutional rights, so I think you have some misplaced anger about what that doctrine actually entails.
Your reading of qualified immunity is wrong. But feel free to link a source.
And regarding unions, sure, let’s have that conversation.
Show me another union that consistently operates like police unions, publicly defending literal murder and defaming the victims in the process.
I happen to work for a union, by the way. But maybe I’ll learn something.
Well, in general they do tend to stick up for bad employees. That's what unions do. Though yes if they fought for Chauvin then that's going way too far. Zero excuse to fight for him.
Just a disclaimer: I wasn't and do not denounce unions. Though I don't always agree with them, I agree that we need them. They protect our jobs and workers rights. How places like Wal-mart have been able to hold down their employees from unionizing is beyond me. They need a union and should've been done decades ago.
Sorry for getting OT a little there.
Sometimes unions go too far defending bad workers. No argument there. But listen to the rhetoric that comes out of FOPs after a cop assaults or kills someone or when a public official breathes a word about accountability. It’s unlike anything in labor. Which is why people say they’re less of a union than they are a special interest group working against the public good. Like the NRA.
Funny, I used to work for a union that’s trying to organize Walmart. The short answer to your question about why they don’t unionize: the company spends a lot of money and breaks a lot of laws to make sure that doesn’t happen.










