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posted by LaminatorX on Wednesday August 26 2015, @08:15PM   Printer-friendly
from the Who-LiveStream's-the-Watchmen? dept.

The Root reports that “Almost half of Americans hate their police department:”

[DrugAbuse.com] examined over 766,000 tweets about sentiment toward law enforcement in each state. The state with the most positive perception of police was New Hampshire. The most negative: Arkansas. The city with the most positive perception of police was Columbus, Ohio, while the one with the most negative was, not surprisingly, Ferguson, Mo. Other “failing” city police departments included Los Angeles, Miami, Phoenix, New York and Denver. Baltimore, a city still reeling from recent unrest, received a D grade….

“If you talk to young people in Baltimore, I don’t think their feelings about police have changed at all in the last five to seven years,” says [Philip Leaf, a Johns Hopkins University professor]. “There has been a negative perception of police in many communities for a long time. There just haven’t been conversations with these young people or in the media about it until recently. There hasn’t been an upsurge of disconnect with the police. With cellphones, there has been documentation of things that people have been talking about for a long time. People haven’t been believed, and now it’s hard not to believe it, if you see it on TV.…”

“It’s not as if this stuff hasn’t been going on all along for decades, but now it’s being captured for the world to see, and the few bad apples being captured on camera are ruining the entire tree of law enforcement,” says Hassan Giordano, 39, and a candidate for Baltimore City Council. “However, those very same people who have a negative opinion of police will also be the same ones calling 911 when they find themselves in an unsafe situation. It’s a catch-22.”

It's important to note that on the graphs shown in the article, even an A grade represents negative sentiment.

More data and a description of the methodology are available at DrugAbuse.com, including graphs of tweet sentiment involving alcohol, drugs, and marijuana. DrugAbuse.com used the commercial IBM service AlchemyAPI to analyze the tweets.


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  • (Score: 2) by Anal Pumpernickel on Thursday August 27 2015, @02:48AM

    by Anal Pumpernickel (776) on Thursday August 27 2015, @02:48AM (#228411)

    True I may have created the problem by driving off

    No. The cop created the problem by violating your liberties. Cowardly people who simply comply (and often criticize people who actually try to defend their rights) do us all a disservice and allow unjust and unconstitutional practices to continue for a longer period of time.

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   2  
  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 27 2015, @03:05AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 27 2015, @03:05AM (#228419)

    What I was trying to say is many people might defend the police by saying I was the proximate cause. Therefore I started that sentence with an agreeing tone, only to point out that the officer was not only a cause sine qua non, but more proximate than I. Perhaps I had my lawyer hat on too tight and got caught in my own cute sentence construction.