dang 6 years ago

Since there were two threads about qualified immunity on the front page, we merged them. The other article has more substance, so we moved (most) comments thither: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23379910.

The remaining comments are the ones that only make sense in this context.

bgentry 6 years ago

Small typo in the title: it's the "Ending Qualified Immunity Act", not the "End Qualified Immunity Act".

tathougies 6 years ago

Thank goodness for common sense.

Overtonwindow 6 years ago

It’s unfortunate that in the current political climate this legislation will likely go nowhere. It would be better to see leadership introduce this.

  • pm90 6 years ago

    Leadership isn't the source for all bills that are passed, though. Maybe as a 3rd party member, the bill would garner bipartisan support?

    I do agree with you that the leadership should be offering some sort of legislative solutions. All we have seen so far is deflection.

    • Consultant32452 6 years ago

      My conspiracy theory is that something else is brewing on the international level that is bigger than these riots. There's been reports of actions by various international adversary militaries. Everyone is extremely busy.

      • AnimalMuppet 6 years ago

        Could you be more specific? Which adversaries? What are they doing? What do you expect them to do next? And how do you think that relates to the riots, or to this bill?

    • bedhesd 6 years ago

      They are not the source, per se, but they are the deciding entity as to what moves in the process. Legislation cannot move without leadership, which includes committee chairs, majority leader, floor leader, whip, etc. Under a very technical way a discharge petition could be brought to force it out of committee, but ..that's extremely rare[0].

      [0.] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discharge_petition#Uses_since_...

  • pmiller2 6 years ago

    I agree. This will go nowhere, because established interests don't want to end qualified immunity for cops. I have mentioned in other comments [0] how police do not serve "the public," but, rather, property interests. Until that changes, we won't see any movement in this area. The incentives simply do not align.

    Edit: added citation to one of my previous comments.

    ---

    [0]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23373890

    • jonlucc 6 years ago

      If this is true, then people smashing property is actually the effective way forward. Pressure on property owners should cause them to push elected officials to rein in police forces. I'm not convinced it's true, but it does make me think about the property damage being done in a different light.

      • pmiller2 6 years ago

        Sadly, I believe this is the case. Someone else said it more succinctly than I can:

        > a government that can’t mobilize to house and feed us during a pandemic but can mobilize to beat us whenever we rise up tells you exactly where their priorities are [0]

        They're right. Look at our reaction to a deadly virus that could easily kill a million people in this country versus what happens when a few windows get smashed, buildings set on fire, and some TVs get stolen from stores.

        ---

        [0]: https://twitter.com/uncrushedvelvet/status/12670040021154242...

      • qbaqbaqba 6 years ago

        Property owners will build more walls. Looting is not protesting.

pm90 6 years ago

@dang the article does nothing but link to the tweet, I think it would be more useful to link to the tweet instead: https://twitter.com/justinamash/status/1267267244029083648?s...