paperburn1 wrote:This has been case law for years, cops carry guns for self protection not to enforce the law and are no obligations to provide protection to the population supreme court 1963
What a quaint idea "Protect and Serve" is.
Apparently some folks have issues with reading Webster's when in doubt of what words mean.
My understanding of legal rulings regarding police duty is that they are not compelled to risk thier own life to prevent crime. They do so by choice. They are not military. They can quit. So armed or not, it is the choice of the officer to engage. It is like fire fighters, they are also not compelled to enter the burning building to rescue someone. They choose.
I think you may have misrepresented.
"Policed" & "Policing" - Transitive verb
po·liced po·lic·ing
Definition of POLICE
1 archaic: govern
2: to control, regulate, or keep in order by use of police
3: to make clean and put in order
4 a: to supervise the operation, execution, or administration of
to prevent or detect and prosecute violations of rules and regulations
b: to exercise such supervision over the policies and activities of
5: to perform the functions of a police force in or over
Examples of POLICE
The officers police the streets for reckless drivers.
The coast is policed by the military.
The international agency polices the development of atomic energy facilities.
Origin of POLICE
in sense 1, from Middle French policier, from police conduct of public affairs;
in other senses, from 2 police
First Known Use: 1589
Police (plural) noun
1a: the internal organization or regulation of a political unit
through exercise of governmental powers especially
with respect to general comfort, health, morals, safety, or prosperity
b: control and regulation of affairs affecting the general order and welfare of any unit or area
c: the system of laws for effecting such control
2a: the
department of government concerned primarily with maintenance of public order, safety, and health and enforcement of laws and possessing executive, judicial, and legislative powers
b: the
department of government charged with prevention, detection, and prosecution
of public nuisances and crimes
3a: police force
b plural: police officers
4a: a private organization resembling a police force <campus police>
b plural: the members of a private police organization
5a: the action or process of cleaning and putting in order
b: military personnel detailed to perform this function
6: one attempting to regulate or censor a specified field or activity <the fashion police>
The development of atomic power, though it could confer unimaginable blessings on mankind, is something that is dreaded by the owners of coal mines and oil wells. (Hazlitt)
What I want to do is to look up C. . . . I call him the Forgotten Man. (Sumner)