When police in a Sacramento, Calif., suburb were searching for a violent killer Saturday, they set up roadblocks in certain areas. This picture is what innocent suburbanites faced as they drove down neighborhood streets trying to get to or from their houses.
I think it’s a perfect example of the conflicts we face between two very strongly opposing views about law enforcement and the rights of innocent people. Do you think it’s right and reasonable for this random innocent driver — who wasn’t suspected of anything — to have this weapon pointed at him at close range under this circumstance?
I don’t think it’s reasonable, but defenders of police would say that it was necessary to protect police safety. Frankly, I’m a little more worried about the safety of the vast bulk of the public — who don’t deserve to have high-powered weapons pointed at their heads when they come to roadblocks in their otherwise safe neighborhoods.
There are two prevailing narratives about police today. One is that they’re all thugs who are drunk on the power of the state and are out to violate the rights of innocent people. The other is that they’re valiant and trustworthy servants of the people who are sacrificially doing a dangerous job to keep the rest of us safe.
I think there’s some true in each extreme, although people on the two extremes generally can’t see much middle ground.

What does a man confess about himself when he wants a ‘slut’?
Was I ‘fat’? ‘Lazy’? My father’s ugly words made me feel shame
Concerns about digital future leave me mourning analog past
Tell me the music you listen to and that’ll reveal a lot about you
We all know fairy tales aren’t true, but maybe we need such illusions
If we’re seduced by our desires, we often follow devil in disguise
Rhetoric about freedom means nothing without right to secede
The Alien Observer: Minneapolis riots might be preview of future