Throwaway because current environment is hostile to nuance, and consequences are disconnected from intent.<p>On these topics, I am always confused by the variety of positions.<p>I note that NPR is considered high factuality, left of center bias, so I generally want to trust them.<p>It's tricky to cut through the difficulty of understanding that we have a set of laws and those laws say a police officer is allowed to shoot someone, race irrespective, under circumstances. And it's a tragedy when someone loses their life, but the hypothesis of allowing police to kill someone is that the individual is suspected to be dangerous to others whom are less suspected (ie innocent).<p>Then there are takes like this <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vmgxtcbc4iU" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vmgxtcbc4iU</a> -- Sam Harris examines the available data and gives compelling argument that race is probably not a real variable in police killing civilians, especially when we start to examine same race police killings...