He didn't learn that lesson long. Just a week after declaring that people should comply with police, he was publicly demanding a university fire an officer who had used force to gain compliance from a female professor who resisted arrest.
There are those who believe that all law enforcement critics should experience force-on-force training in order to gain empathy with the experience of law enforcement officers. And I'm all for that. But I don't expect it to work. The problem with this approach is that the participants don't face any consequences from their mistakes.
If an officer makes the wrong decision about when to use force on the street, there are very real consequences, including loss of career, loss of reputation, lawsuits, prosecution, serious bodily injury, and oh, yeah…Death. There's no way to have activists, journalists, and politicians truly understand the very real fear that officers experience in use-of-force encounters just by running them through force-on-force training.
I think part of the problem is that we as a society have dehumanized officers. A small, but growing, part of the public sees you as just a badge and a uniform, a target, an enemy. Much of the rest of society—influenced by TV and movies—sees you as superhuman.
Most Americans, including activists, journalists, and politicians, have very little knowledge of what you actually do on the job. They don't understand the tightrope you walk between violating someone's rights and placing yourself in grave danger.