Post 1 – The Training Gap: When Power Meets Underpreparedness π€¨π₯
Yes, technically Transit cops are fully sworn officers, with the power to arrest, issue tickets, and enforce the law. But… how the hell did we get here?
Society expects these officers — trained in a police academy for only 6–12 months — to manage:
- Mental health crises π’
- Addiction and homelessness π₯Ί
- Domestic disputes π
- Child welfare, elder care, and crisis intervention πΆπ΅
Meanwhile, professions historically dominated by women — teaching, nursing, social work, caregiving, cooking — require years of training:
- Teachers: 4–5 years π
- Nurses: 2–4 years π₯
- Social workers: 2–4 years π¬
- Doctors: 7+ years π¨⚕️
- Chefs / caregivers: 2+ years π³
Irony: Male-dominated “tough” roles get short training, while traditionally female, “nurturing” roles require far more education, experience, and empathy — yet the stakes are the same: human lives.
Here’s the danger — in questions and analogies:
- If a chef trains 2 years to safely cook meals, how can someone trained 6 months handle a human crisis without “burning” someone emotionally or physically? π₯π¨π³
- Would you get on a plane flown by someone who trained for only 6 months, expected to handle storms, medical emergencies, and panicking passengers? ✈️π¬
- Would you trust a person with 6 months of training to teach, counsel, and discipline children, including those facing trauma? ππ’
- If someone holds authority over people historically oppressed — like Indigenous communities — but lacks empathy training, what’s the likelihood of abuse or harm? π₯Ί⚖️
- Giving a 6-month trained recruit a wrench and keys and saying, “Fix everyone’s lives, de-escalate crises, and enforce laws” — how many lives could be “damaged”? π§π₯
- A firefighter spends almost a year training to save lives; a cop spends half that time and is expected to do both rescue and judgment — how is this fair? ππ€―
- Would you rather a trained social worker intervene in addiction, homelessness, or domestic disputes — or someone trained for 6 months with a baton and handcuffs? π
- Stealing a bus ride is like stealing bread to survive — how does punishing someone harshly reflect a system that fails to provide safety or support? π₯π
- How can officers respect Indigenous traditions, trauma, and rights if their training barely touches history, social justice, or empathy? πΏ⚡
- Isn’t it bizarre that society gives power over life, liberty, and dignity to someone whose training is shorter than a nurse’s or social worker’s? π‘π
Bottom line: We are giving enormous power to people with far too little preparation — and human lives are paying the price. ππ₯Ί
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.