Yeah, but they're civilians with special privileges."and in close proximity of a civilian."
Police are civilians. Every time I hear law enforcement start talking about "civilians" as a separate thing, I cringe a bit.
Yeah, but they're civilians with special privileges.
peasant found shooting without the kings permission by his royal highness force"NYSP Illegally Shooting Deer !"
No NYSP illegally shooting deer according to link.
that's a face only a mother can luvIs he Amish or Hasidic?
?
"and in close proximity of a civilian."
Police are civilians. Every time I hear law enforcement start talking about "civilians" as a separate thing, I cringe a bit.
A civilian is "a person who is not a member of the military or of a police or firefighting force".[1] The term "civilian" is slightly different from a non-combatant under the laws of war, as some non-combatants are not civilians (for example, military chaplains attached to the belligerent armed forces or neutral military personnel). Under international law, civilians in the territories of a party to an armed conflict are entitled to certain privileges under the customary laws of war and international treaties such as the Fourth Geneva Convention. The privileges that they enjoy under international law depends on whether the conflict is an internal one (a civil war) or an international one.
ci·vil·ian
səˈvilyən/
noun
noun: civilian; plural noun: civilians
1.
a person not in the armed services or the police force.
[si-vil-yuh n]
See more synonyms on Thesaurus.com
noun
1.
a person who is not on active duty with a military, naval, police, or fire fighting organization.
Definition of civilian
1 : a specialist in Roman or modern civil law
2 a : one not on active duty in the armed services or not on a police or firefighting force
Me, I do not care one way or another. This is the definition from three different dictionary's.
And this one, The Oxford Dictionary:
civilian
noun
1A person not in the armed services or the police force.
These are also generic definitions, and not US specific definitions. Looking at US code, the classification is quite different. United states code refers to LEO as a civilian agency, per Title 10 Chapter 15 (formerly Chapter 18). On multiple occasions it refers to law enforcement as a civilian agency.
[USC07] 10 USC Ch. 15: MILITARY SUPPORT FOR CIVILIAN LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES
The distinction matters because the mentality that civilian police are other than civilians breeds a mentality of militarization. We don't want a militarized police force. We want a police force composed of the people, and subject to the same law -- as it stands now.
I don't explain it better, I explain it more curtly. lol
The only time I hear this argument is on gun forums. Period.
The word civilian doesn't simply exist as a description opposed to military. Colloquially (holy fuck I spelled that correctly without spell check!), "civilian" is used to describe non-members by numerous different professions. Individualistic-types argue this point because they have it in their head that the police aren't different at all from anyone else not military. That's simply not true.
There are numerous examples of decisions cops can make, legally, that citizens cannot. This has been the case since the creation of the first police force and always will be the case. From simple acts such as closing a street and rerouting traffic/pedestrians to the extreme example of being authorized to use DPF in situations where a non-LEO would not have the same ability.
As Goperfect pointed out, the easy answer is that the dictionaries that define our language all (as far as I know), include cops in the definition of "non-civilian". Some even include firemen I believe.
It is what it is really, I think it's a dumb argument and the "civilians" who harp on it are reading much more into it than "our side". Nothing will convince them that I am not using the word to denote that I am "better" than them, but if you ask most cops if that's why they use the term the way they do, they'll give you a funny look and wonder why someone would even ask that.
As for the definition itself, you're trying to argue that anyone in a position of "authority" can call others civilians.
I didn’t use the word hate anywhere in that post or even remotely imply that you (anyone else) doesn’t like cops.
Such a stupid thing to be upset about. A fucking word. Holy shit.
Calling a cop a civilian or not has nothing at all to do with the law.
My argument was that it is a distinction that is important. That's a valid discussion to have.
I will say I prefer how you discuss these issues over how others do.
We like you Civilians as well.You mean throwing piss and eggs at each other? We're not liberals here, man. We're civilized.
Regardless of why I think the distinction is important, I would not hesitate to help LEO in need -- nor do I have any less respect for the difficulty the job entails and discretion it requires.